Film

What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases

Get 2 for 1 cinema tickets with Orange Click Here

Search cinema listings

Browse cinemas A-Z

Search 20,000 reviews

 

La Notte (1961)

Director: Michelangelo Antonioni

Average user rating
2 reviews

Movie review

From Time Out Film Guide

The middle section of Antonioni's trilogy on bourgeois alienation, La Notte covers twenty-four hours in the breakdown of a 'typical' middle class marriage. The husband (Mastroianni) is a novelist with a block, spineless, out of touch with his own instincts; the wife (Moreau) is a bored socialite who understands her own predicament but doesn't know how to get past it. Scene after scene is introduced solely to make laboured points about their emotional/ social/philosophical problems; Antonioni's intimations of a broader political context are startlingly shallow. It's impossible to discern the relevance of this kind of film-making, which is doubtless why nobody (including Antonioni) practises it any more.

Author: TR 0000-00-00 00:00:00

Time Out Film Guide


  • Print this page
  • Send to a friend
Get 2 for 1 cinema tickets with Orange Click Here

User reviews of this film

  • Technoguy said...
    Posted on Jul 04 2008 18:30 La Notte
    The middle of the ‘incommunicativity trilogy’. If art is life squeezed through a repression. Then Antonioni is Fellini sqeezed through a repression. La Dolce Vita came a year before with Mastroianni ,one of his key roles as the playboy
    journalist. Here he is a serious intellectual,a novelist whose marriage is all but
    over, exhausted with his life and writing.Similarly this film has no truck with the divine as Fellini’s film does,albeit only if to say the age of faith is over. This is
    a secularist’s film with all the appurtenances of modern life like modern architecture,rockets,gatherings of people,book openings.We get 24 hours in the life of this married couple.Alienation is a strong theme,uncertainty.People are onlookers in their own lives.There is a concentration on their inner lives but
    they have no language to communicate it.As on of the characters says ‘when I
    try to communicate,love goes’. Morality is old fashioned,they carry the baggage of their emotions through the checkpoint of the modern world. Antonionni
    uses the dynamics of architecture,horizontals and verticals to show the backdrop
    to a world that’s in transition between the old and new. They cling to a pathetic
    remnant of the old codes. As a couple they do not engage with each other but turn up together at book signings and parties.They are open to other relationships but neither is unfaithful. They go out together but face in different directions,drift apart,go off with other people. Moreau acts as Lidia who goes
    on solitary walks around the streets of Milan. She meets young men fighting,
    she demands that it stops after observing it awhile;she also sees another grouping of young men setting off rockets.We are drawn into her personality
    as she looks outwards and we are drawn into reacting through her. Giovanni
    attracts a rich business man with his creative talents.The business world is seen
    as glamorous,at the forefront of change. He is attracted towards this man’s
    daughter(Monica Vitti) Valentina and they play with the compact. However
    there is no adultery and Giovanni maybe feels the job offer is like selling out.
    Nothing much happens at the rich people’s party apart from people getting wet
    or diving into the swimming pool fully clothed. The couple are essentially kind and decent people and treat each other well. They reach out to each other with
    small gestures but do not connect like a cat looking at a statue.they themselves
    being like objects in the landscape. Their last grope on a golf course may be an
    act of desperation to camouflage the fact they are holed in a bunker.Or maybe not.
    La Notte
    The middle of the ‘incommunicativity trilogy’. If art is life squeezed through a repression. Then Antonioni is Fellini sqeezed through a repression. La Dolce Vita came a year before with Mastroianni ,one of his key roles as the playboy
    journalist. Here he is a serious intellectual,a novelist whose marriage is all but
    over, exhausted with his life and writing.Similarly this film has no truck with the divine as Fellini’s film does,albeit only if to say the age of faith is over. This is
    a secularist’s film with all the appurtenances of modern life like modern architecture,rockets,gatherings of people,book openings.We get 24 hours in the life of this married couple.Alienation is a strong theme,uncertainty.People are onlookers in their own lives.There is a concentration on their inner lives but
    they have no language to communicate it.As on of the characters says ‘when I
    try to communicate,love goes’. Morality is old fashioned,they carry the baggage of their emotions through the checkpoint of the modern world. Antonionni
    uses the dynamics of architecture,horizontals and verticals to show the backdrop
    to a world that’s in transition between the old and new. They cling to a pathetic
    remnant of the old codes. As a couple they do not engage with each other but turn up together at book signings and parties.They are open to other relationships but neither is unfaithful. They go out together but face in different directions,drift apart,go off with other people. Moreau acts as Lidia who goes
    on solitary walks around the streets of Milan. She meets young men fighting,
    she demands that it stops after observing it awhile;she also sees another grouping of young men setting off rockets.We are drawn into her personality
    as she looks outwards and we are drawn into reacting through her. Giovanni
    attracts a rich business man with his creative talents.The business world is seen
    as glamorous,at the forefront of change. He is attracted towards this man’s
    daughter(Monica Vitti) Valentina and they play with the compact. However
    there is no adultery and Giovanni maybe feels the job offer is like selling out.
    Nothing much happens at the rich people’s party apart from people getting wet
    or diving into the swimming pool fully clothed. The couple are essentially kind and decent people and treat each other well. They reach out to each other with
    small gestures but do not connect like a cat looking at a statue.they themselves
    being like objects in the landscape. Their last grope on a golf course may be an
    act of desperation to camouflage the fact they are holed in a bunker.Or maybe not.
    Report as inappropriate
  • Abhibrata said...
    Posted on Jan 28 2008 15:29 The film depits the mid-life crisis faced by a middle class intellectual couple. Apparently the film seems slow paced and repeatation of the same thoughts and revelations of an already irrevocably broken marriage. However a closer look reveals more subtle aspects of love , marriage and persistent understanding in longstanding and often assumed relationships. The director also touches upon the insecurities emerging from the fear of lonliness in the characters involved. Definitely not of the best by the director, most of the cinematic metaphors are too blatant and repeptative. there are too many instances to drive home that the marriage is over, which becoms very clear to the audience pretty early in the film, and the audience is left asking for "what happened next?". However in the defence of the director, the film takes multiple perspetives at the dead relationship. More like a post mortem of an already dead person and the various perspective...lust,love,societal confusions and helplessness.
    Report as inappropriate

