A young woman meets a vital young man, but their love affair is doomed because of the man's materialistic nature.A young woman meets a vital young man, but their love affair is doomed because of the man's materialistic nature.A young woman meets a vital young man, but their love affair is doomed because of the man's materialistic nature.
- Awards
- 1 win & 5 nominations total
Cyrus Elias
- Intoxicated Man
- (uncredited)
Alba Maiolini
- Woman at the Stock Market
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
Far Too Slow-Paced, Uninteresting Characters, But Great Performances And Gorgeous Cinematography
Pros:
1. The scope of the film is very impressive, particularly in regards to the plethora of extras and different locations used.
2. The usage of prolonged silences and wide shots really helps to ram home the adverse effects of the break-up with Riccardo (Francisco Rabal), and the feelings that naturally accompany a break-up.
3. Both Alain Delon (Piero) and Monica Vitti (Vittoria) give incredible performances.
4. The cinematography is absolutely beautiful, especially when the camera pulls back and allows you to take in the scenery completely.
5. The comedy, though infrequent, is hilarious and stems from genuinely grounded character interactions.
6. Monica Vitti and Alain Delon harbour electric chemistry with each other, and it really shines through during the intimately romantic scenes.
Cons: 1. The movie is ridiculously slow-paced. Even though the reason for its slow-pace is clear, it still feels unnecessarily slow. 2. The stock market story-line is exceedingly uninteresting, and far too much screen-time is dedicated towards it. 3. None of the characters engaging which makes it difficult to care. This is unfortunate as the run-time is over 2 hours long. 4. The last 5-10 minutes drag on needlessly.
Cons: 1. The movie is ridiculously slow-paced. Even though the reason for its slow-pace is clear, it still feels unnecessarily slow. 2. The stock market story-line is exceedingly uninteresting, and far too much screen-time is dedicated towards it. 3. None of the characters engaging which makes it difficult to care. This is unfortunate as the run-time is over 2 hours long. 4. The last 5-10 minutes drag on needlessly.
SciFi for the Emotional Life
Smart and moody, this film is not only about emotional Eclipse, it is about the eclipse of the old society as it changes, and also about how architectural changes eclipse older style, and more importantly, nature. There are really smart and insightful comments here on changing racial attitudes, and the disparities between rich, poor, and the people who don't mind cannibalizing the disenfranchised. All this commentary done with the subtlety of the slowing growing suburbs that our leading lady lives in.
Monica Vitti plays our "everywoman" who is our window into the Director's mind, but also herself a mere dot on the landscape. Early on, we see her throw away exactly what she seems to be looking for, only to pursue it in exactly the wrong place/person.
The film has a look of a sci-fi horror movie, but the horror here is emotional desolation, the destruction of nature/natural-ness, and the looming threat of nuclear war. This film, so cleanly represents the era when "duck and cover" was not only a physical act, it was an emotional state.
If you don't like film as art, you will be completely lost by the architectural city-scape ending montage, and the lack of traditional film closure. This is not a light evening of movie entertainment, but it is film making at it's non-verbal, eloquent best. Captivating, thought provoking, and meaty.
Monica Vitti plays our "everywoman" who is our window into the Director's mind, but also herself a mere dot on the landscape. Early on, we see her throw away exactly what she seems to be looking for, only to pursue it in exactly the wrong place/person.
The film has a look of a sci-fi horror movie, but the horror here is emotional desolation, the destruction of nature/natural-ness, and the looming threat of nuclear war. This film, so cleanly represents the era when "duck and cover" was not only a physical act, it was an emotional state.
If you don't like film as art, you will be completely lost by the architectural city-scape ending montage, and the lack of traditional film closure. This is not a light evening of movie entertainment, but it is film making at it's non-verbal, eloquent best. Captivating, thought provoking, and meaty.
L'Eclisse is about emptiness, meaningless capitalism and the nuclear threat.
Antonioni's 'L'Eclisse' depicts the emptiness and and meaningless of life in the post-Second World War world under the shadow of the nuclear threat. This is represented by the mushroom shaped water-tower looming outside the window in the film's early sequences, and is referred to again in newspaper headlines towards the end of the film. This film was made in 1962, a year after the Berlin crisis, and in the year of the Cuba crisis when we came very close to nuclear war between the USA and the USSR.
