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Il Grido

Italy

1957

115 Min
Black and White
Italian
Subtitled in English
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Michelangelo Antonioni

PROD Franco Cancellieri

SCR Michelangelo Antonioni, Elio Bartolini

DP Ennio De Concini

CAST Gianni Di Venanzo, Alida Valli, Betsy Blair, Dorian Gray, Steve Cochran

Synopsis

A rare male melodrama from a director known for his collaborations with beautiful women, Il Grido is a fascinating link in the career of Michelangelo Antonioni, marking his transition from the neorealist impulses expressed in his early features and documentaries of the 1950s toward the more precise and rarified personal approach of such classic works as L’Avventura (1960), La Notte (1961) and Red Desert (1964). Shot in Antonioni’s native Po Valley region, Il Grido uniquely focuses on a working class protagonist rather than the bourgeoisie of his later films. The story concerns Aldo (Steve Cochran), a refinery mechanic who, unable or unwilling to commit to his long-term affair with a married woman (Alida Valli), escapes his dreary job and life in his hometown and travels the countryside searching for something different and more fulfilling. The episodic narrative finds him traveling from the arms of one woman to another with only fleeting satisfaction: the home of an old flame (Betsy Blair), a brief life living with a lonely widow (Dorian Gray) running a filling station, and the comfort of a prostitute (Lyn Shaw) living in a dilapidated and impoverished fishing shanty town. A precursor of the alienated wanderers so key to Antonioni’s later, better known work, Aldo lives in and passes through an unfriendly but eerily beautiful landscape, formed by alien images of stern, solitary tree lines, abstract clusters of giant spool wheels, a random river boat race, and empty roadsides. Connecting the neorealist emphasis on actual locations tied to specific social and economic realities with a modern look at the estrangement, hostility, and dissatisfaction found in such an environment, Il Grido stands as one of Antonioni’s best works, and one that powerfully unites the famed socially conscious works of the immediate Italian post-war period with the flourishing fame of Italian art-house auteurs in the 1960s.

Director

Michelangelo_antonioni

Michelangelo Antonioni

Italian filmmaker Michelangelo Antonioni redefined the concept of narrative cinema, challenging the accepted notions at the heart of storytelling, realism, drama, and the world at large; his films – a seminal body of enigmatic and intricate mood pieces – rejected action in favor of contemplation, championing image and design over character and story. Haunted by a sense of instability and impermanence, his work defined a cinema of possibilities, a shifting landscape of thoughts and ideas devoid of resolution; in Antonioni’s world, riddles were not answered, but simply evaporated into other riddles.

Antonioni was born on September 29, 1912, in Ferrara, Italy; as a child, his interests included painting and building architectural models (an interest which continued in the design and decor of his films). After graduating from high school, he attended the University of Bologna, where he initially studied classics but later emerged with a degree in economics. While he was at college… read more

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Displaying 2 wall posts.
Picture of Kim Packard

Kim Packard

24Oct09

Found something interesting on Il Grido in the "Film Analysis Guide":http://classes.yale.edu/film-analysis/ from Yale Film Studies website. (Under Part 6: Analysis)  
Picture of Pedja

Pedja

19Oct09

Dirty shoes on misty paths by the river and asphalt road near the gas station are not enough for a runaway. Fascinating realism.  

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Il Grido [The Outcry], 1957

By Acquarello on January 23, 2008
A rugged, inexpressive refinery mechanic, Aldo (Steve Cochran), hurries home after being summoned by his married lover, Irma (Alida Valli). Irma has been informed of her husband’s death in Australia, and
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Michelangelo Antonioni

By James Brown on December 19, 2007
The films of Michelangelo Antonioni are aesthetically complex – critically stimulating though elusive in meaning. They are ambiguous works that pose difficult questions and resist simple conclusions. Classical
read article

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