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The Passenger
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The mutual admiration between actor Jack Nicholson and director Michelangelo Antonioni resulted in the psychological drama The Passenger. Nicholson plays David Locke, a disillusioned American reporter who is sent on a grueling mission to North Africa. When he stumbles across the body of a dead man in his hotel room, Locke, long desirous of starting life over again, assumes the corpse's identity. He soon discovers that the man he's pretending to be is involved in espionage activities on behalf of a terrorist group. Making the acquaintance of a mysterious woman (Maria Schneider), he finds a kindred spirit -- a woman as "lost" as he. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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sarcastigsarcastig Professione: Reporter aka The P ...
by sarcastig in As cool as a Fruitstand
loved it.
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""This first piece of the film in this desert is a man looking for something, and that's really enough of a story for Antonioni"A confession: I love that there's such a thing as DVD commentaries, but I rarely take the time to listen to them. It feels to much like a purely analytic pursuit, in a way: of course I analyse movies also while I watch them but that does not mean I cannot be swept away and involved by them, but when you're listening to a commentary you're seeing a movie from a much bigger remove, with a layer of analysis between you and the film.In retrospect, it's obvious that this would be an ideal way to see an Antonioni movie, who, as Nicholson points out on his wonderful commentary track "(films) at a dispassionate distance".It's a commentary like all commentaries should be: it offers insight, funny anecdotes, but Nicholson's also not afraid of letting some of the scenes play out, even professing his hope at the end that he didn't distract too much from the movie. It's ... " [More]
sarcastigsarcastig Re: What are your favorite endi ...
by sarcastig in What An Ending
loved it.
"I can think of so many perfect endings...In fact, almost all the movies I love have good endings, because I think it's needed to go from liking to loving a movie. But a few that came immediately to mind: *Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind*The Third Man: it's a very long shot of the main female character watching towards the camera, where the main character is standing by his car. It takes about 3 minutes, with the only sound being the great zithar music. Then she gets to the camera, and without even looking at the guy, walks past it and out of the frame. It's hard to explain why it's so perfect, but just watch the movie, it's worth it.*The Passenger: fabulous, and rightfully famous, final scene. I won't reveal anything because you have to try to figure it out yourself*Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Bonnie & Clyde, and Thelma& Louise. Somehow these "1 pair on the lam" movies tend to end the same way, the only way they can end, but that doesn& ... " [More]
bradbrad For film loving friends: The Pa ...
by brad in Brad Movies
hasn't rated it.
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"I was asked by my friend, Paul, to list several movies I would consider giving to my favorite film-loving friend for Christmas this year. Paul and I used to get together once a week to watch films. Since he was asking the question, I decided to make him my subject. This past year, I’ve watched several films I thought, "Man, I wish I had been able to see this with Paul." The Passenger was one of these. I would like to say upfront that beyond the bullshit that I have written below, I just plain loved the movie so much I wanted to share it with my friend.   David Locke (Jack Nicholson) steps out of a stranded Land Rover in the desert, sand in every direction.  He's just come back from a fruitless search for a militia. He is a reporter with a stranded vehicle and a stranded life. He comes across a fellow English traveler who has died in his sleep in the room next to his.  Remarkably this man looks a 
lot like him. David makes an impulsive decision and changes identities with the dea ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
The Passenger is a late Antonioni film, made only about a decade after his most influential works had been completed. After the success of Blow-Up (1966), Antonioni was free to write his own ticket, but the result was the disastrous Zabriskie Point (1970), which despite some interesting sequences (particularly the last reel, depicting a sprawling ranch house in the desert exploding repeatedly in slow motion, to the soundtrack of Pink Floyd's "Be Careful with That Ax, Eugene") was a commercial and critical failure that made financing difficult to come by for the director's next project. Combining forces with Jack Nicholson as his lead actor, Antonioni made The Passenger as his first resolutely commercial project, and the results are decidedly mixed. Never comfortable working in English (the best sequences of Blow-Up are conspicuously wordless), Antonioni's tale of jaded television reporter David Locke (Nicholson), who swaps identities with a dead man he comes across in a hotel in Africa while on assignment, plays out like a rather listless remake of one of the director's 1960s classics, in which Alain Delon or Marcello Mastroianni took on the role of one of Antonioni's typically disaffected, seemingly doomed protagonists. The last shot of the film is an extraordinary technical tour de force, but it can't disguise the essential emptiness of the project, which leans much too heavily on Nicholson's screen presence to get its message across. One is never convinced that Nicholson's character is as bored with life as Antonioni would like us to believe; Nicholson's screen persona is simply too resourceful to allow himself to spiritually disintegrate. Revered by many as one of Antonioni's last great films, The Passenger finally seems like a shadow of his past work in film, lacking the necessary commitment to the material that made his earlier works so austere and stunningly original. ~ Wheeler Winston Dixon, All Movie Guide
 



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