| Gabriele Ferzetti, Monica Vitti, Lea
Massari, Dominique Blanchar, Renzo Ricci, Dorothy de Poliolo
This ground-breaking film won a Special Jury Prize at the 1960
Cannes Film Festival and established its director, Michelangelo
Antonioni, as a major international talent. The plot concerns a
yachting trip by a small group of jaded socialites, including Sandro
(Gabriele Ferzetti), an aging architect who sold out for easy money
long ago, his mistress Anna (Lea Massari), and her friend Claudia
(Monica Vitti), who doesn't fit in with the wealthy jet-setters'
dissolute ethics. When Anna disappears during a tour of a volcanic
island, Claudia initially blames Sandro's emotionally barren behavior
toward her. As they search the island, however, Claudia and Sandro
grow closer and -- when it is apparent that Anna is gone forever
-- become lovers. Unfortunately, Sandro cannot find anything decent
inside himself and betrays Claudia with a local prostitute. Caught
in the act, Sandro has a heartrending breakdown on a desolate beach,
but Claudia silently forgives him. L'avventura caught many audiences
who were expecting a mystery by surprise; as in La notte (1961),
The Eclipse (1962), and Red Desert (1964), Antonioni is interested
less in developing a logical story than in exploring states of feeling
and breakdowns in human connection. |