Zabriskie Point (film)

Zabriskie Point

Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni
Produced by Carlo Ponti
Screenplay by
Story by Michelangelo Antonioni
Starring
Music by
Cinematography Alfio Contini
Edited by Franco Arcalli
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release dates
  • February 9, 1970 (1970-02-09) (United States)
Running time
110 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $7 million[1]
Box office $1 million[1][Note 1]

Zabriskie Point /zəˈbrɪski/ is a 1970 American drama film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, widely noted at the time for its setting in the counterculture of the United States in the late 1960s. Some of the film's scenes were shot on location at Zabriskie Point in Death Valley.

Zabriskie Point was the second of three English-language films that Antonioni had been contracted to direct for producer Carlo Ponti and to be distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The other two were Blowup (1966) and The Passenger (1975).

Zabriskie Point was an overwhelming commercial failure,[3] and was panned by most critics upon release;.[4] The film has been considered to be one of the worst films of all time.[5] Its critical acclaim, however, has increased massively since its release. It has achieved somewhat of a cult status and is noted for its cinematography, use of music, and direction.[6]

Plot

In a room at a university campus in 1970, white and black students argue about an impending student strike. Mark (Mark Frechette) leaves the meeting after saying he is "willing to die, but not of boredom" for the cause, which draws criticism from the young white radicals. Following a mass arrest at the campus protest, Mark visits a police station hoping to bail his roommate out of jail. He is told to wait but goes to the lock-up area, asks further about bail for his roommate, is rebuffed, calls out to the arrested students and faculty and is arrested. He gives his name as Karl Marx, which a duty officer types as "Carl Marx". After he is released from jail, Mark and another friend buy firearms from a Los Angeles gun shop, saying they need them for "self-defense" to "protect our women."

In a downtown Los Angeles office building, successful real estate executive Lee Allen (Rod Taylor) reviews a television commercial for Sunny Dunes, a new resort-like real estate development in the desert. Instead of actors or models, the slickly produced commercial features casually dressed, smiling mannequins. In the next scene Allen talks with his associate (G. D. Spradlin) about the greater Los Angeles area's very rapid growth as the two drive through crowded streets.

Mark goes to a bloody campus confrontation between students and police. Some students are tear-gassed and at least one is shot. As Mark reaches for a gun in his boot, a Los Angeles policeman is seen being fatally shot, although it is unclear by whom.[7] Mark flees the campus and rides a city bus to suburban Hawthorne where, after failing to buy a sandwich on credit from a local blue-collar delicatessen, he walks to Hawthorne Municipal Airport (California), steals a small Cessna 210 aircraft and flies into the desert.

Meanwhile, Daria (Daria Halprin), "a sweet, pot-smoking post-teenybopper of decent inclinations", is driving across the desert towards Phoenix in a 1950s-era Buick automobile to meet her boss, Lee, who may or may not also be her lover.[7] Along the way Daria is searching for a man, who works with "emotionally disturbed" children from Los Angeles. She finds the young boys near a roadhouse in the Mojave desert but they tease, taunt, and grab at her, boldly asking for "a piece of ass", to which she asks in reply, "are you sure you'd know what to do with it?"

Daria flees in her car. While filling its radiator with water, she is spied from the air by Mark, who buzzes her car and then flies only 15 feet over Daria as she lies face down in the sand. He throws a T-shirt out of the window of the aircraft for her to pick up. Daria goes from upset to curious and smiling during this sequence.

They later meet at the desert shack of an old man, where Mark asks her for a lift so he can buy gasoline for the aircraft. The two then wander to Zabriskie Point, where they make love and the site's geological formations seem to come alive in a dusty orgy. [Note 2]

Later, a California highway patrolman suspiciously questions Daria. Hidden behind a portable toilet meant for tourists, Mark takes aim at the policeman but Daria stands between the two of them to block this, apparently saving the policeman's life before he drives away. Daria asks Mark if he was the one who killed the cop in Los Angeles. He states that he wanted to, but someone else shot the officer first and that he "never got off a shot".

Getting back to the stolen aircraft, they paint it with politically charged slogans and psychedelic colors. Daria pleads with Mark to travel with her and leave the aircraft but Mark is intent on returning and taking the risks that it involves. He flies back to Los Angeles and lands the plane at the airport in Hawthorne. The police (along with some radio and television reporters) are waiting for him. and patrol cars chase the aircraft down the runway. Rather than stopping, Mark tries to turn the taxiing aircraft around across the grass and is shot to death by one of the policemen.

Daria learns about Mark's death on the car radio. She drives to Lee's lavish desert home, "a desert Berchtesgaden"[7] set high on a rock outcropping near Phoenix, where she sees three affluent women sunning themselves and chatting by the swimming pool. She grieves for Mark by drenching herself in the house's architectural waterfall. Lee is deeply immersed in a business meeting having to do with the complex and financially risky Sunny Dunes development. Taking a break, he spots Daria in the house and happily greets her. She goes downstairs alone and finds the guest room that has been set aside for her but after briefly opening the door, she shuts it again.