The film also depicts the greed of capitalism, as shown in the mad, chaotic scenes in the Rome Stock Exchange and the obsessive gambling of the mother character.
The location, with distant shots of Benito Mussolini's EUR buildings on the outskirts of Rome, also suggest a meaningless, empty, soulless Brave New World all overshadowed by the nuclear threat, where people suffer loneliness and depression and feel unable to make long-term commitments.
The film also depicts the greed of capitalism, as shown in the mad, chaotic scenes in the Rome Stock Exchange and the obsessive gambling of the mother character.
The location, with distant shots of Benito Mussolini's EUR buildings on the outskirts of Rome, also suggest a meaningless, empty, soulless Brave New World all overshadowed by the nuclear threat, where people suffer loneliness and depression and feel unable to make long-term commitments.
Lack of Communication, Emptiness and Loneliness in the Big City
In the suburb of Rome, the translator Vittoria (Monica Vitti) breaks her engagement with her boyfriend, the writer Ricardo (Francisco Rabal), after a troubled night. Vittoria goes to downtown to meet her mother (Lilla Brignone), who is addicted in Stock Market, and she meets the broker Piero (Alain Delon) in a day of crash in the Stock Market. The materialist Piero and the absent Vittoria begins a monosyllabic relationship.
"L'Eclisse" is a love story in the world of Michelangelo Antoniani, where the lack of communication, emptiness and loneliness in the big city prevails over the human feelings. The first ten or fifteen minutes with Vittoria and Riccardo alone in his apartment, practically without any words (actually very few words are spoken), is amazing, showing a couple whose love and relationship is completely exhausted. The scenes in the Stock Market of Rome are also very impressive. Monica Vitti, the favorite actress of Antonioni, shows a stunning beauty and her alienation of feelings is expressed by her face and few words along the story. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): "O Eclipse" ("The Eclipse")
"L'Eclisse" is a love story in the world of Michelangelo Antoniani, where the lack of communication, emptiness and loneliness in the big city prevails over the human feelings. The first ten or fifteen minutes with Vittoria and Riccardo alone in his apartment, practically without any words (actually very few words are spoken), is amazing, showing a couple whose love and relationship is completely exhausted. The scenes in the Stock Market of Rome are also very impressive. Monica Vitti, the favorite actress of Antonioni, shows a stunning beauty and her alienation of feelings is expressed by her face and few words along the story. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): "O Eclipse" ("The Eclipse")
Beauty and pain.
It only takes a few films to become familiar with the methodic ways of Michelangelo Antonioni. Themes of alienation, disconnection, romance without the romance and dealing with an ambiguous existential way of life. It's fascinating but challenging. I came into L'Eclisse wanting to love it because I love L'Avventura and Blowup but deliberately hard to connect to. We're thrown into a vague but disheartening scenario with depressed characters and just have to follow down that road. It has rich cinematography that has beautiful composition, but an gut- sinking emptiness. It's almost too precise and too self-aware. But that's the beauty of the film, its aesthetic is not supposed to be pleasing, even though artistically it should be. In fact, it's painful. Painful to watch the busiest life of the film being at the stock market while the rest of nature is desolate yet so picturesque. Machines and technology are prominent throughout the film and often physically get in the way of human relationships. The film is a profound and quietly poignant statement on human desires and insecurities, if a little held back by a touch of pretence and too cold for its own good.
8/10
8/10
Alain Delon's Top 10 Films, Ranked
Alain Delon's Top 10 Films, Ranked
To celebrate the life and career of Alain Delon, the actor often credited with starring in some of the greatest European films of the 1960s and '70s, we rounded up his top 10 movies, ranked by IMDb fan ratings.
Did you know
- TriviaThe Roman stock market scenes were filmed on Sundays when the market was closed. Real brokers were drafted to make it more convincing.
- Goofs(at around 1h 28 mins) Vittoria and Piero get wet from a sprinkler. The right side of Piero's jacket is wet. A minute later when they are listening to the piano player, the back of Vittoria's blouse is still wet, but Piero's jacket is dry.
- Alternate versionsWest German theatrical version was cut by approx. three minutes.
- ConnectionsEdited into Dolce Vitti (2014)
- How long is L'Eclisse?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- The Eclipse
- Filming locations
- 307 Viale dell'Umanesimo, E.U.R., Rome, Lazio, Italy(Vittoria's apartment building)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $5,947
- Runtime
- 2h 6m(126 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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