Giovanni Pontano
Marcello Mastroianni
Giovanni Pontano

“A new genre of motion picture... to make you think and feel.”
A day in the life of an unfaithful married couple and their steadily deteriorating relationship in Milan.
Masters of Cinema Trailer [Subtitled] Official
Giovanni Pontano
Marcello Mastroianni
Giovanni Pontano
Lidia
Jeanne Moreau
Lidia
Valentina Gherardini
Monica Vitti
Valentina Gherardini
Tommaso Garani
Bernhard Wicki
Tommaso Garani
Rosy
Rosy Mazzacurati
Rosy
Un'invitata
Maria Pia Luzi
Un'invitata
Fanti
Guido A. Marsan
Fanti
Vittorio Bertolini
Mr. Gherardini
Vincenzo Corbella
Mr. Gherardini
Cesarino
Ugo Fortunati
Cesarino
Signora Gherardini
Gitt Magrini
Signora Gherardini
Roberto
Giorgio Negro
Roberto
I have always thought Jeanne Moreau to be one of the most striking of actresses. He expressions with her smile and her eyes would have made her a fantastic silent film star. Here she portrays "Lidia", married to "Giovanni" (an equally potent Marcello Mastroianni), with whom she has a pretty open relationship in what is a rapidly deteriorating marriage. It's only after they visit a terminally ill friend "Garani" (Bernhard Wicki) that she becomes distraught, leaves the hospital and her thoughts start to focus a little. She visits the home of her youth, he goes to a party to celebrate the release of his latest tome then they both end up at a lavish soirée where they are as if independent of each other - both pretty shamelessly flirting with other, younger, people whilst maintaining just about enough of a façade to remember that this is all about business. Michelangelo Antonioni has created the ultimately crafted fly-on-the-wall film, here. The photography is intimate, almost invasive, at times as we watch these two people heading on a crash course to marital oblivion taking a great deal of themselves with them too. Though at times outwardly superficial, the characterisations are actually quite complex and both play with a subtle, nuanced charisma that compliments the more obvious symptoms of their declining interest in each other. What also adds a richness to this is a distinct paucity of dialogue. Giorgio Gaslini has provided us with a score that allows the photography to tell us great swathes of the story using imagery only - the lack of needless conversation between the characters helps it to showcase the ostentatiousness of their ball or the use of the Milanese city-scape in the darkness illuminated only by the occassional street-light - and that frequently creates a compelling atmosphere as sterile and barren as is their failing partnership. By the end, we know that something has to give, but what might that be? For two hours it just flies by. It's Golden Bear was well won.
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