Un corrispondente di guerra frustrato, non riuscendo a trovare la guerra della quale gli è stato chiesto di scrivere, intraprende la pericolosa strada di impossessarsi del documento di ident... Leggi tuttoUn corrispondente di guerra frustrato, non riuscendo a trovare la guerra della quale gli è stato chiesto di scrivere, intraprende la pericolosa strada di impossessarsi del documento di identità di un trafficante d'armi morto, suo conoscente.Un corrispondente di guerra frustrato, non riuscendo a trovare la guerra della quale gli è stato chiesto di scrivere, intraprende la pericolosa strada di impossessarsi del documento di identità di un trafficante d'armi morto, suo conoscente.
- Premi
- 5 vittorie e 2 candidature
- Robertson
- (as Chuck Mulvehill)
- Hotel Clerk
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Murderer's accomplice
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Cameraman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWhen Michelangelo Antonioni received his honorary Oscar in 1995, the Academy asked Jack Nicholson to present it to him.
- BlooperThere are a couple of inaccuracies in the displayed details of Locke's Air Afrique air ticket that was evidently issued in Douala, Cameroon in August 1974. The name of Fort-Lamy (Chad's neighboring capital city) became N'djamena in early 1973, and Paris is written in Italian ("Parigi") which would not have occurred in French-speaking Douala.
- Citazioni
The Girl: Isn't it funny how things happen? All the shapes we make. Wouldn't it be terrible to be blind?
David Locke: I know a man who was blind. When he was nearly 40 years old, he had an operation and regained his sight.
The Girl: How was it like?
David Locke: At first he was elated... really high. Faces... colors... landscapes. But then everything began to change. The world was much poorer than he imagined. No one had ever told him how much dirt there was. How much ugliness. He noticed ugliness everywhere. When he was blind... he used to cross the street alone with a stick. After he regained his sight... he became afraid. He began to live in darkness. He never left his room. After three years he killed himself.
- Curiosità sui creditiLeo, the MGM lion, which normally precedes the opening credits of MGM movies, has been supplanted by "BEGINNING OUR NEXT 50 YEARS". Leo then returns in the center with "GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY" on either side of it.
- Versioni alternativeSeven minutes were added to the 2005-2006 re-release version, including a brief shot of a nude Maria Schneider in bed with Jack Nicholson in the Spanish hotel.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession (2004)
Thirty years later, Michelangelo Antonioni's re-released "The Passenger" is looking very good, and so are Jack Nicholson and Maria Schneider, as the journalist who takes a dead man's identity in the Sahara and the girl he meets in Barcelona who decides to tag along. David Locke (Nicholson) takes the passport of a man named Robertson who he's had a few drinks with in a hotel. Before that we see Locke experience frustration, giving away cigarettes to men in turbans who say nothing, abandoned by a boy guide, dumping a Land Rover stuck in the sand. Later we see films that show as a journalist he was subservient to bad men. Locke has Robertson's appointment book which leads him to Munich, then various points in Spain. He learns Robertson was a committed man taking risks: he sold arms to revolutionaries whose causes he thought were just. He gets a huge down-payment.
Then Locke's wife gets a tape of him talking to Robertson and his passport with Robertson's photo pasted into it -- and she gets the picture.
Changing your identity and using someone else's isn't just an existential act, it's also a criminal one. Locke's gambit is hopeless: he winds up fleeing from himself. The film skillfully gives its action story an existential underpinning. The chase keeps up a rapid pace, like the Bourne franchise, but it has time to contemplate Locke's old and new lives in a metaphorical story he tells Schneider about a blind man that explains how he ends up.
Antonioni is great at little incidentals -- a girl chewing bubblegum, a man reciting in a Gaudi building. And at the end, people coming and going in a desolate plaza outside a bullfighting amphitheater. The locations provide exotic glamor. The camera-work of course is wonderful. In retrospect now one can see this was definitely a culmination for Antonioni. He thought it technically his best film. This is the director's preferred European version, originally released as "Professione: Reporter."
- Chris Knipp
- 2 ott 2005
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- The Passenger
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Fort Polignac, Algeria(desert scenes, setting: Chad)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 620.155 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 24.157 USD
- 30 ott 2005
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 769.503 USD