Thursday 23 July 2020

European Masters of Film

At the outset, it may be mentioned that most of these confined themselves to a life-long theme & explored it exhaustively.

Michelangelo Antonioni
Federico-Fellini
Antonioni examined human alienation from his society. After his critical successes, major studios roped him in to make films with international stars. Blow-Up, Red Desert, Zabriskie Point & The Passenger achieved varying degrees of main-stream acceptance, with Satyajit Ray acerbically commenting "Perhaps the artistic significance of "Blow Up" is like Antonioni's tennis ball, which a vast number of critics & filmgoers seem to have picked up & handed back to the Maestro. I, for one, am still looking."

His fellow Italian, Fellini went to the other extreme of whole-hearted embrace of a fantastical, decadent life, impossibly working air borne statues of Jesus Christ & Roman Orgies into the body of his work, including the auto-biographical "Amarcord."

Visconti, showing dysfunctional families like "Rocco & his brothers" went onto to make opulent period pieces like "The Leopard" with (the possibly miscast) Burt Lancaster in the eponymous role.

Vittorio De Sica
Ingmar Bergman
De Sica, starting with the neo-realist trend setter "Bicycles Thieves" used the star power of Sophia Loren & Marcello Mastroianni to make meaningful, popular films.

The French "New-Wave", fuelled by the critics turned auteurs, charted individual paths. The most accessible, Truffaut, charted the growth of a boy into adulthood, in a series of films starting with "Four Hundred Blows" similar to Ray's "Apu Trilogy", though he is supposed to have walked out of the screening of "Pather Panchali", the fastidious Francois revolted at the Brahmin family eating with their hands!

Claude Chabrol, the acolyte of Hitchcock, expectedly made suspenseful movies.

Resnais, the man who pioneered the use of non-linear time in his debut film "Hiroshima mon amour" took a break from his pre-occupation with non-chronological presentations in his "Stavisky", a story of a  con-man with access to the highest in the land, played with aplomb by Jean Paul Belmondo.

The iconoclast Bunuel, starting from slicing eyeballs on screen, made other anti-establishment films & also a conventional, well-made "Robinson Crusoe."

Satyajit Ray
The Swedish Bergman, delved into the innermost recesses of the human psyche, especially the female one, but occassionally redeemed himself by wondrous visions like the baby Michael & his mother appearing like the Madonna & Child, in his "The Seventh Seal."

To end on a lighter note, the anti establishment Godard made anarchic films which none liked. When Satyajit Ray was told about this, he said "I also don't like him. But his films are filled with striking things."

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