BLOWUP


'''Blowup''' (also rendered as '''Blow-Up''') is an award-winning 1966 British-Italian art film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni and was that director's first English language film. It tells the story of a photographer's involvement with a murder case. The film was inspired by the short story "Las Babas del Diablo" by Argentinian writer Julio Cortázar, and by the work, habits, and mannerisms of Swinging London photographer David Bailey.
''Blowup'' stars David Hemmings, Vanessa Redgrave, Sarah Miles, John Castle, and Jane Birkin. The screenplay was written by Antonioni and Tonino Guerra, with the English dialogue being written by British playwright Edward Bond. The film was produced by Carlo Ponti, who had contracted Antonioni to make three English language films for MGM (the others were ''Zabriskie Point'' and ''The Passenger'').

Contents
Synopsis
Celebrity appearances
Filming locations
Controversy
Awards
Academy Awards
BAFTA Awards
Cannes Film Festival
Golden Globe Awards
Influence
See also
External links
Notes
Further information

Synopsis


The story concerns a photographer (Hemmings) who may or may not have inadvertently preserved evidence of a murder, which may or may not involve a woman (Redgrave) who visits the photographer in his studio. As is typical with Antonioni films, the story does not follow a conventional narrative structure.
David Hemmings

As a professional photographer, the main character mixes with the rich and famous in the London of the sixties. One day he chances upon two lovers in a park and takes photos of them. The woman of the couple pursues him, eventually finding his apartment and desperately trying to get the film. This leads the photographer to investigate the film, making blowups (enlargements) of the photos. This process seems to reveal a body, but the director cleverly uses the heavy film grain and black and white imagery to obscure the image. This drives the photographer to keep making blowups and try to find the truth.
She asks for the pictures.

He does eventually find the body in the park, but this time, unfortunately and surprisingly, he is without his camera. He tries to get a friend to act as witness, but later the body is gone. The viewer never learns whether there has been a real murder or not.
Ultimately, the film is about reality and how we perceive it or think we perceive it. This aspect is stressed by the final scene, one of many famous scenes in the film, when the photographer watches a mimed tennis match and, after a moment of amused hesitation, enters the mimes' own version of reality by picking up the invisible ball and throwing it back to the two players. A tight shot shows his continued watching of the match, and, suddenly, we even hear the ball being played back and forth. Another version of reality has been created. Then, at the very end, Hemmings, standing all alone in the green grass of the park, suddenly disappears, removed by his director, Antonioni.

Celebrity appearances


The film contains appearances from various famous people of the day, and some people who would become famous later.
In a scene near the end, The Yardbirds perform, Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck play side by side until Beck smashes his guitar ''à la'' The Who. Michael Palin of Monty Python's Flying Circus fame can be seen very briefly in the crowd in this scene, and future media personality Janet Street-Porter can be seen dancing in stripey trousers.
Antonioni had considered using the bands Tomorrow, He also considered The Velvet Underground, but guitarist Sterling Morrison's drug convictions prevented the band from getting work permits in the United Kingdom.[1]

Filming locations


The first scene (with the mimes acting) was filmed on the Plaza of The Economist Building (Piccadilly, London, 1959-64, project by Alison and Peter Smithson). The park scenes were filmed at Maryon Park, Charlton, southeast London, and the park is little changed since the making of the film. The street with the many maroon-coloured shop fronts is Stockwell Road, and the shops belonged to motorcycle dealer Pride & Clark. The scene where Thomas sees the mysterious woman from his car, then proceeds to follow her, was shot in Regent Street, London. He stops at Heddon Street, where the cover shot of David Bowie's Ziggy Stardust LP was later photographed.

Controversy


''Blowup'' was controversial for its sexual content: it was the first British film to feature full frontal female nudity. MGM failed to obtain approval for it from the MPAA Production Code in America, but released anyway through their subsidiary Premier Productions, a key event in the Code's eventual collapse.

Awards


Academy Awards


★ Nominated: Best Director - Michelangelo Antonioni

★ Nominated: Original Screenplay - Michelangelo Antonioni, Tonino Guerra, Edward Bond
BAFTA Awards


★ Nominated: Best British Film - Michelangelo Antonioni

★ Nominated: Best British Art Direction (Colour) - Assheton Gorton

★ Nominated: Best British Cinematography (Colour) - Carlo Di Palma
Cannes Film Festival


★ ''Won'': Grand Prix - Michelangelo Antonioni
Golden Globe Awards


★ Nominated: Best English-Language Foreign Film

Influence


Brian De Palma's ''Blow Out'' (1981), starring John Travolta, which alludes to ''Blowup'', used sound recording rather than photography as its central motif. In the DVD commentary to his 1974 film ''The Conversation'', which is also about sound recording, Francis Ford Coppola said he, too, was inspired by ''Blow Up'' in writing the screenplay.
In Mel Brooks's film ''High Anxiety'', a minor plot line involves a bumbling chauffeur who takes a picture showing the evil assassin (wearing a latex mask of Brooks's character's face) firing a gun at point-blank range at someone; he makes blow-ups until he can see the ''real'' Brooks's character, standing in the elevator in the background. (Technically speaking, the chauffeur does not make blow-ups; the joke is that he simply makes bigger and bigger enlargements until he has one the size of a wall.)
Indie filmmaker Jonathan Blitstein has said that the last scene of his 2007 film ''Let Them Chirp Awhile'' was trying to evoke the tennis ball scene at the end of ''Blowup''. A line in the film during which actor Justin Rice as "Bobby" mentions to "Dara" played by actress Laura Breckenridge his love for the famous "tennis ball scene" was deleted from the final cut.
This film also inspired the Indian movie ''Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron'', in which two photographers inadvertently capture the murder of a city mayor on their cameras and later discover this when the images are enlarged. The park in which the murder occurs is aptly named "Antonioni Park".
The comedy features a parody of the scene in which Hemmings' character photographs a model while barking commands and voicing enthusiasm.
This film also has a heavy influence on the music video for Amerie's "Take Control", from her 2007 album, ''Because I Love It''.[2]

See also



Assassinations in fiction

External links





Collection of pictures taken on the set

Alternative Film Guide in depth review of film DVD

Where Did They Film That? — film entry

Peter Bowles about Blow-Up's filming

Notes


1. Victor Bockris and Gerard Malanga, ''Uptight: The Story of 'The Velvet Underground''.
2. "NEW RELEASE: Amerie "Take Control"". Video Static. January 9 2007. Retrieved July 30 2007.

Further information



★ Brunette, Peter. Audio commentary on the 2005 DVD (Iconic Films).

★ Hemmings, David. ''Blow-Up… and Other Exaggerations: The Autobiography of David Hemmings''.

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