The Passenger (1975 film)

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The Passenger
US theatrical release poster
Directed byMichelangelo Antonioni
Written byMark Peploe
Michelangelo Antonioni
Peter Wollen
Produced byCarlo Ponti
StarringJack Nicholson
Maria Schneider
Steven Berkoff
Ian Hendry
Jenny Runacre
CinematographyLuciano Tovoli
Edited byMichelangelo Antonioni
Franco Arcalli
Music byIvan Vandor
Color processMetrocolor
Production
companies
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Compagnia Cinematografica Champion
CIPI Cinematografica
Les Films Concordia
Distributed byCinema International Corporation
Release dates
  • 28 February 1975 (1975-02-28) (Italy)
  • 9 April 1975 (1975-04-09) (US)
Running time
126 minutes
CountriesItaly
Spain
France
LanguagesEnglish
German
Spanish
French
Box office$768,744 (2005 re-release)[1]

The Passenger (Italian: Professione: reporter) is a 1975 drama film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. Written by Antonioni, Mark Peploe, and Peter Wollen, the film is about a disillusioned Anglo-American journalist, David Locke (Jack Nicholson), who assumes the identity of a dead businessman while working on a documentary in Chad, unaware that he is impersonating an arms dealer with connections to the rebels in the current civil war. Along the way, he is accompanied by an unnamed young woman (Maria Schneider).

The Passenger was the final film in Antonioni's three-picture deal with producer Carlo Ponti and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, after Blowup (1966) and Zabriskie Point (1970). During the film's release, it was in competition for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival.[2]

The film was originally released by MGM in the United States, but after a dispute, Nicholson received the film rights and reportedly kept it out of distribution.[3] In 2005, Sony Pictures Classics remastered the film and re-released it on DVD.[4]

Plot

David Locke is a disaffected television journalist in northern

Land Rover gets stuck in a sand dune after being abandoned, there, by guides. After a long walk through the Sahara back to his hotel, an exhausted Locke discovers that a fellow guest (Robertson), an Englishman with whom he had struck up a casual friendship, died in his room that same night. Locke decides to switch identities with Robertson and reports his own death at the front desk, the plan going off without a hitch. Locke collects Robertson's belongings, which include a pistol, an appointment book and passport
. He alters the passport to carry his own photo.

In

arms dealer
for the same rebels whom Locke had been trying to contact in Chad.

In Barcelona, Locke spots Martin, who is trying to find Robertson. Locke encounters an architecture student, credited only as 'Girl', while trying to hide in a

Gaudi building, the Palau Güell. Later (at La Pedrera
, another Gaudi building on Paseo de Gracia), Locke asks the girl to fetch his belongings from the hotel so that he will not be seen there by Martin, who is watching the lobby. Martin overhears her while she collects her baggage, and speaks to her outside. She offers to take him to meet Robertson, suggesting he follow her in a taxi, but she manages to lose him. She and Locke leave Barcelona, becoming lovers while on the run. Flush with cash from the down payment on undelivered arms, Locke is drawn to keep a meeting scheduled in Robertson's diary. His appointed contact, however, does not show up. Meanwhile, the men arranging the arms deal are abducted, interrogated, and beaten by hitmen operating for the Chadian government.

Rachel receives Locke's belongings, returned from Africa. Having heard from Martin of his unsuccessful chase in Barcelona, Rachel is shocked as she opens Locke's passport to find Robertson's photo pasted inside. As she heads to Spain to find Locke, the hitmen follow her. Rachel gets help from the Spanish police in her pursuit, but Locke and the girl continue to flee. With their getaway car damaged, Locke sends the girl away, instructing her to meet him three days later in

Tangiers. Virtually trapped, Locke checks into a hotel in the Spanish town of Osuna
, where he finds that the girl has returned and booked a double room posing as Mrs. Robertson. He again tries to persuade her to leave. She exits the hotel and dawdles around the dusty square outside, wanting to return to him. Soon the hitmen arrive at the hotel and depart just before the police arrive with Rachel. The girl joins the latter group, who find Locke dead in his room. Asked by the police whether they recognize him, Rachel says that she never knew him, but the girl says, "Yes".

