Michelangelo Antonioni, (born Sept. 29, 1912, Ferrara, Italy—died July 30, 2007, Rome), Italian film director and producer. He wrote film reviews and studied filmmaking before directing his short film People of the Po Valley (1947). His first major film, The Girlfriends (1955), was followed by the international successes The Adventure (1960), The Eclipse (1962), and Blow-up (1966). His other films include The Red Desert (1964), Zabriskie Point (1970), and The Passenger (1974). In Antonioni’s films, plot and dialogue are subordinated to the visual image, which becomes a metaphor of human existence rather than a record of it.
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directing Summary
Directing, the craft of controlling the evolution of a performance out of material composed or assembled by an author. The performance may be live, as in a theatre and in some broadcasts, or it may be recorded, as in motion pictures and the majority of broadcast material. The term is also used in
film Summary
Film, series of still photographs on film, projected in rapid succession onto a screen by means of light. Because of the optical phenomenon known as persistence of vision, this gives the illusion of actual, smooth, and continuous movement. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film