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L'Eclisse (1962)

L'eclisse (1962) ✦ Fast

She soon encounters (Alain Delon), a hyper-kinetic, "sociopathically materialistic" stockbroker. Their ensuing romance is less a love story and more a series of tentative, awkward collisions. They kiss through glass panes and talk through fences—physical barriers that mirror their internal inability to connect.

Michelangelo Antonioni’s (1962) is the final, and arguably most radical, chapter in his "Trilogy on Modernity and its Discontents," following L’Avventura and La Notte . It is a film where objects often carry more weight than people, and silence speaks louder than dialogue. The Story of a "Non-Event" L'Eclisse (1962)

The film begins at the end of things: a long, exhausted night that culminates in the breakup between (Monica Vitti) and her lover, Riccardo (Francisco Rabal). This opening sets a tone of emotional paralysis that persists as Vittoria drifts through a sterile, rapidly modernizing Rome. Michelangelo Antonioni’s (1962) is the final, and arguably

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