Blow-Up

Digital Restoration

featuring

David Hemmings, Vanessa Redgrave, Sarah Miles, Peter Bowles,

For his first English-language film, Michelangelo Antonioni set a metaphysical mystery in the world of fashion, at a time when the director’s metaphysics had itself become a fad; the movie and its meaning were the talk of the swingingest parties of 1966. Photographer David Hemmings snaps pictures of Vanessa Redgrave and an older man apparently trysting in a London park; later, analyzing the images, scrutinizing the grain, he believes he sees evidence of murder, but finds that the harder you look, the less you know. The same interpretive limits apply to watching Blow-Up: Is this portrayal of youth culture—with its pot parties and Yardbirds shows, its rehearsed rebellion and limitless cool—affectionate or perhaps parodic, or is it a lament over the inscrutable emptiness of hip? Is it really about philosophical depths, or fascinating surfaces? Like its closing game of mime-tennis, the film may be daring us to focus on something that doesn’t exist. Keep your eye on the ball.

Juliet Clark
FILM DETAILS 
Screenwriter
  • Michelangelo Antonioni
  • Tonino Guerra
Based On
  • A story by Julio Cortázar

Cinematographer
  • Carlo Di Palma
Language
  • English
Print Info
  • Color
  • DCP
  • 110 mins
Source
  • Warner Bros. Classics