Cast

Production

Development

During the 1960s, Michelangelo Antonioni had signed a three-picture deal with producer Carlo Ponti and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. His first two films were Blowup (1966) and Zabriskie Point (1970). His third project was tentatively titled Technically Sweet, which was inspired by the 1958 short story titled "L'Avventure di un Fotografo" (translated to "The Adventure of a Photographer") by Italo Calvino.[5] The title had been inspired by J. Robert Oppenheimer's remark on the atomic bomb because of the "technically sweet" theoretical problems it created. Antonioni first wrote a film treatment in 1966, and later wrote a script in collaboration with Mark Peploe, Niccolò Tucci, and Tonino Guerra.[6] After Zabriskie Point (1970) was released, Antonioni spent two years on pre-production work, including location scouting near the Amazon River.[7]

Academy Award nomination for Last Tango in Paris (1972).[5] However, Ponti grew concerned about the enormous cost of location shooting and cancelled the project.[7] In May 1975, Antonioni told the Los Angeles Times that the commercial failure of Zabriskie Point (1970) had factored into the project's cancellation.[8] The script, translated to its Italian title Tecnicamente dolce, was later published by Einaudi in 1976.[6][9]

Meanwhile, a low-budget film titled Fatal Exit was in development for Carlo Ponti Productions. The project had been written by Peploe, who was the brother of Antonioni's then-partner, Clare Peploe.[7] Initially, Mark Peploe was to direct the film, with a screenplay written by him and Peter Wollen.[10][11] However, Ponti instead asked Antonioni to direct the film, mainly because of Peploe's inexperience as a director.[12] Antonioni accepted the offer with Peploe's approval.[8] Antonioni had noticed similarities between Technically Sweet and Peploe's script because it had centered around a photojournalist. However, because of Nicholson's commitment to Chinatown (1974), Antonioni had only six weeks to rewrite the script.[11]

Filming

La Pedrera
in Barcelona, as seen in 2005. The look of the roof was quite different in 1975, during filming of The Passenger. Locke (Nicholson) asks the Girl to get his things from the hotel so as not to be seen by his friend from the BBC.

Principal photography took place in the Illizi Province of Algeria (to depict Chad), London, Munich, Barcelona and locations across south-eastern Spain throughout mid-to-late 1973.[13][failed verification]

In a long take early in the film, Nicholson's character Locke is exchanging passport photos in his hotel room, with a tape recording playing an earlier conversation between Locke and Robertson, now dead. The camera pans for 25 seconds, without a cut, to hold on Robertson's now live appearance on the balcony, when Locke appears beside him and the two of them continue talking (i.e. an in-camera in-single-shot flashback).

The film's

penultimate shot is a six-minute, 32-second long take tracking shot which begins in Locke's hotel room, looking out onto a dusty square, pushes out through the bars of the hotel window into the square, rotates 180 degrees, and finally tracks back to a close exterior view of the room's interior.[14]

  • The shot was continuous, preventing adjustment of the lens aperture as the camera left the room and entered the square. Therefore, the footage had to be captured in the late afternoon near dusk to minimize lighting contrast between the brightness outside and inside the room.
  • The camera ran on a ceiling track in the hotel room and when it came outside the window, was meant to be picked up by a hook suspended from a giant crane nearly 30 meters high. A system of gyroscopes was fitted on the camera to steady it during the switch from this smooth indoor track to the crane outside. Meanwhile, the bars on the window had been given hinges. When the camera reached the window and the bars were no longer in the field of view, they were swung away to either side. At this time, the camera's forward movement had to stop for a few seconds as the crane's hook grabbed it and took over from the track. To hide this, the lens was slowly and smoothly zoomed until the crane could pull the camera forward. Then the cameraman walked the camera in a circle around the square, giving the crew time to shut the window bars before the camera returned to look through the window from the outside this time. Antonioni directed the scene from a van by means of monitors and microphones, talking to assistants who communicated his instructions to the actors and operators.[17]

Although this is often referred to as the "final shot" of the film, it is not; the last passage shows a small driving school car pulling away in the twilight, and the camera holds on the hotel as the film's credits begin to roll.

Release

The Passenger was released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the United States on 9 April 1975. Years after the film's release, Nicholson had developed and planned to star in a film project, but MGM abandoned the project. Nicholson demanded compensation, to which MGM relinquished The Passenger to Nicholson's ownership.[3] For nearly three decades, Nicholson kept the film from circulation, although the film was briefly released on videocassette during the 1980s. In 2003, Sony Pictures Classics approached Nicholson with an offer to restore and re-release the film.[3] On 28 October 2005, the film was given a limited release in the United States, in which it earned $768,744 worldwide.[1] The film was released on DVD on 25 April 2006.