What do you think?
Post your review now

clear rating
Min 1 star. Zero stars will be treated as unrated.

*mandatory fields





Top Stories

Hippies who work for The Man

Hippies who work for The Man

To celebrate George Clooney comedy 'The Men who Stare at Goats', we look back at six memorable onscreen hippies who fought the system from within

Roland Emmerich's guide to disaster movies

Roland Emmerich's guide to disaster movies

Ahead of the release of '2012', Roland Emmerich offers his ten tips on creating the perfect global catastrophe

Grant Heslov: interview

Grant Heslov: interview

Grant Heslov, director of 'The Men who Stare at Goats' talks about his old pal George Clooney, his interest in the paranormal, and his fond memories of working on 'Happy Days'

The Coen brothers discuss 'A Serious Man'

The Coen brothers discuss 'A Serious Man'

Masters of contrary comedy, Joel and Ethan Coen have struck gold again with their latest, ‘A Serious Man’

Ten inspirations behind 'Avatar'?

Ten inspirations behind 'Avatar'?

Time Out ponders the influences behind James Cameron's anticipated space-opera on the basis of the trailer

Michael Jackson's This Is It: review

Michael Jackson's This Is It: review

Kenny Ortega's posthumous concert film is a rousing eulogy for one of pop's great enigmas

Michael Haneke: The man behind the menace

Michael Haneke: The man behind the menace

From Cannes to Munich to London, Dave Calhoun tours Michael Haneke's Palme d'Or winner, 'The White Ribbon'

Lone Scherfig talks 'An Education'

Lone Scherfig talks 'An Education'

Danish director Lone Scherfig was an unlikely choice for a very English affair like 'An Education'. Cath Clarke meets her

How Jane Campion brought John Keats back to life

How Jane Campion brought John Keats back to life

Time Out gets Romantic with the ‘difficult’ New Zealander about her new film, 'Bright Star'

Time Out's 50 greatest animated films with commentary by Terry Gilliam

Time Out's 50 greatest animated films with commentary by Terry Gilliam

In celebration of the release of Pixar's 'Up' and Wes Anderson's 'Fantastic Mr Fox', read our rundown of fifty classic feature length animations