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La Notte (The Night)

 

  Written and Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni

Italy-France 1961 / Drama / 115 min / Black & White / Monaural / 1.66: 1  Widescreen / NTSC /  In Italian with English Subtitles
Marcello Mastroianni, Jeanne Moreau, Monica Vitti, Bernhard Wicki, Maria Pia Luzi, Rosy Mazzacurati 

La Notte is another of Michelangelo Antonioni's cinematic interrupted journeys. Just as no one solved the central mystery in Antonioni's L'Avventura, neither does anyone truly enjoy the literary party that is La Notte's centerpiece. The party is being thrown to celebrate the publication of author Marcello Mastrioanni's new novel. But before he even reaches the door of the house, Mastrioanni's evening is ruined when his wife Jeanne Moreau announces suddenly she is disgusted with him--this reaction evidently triggered by an earlier visit to a dying friend. Moreau skips out on the party to wander the streets of Rome, searching for...for what? Meanwhile, Mastrioanni tries to inaugurate an empty affair with Monica Vitti, the daughter of a wealthy industrialist. The very elements that drive Mastrioanni and Moreau apart at the beginning of the film reunite them at the end. Maybe. L'Avventura and La Notte were the first two chapters in Antonioni's "barreness and alienation" trilogy; the third, L'Eclisse, was released two years later.

 
       
Bonus Features: New digital transfer, with restored image and sound / Video introduction by Martin Scorsese / Audio commentary by Peter Bondanella, author of Italian Cinema: From Neorealism to the Present and The Cinema of Federico Fellini / Federico Fellini's Autobiography, a documentary made for Italian television by Paquito del Bosco / Optional English-dubbed soundtrack featuring the voices of Anthony Quinn and Richard Basehart / New essay by film scholar Peter Matthews / Theatrical trailer for the English version / New and improved English subtitle translation