Reception

Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote the film was "a suspense melodrama, a story so basically conventional that it isn't until you're at least half‐way through it you realize it's a magnificent nightmare, and that you are on the inside looking out."[18] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film a complete four-star review, stating "The Passenger is a complex film that is obvious only in its physical beauty. And if you don't hook into that cerebral adventure story, you'll probably find the pace of the chase story to be much too slow. Viewers who connect to that other layer, however, will find a remarkable richness of image and idea ... Nicholson turns in another superior performance, managing to communicate his own brand of wise anger without puncturing Antonioni's grand design."[19] Jay Cocks, reviewing for Time magazine, praised the film's cinematography, writing the film "has some of the boldest and most supple imagery that Antonioni has achieved in years—more memorable than anything in Blow-Up or the unfortunate Zabriskie Point ... The Passenger ends with a scene that seems destined for cinematic history."[20]

Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times called the film "a masterpiece of visual beauty and rigorous artistry that is as tantalizing as it is hypnotic. It is a major achievement by one of the world's great film-makers and boasts still another of those splendid portrayals from Nicholson".[21] Penelope Gilliatt of The New Yorker called the film a "triumph of technical invention that stretches the wizardly vocabulary of film as he has never stretched it before".[22] Hank Werba of Variety wrote Antonioni "laboriously hand-fashioned an excellent film spectacle that is so marked by his own style and anguish reflections on contemporary life as to encourage further collaborative encounters."[23]

Roger Ebert initially gave the film a negative review in 1975. In 2005, he revisited the film with a more positive review, writing that it was a perceptive look at identity, alienation and the human desire to escape oneself. He also praised Schneider's performance as "a performance of breathtaking spontaneity."[24] John Simon, in his 1983 book Something to Declare, wrote disapprovingly that "Emptiness is everywhere: in landscapes and townscapes, churches and hotel rooms, and most of all in the script. Never was dialogue more pretentiously vacuous, plot more rudimentary yet preposterous, action more haphazard and spasmodic, characterization more tenuous and uninvolving, filmmaking more devoid of all but postures and pretensions".[25]

In 2012, The Passenger was ranked 110th on the

Empire magazine as one of The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time. The magazine praised the film's camerawork (by Luciano Tovoli) and the performances, particularly Nicholson's quiet and reflective performance.[27] On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 88% of 74 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.1/10. The website's consensus reads: "Antonioni's classic, a tale of lonely, estranged characters on a journey though the mysterious landscapes of identity, shimmers with beauty and uncertainty."[28] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 90 based on 20 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[29]

References

  1. ^ a b "The Passenger (1975)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  2. ^ "Festival de Cannes: The Passenger". Cannes Film Festival. Retrieved 2 May 2009.
  3. ^ a b c Goldstein, Patrick (25 October 2005). "Some vintage Jack". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  4. ^ "The Passenger—Now on DVD". Sony Pictures. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  5. ^ a b c McGilligan 1994, p. 246.
  6. ^ a b Chatman 1985, p. 176.
  7. ^ a b c Chatman & Duncan 2004, p. 134.
  8. ^
    Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  9. ^ "Tecnicamente dolce". Archivio Michelangelo Antonioni (in Italian). Archived from the original on 19 May 2022. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  10. ^ Hall, William (30 December 1973). "Reality and Vision Meet for Antonioni". Los Angeles Times. Calendar, pp. 16, 51. Retrieved 17 November 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  11. ^ a b Rifkin 1982, p. 120.
  12. Sight & Sound
    . pp. 30–31. Retrieved 19 November 2022 – via Internet Archive.
  13. ^ Taylor, John Russell. ""American audiences' greater education seems to have evaporated": Jack Nicholson interviewed in 1974". BFI. Retrieved 5 June 2022.
  14. ^ Chatman 1985, pp. 183–185, 202.
  15. ^ David Saul Rosenfeld (2007). "Note 25". Michelangelo Antionioni's L'eclisse. A broken piece of wood, a matchbook, a woman, a man. Retrieved 24 May 2010.
  16. ^ Alex el Curioso (4 August 2009). "El Reportero Antoninon escena final". YouTube. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 24 May 2010.
  17. ^ Interview with Antonioni in L'ultima sequenza di Professione: Reporter (1974) directed by André S. Labarthe, available with English subtitles as The Last Sequence of The Passenger.
  18. ^ Canby, Vincent (20 April 1975). "Antonioni's Haunting View". The New York Times. Section 2, p. 1. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  19. Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  20. ^ Cocks, Jay (14 April 1975). "Cinema: A Secondhand Life". Time. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  21. ^ Thomas, Kevin (8 April 1975). "An Odyssey in a New Invention". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, pp. 1, 18. Retrieved 16 November 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  22. ^ Gilliatt, Penelope (14 April 1975). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  23. ^ Werba, Hank (19 March 1975). "Film Reviews: The Passenger". Variety.
  24. ^ Ebert, Roger (11 November 2005). "Antonioni's intriguing disappearing act". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  25. .
  26. ^ "The 100 Greatest Films of All Time". Sight & Sound. BFI. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  27. ^ Green, Willie (10 March 2008). "The 500 Greatest Movies Of All Time". Empire. Archived from the original on 6 April 2021.
  28. ^ "The Passenger". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 29 December 2021. Edit this at Wikidata
  29. ^ "The Passenger (re-release)". Metacritic. Red Ventures. Retrieved 16 November 2022.

Bibliography

External links