Upon the sight of a young Native American housekeeper in the hallway, Daria leaves without a further word. She drives off but stops to get out of the car and look back at the house, leaving her own imagination seeing it repeatedly blown apart in billows of orange flame and household items.[Note 3]

Cast

[Note 4]

Production

While in the United States for the 1966 premiere of his film Blowup, which had been a surprising box office hit, Antonioni saw a short newspaper article about a young man who had stolen an aircraft and was killed when he tried to return it in Phoenix, Arizona. Antonioni took this as a thread, with which he could tie together the plot of his next film. After writing many drafts, he hired playwright Sam Shepard to write the script. Shepard, Antonioni, Italian filmmaker Franco Rossetti, Antonioni's frequent collaborator screenwriter Tonino Guerra and Clare Peploe (later to become the wife of Bernardo Bertolucci), worked on the screenplay.

Most of the supporting roles were played by a professional cast, including, notably, Rod Taylor,[9] along with G.D. Spradlin, in one of his first feature film roles, following many appearances on US national television. Paul Fix, a friend and acting coach of John Wayne who had appeared in many of Wayne's films, played the owner of a roadhouse in the Mojave desert. Kathleen Cleaver, a member of the Black Panthers and wife of Eldridge Cleaver, appeared in the documentary-like student meeting scene at the opening of the film.

Shooting began in July 1968 in Los Angeles, much of it on location in the wider southern downtown area. Exteriors of the art deco Richfield Tower were shown in a few scenes shot shortly before its demolition in November of that year. Various college campus scenes, excluding the scene of the student meeting, were filmed on location at Contra Costa Community College in San Pablo, California. The production then moved to location shooting at Carefree, Arizona near Phoenix and from there to Death Valley.[10] The production rented a Carefree mansion and built a replica of the mansion on the lot of Southwestern Studio in Carefree, Arizona for the special effect of blowing up the mansion.

Early film industry publicity reports claimed Antonioni would gather 10,000 extras in the desert, for the filming of the lovemaking scene but this never happened. The scene was filmed with dust-covered and highly choreographed actors from The Open Theatre. The United States Department of Justice investigated whether this violated the Mann Act (which forbade the taking of women across state lines for sexual purposes); however, no sex was filmed and no state lines were crossed for that segment of the production, given that Death Valley is in California.[8][10]

During filming, Antonioni was quoted as criticizing the US film industry for financially wasteful production practices, which he found "almost immoral" and compared to the more thrifty approach of Italian studios.[10]

Music

The soundtrack to Zabriskie Point included music from Pink Floyd, The Youngbloods, Kaleidoscope, Jerry Garcia, Patti Page, Grateful Dead, the Rolling Stones and John Fahey. Roy Orbison sang the theme song, over the credits, called "So Young".

Unused music

Richard Wright of Pink Floyd wrote a tune called "The Violent Sequence" for inclusion in the film.[11] Antonioni rejected the song because it was too subdued and instead synchronized a re-recording of the band's "Careful with That Axe, Eugene", retitled "Come in Number 51, Your Time Is Up", with the film's violent ending scene. Roger Waters states in Classic Albums - Pink Floyd - Making The Dark Side Of The Moon that while Antonioni loved the song, he said it made him "feel sad". Eventually it was reworked into a new song known as "Us and Them", which was released on their album The Dark Side of the Moon in 1973. "The Violent Sequence" remained unreleased until it was included on a 2011 boxed set of Dark Side of the Moon, where it was named "Us and them (Richard Wright Demo)".[11]

Other discarded pieces recorded for the film, by Pink Floyd, were released on a bonus disc with the 1997 CD re-release of the soundtrack album, along with pieces by Jerry Garcia.[11]

John Fahey was flown to Rome to record some music for the film, but that was not used.[12] The accounts of Fahey and others differ.[13] However, a portion of his Dance of Death was used in the film.[3] Antonioni visited the band The Doors while they were recording their album L.A. Woman and thought about putting them in the soundtrack. The Doors recorded the song "L'America" for Zabriskie Point but it was not used.

Mark Frechette was living at Mel Lyman's intentional community at Fort Hill, Boston, Massachusetts at the time he made this film. He and Lyman hoped that the soundtrack would include some of the Americana type music Lyman had recorded with Jim Kweskin and the Jug Band. Frechette left copies of Lyman's newspaper Avatar around the studio and took time to play tapes of the band for the director and explain Lyman's work. When Antonioni seemed oblivious to the perceived importance of Lyman's music, Frechette quit the film, but returned six days later.[14]

Reception

Decades after its widely panned 1970 release, Zabriskie Point garnered critical praise for its cinematography. Halprin and Frechette can barely be seen in the left of this scene filmed at Zabriskie Point.

Following prolonged publicity and controversy in North America throughout its production, Zabriskie Point was released in February 1970, almost four years after Antonioni began pre-production and over a year and a half after shooting began. The film was panned by most critics and other published commentators of all political stripes, as were the performances of Frechette and Halprin. The New York Times reviewer Vincent Canby called Zabriskie Point "a noble artistic impulse short-circuited in a foreign land." [7] Roger Ebert echoed Canby, saying: "The director who made Monica Vitti seem so incredibly alone is incapable, in Zabriskie Point, of making his young characters seem even slightly together. Their voices are empty; they have no resonance as human beings. They don't play to each other, but to vague narcissistic conceptions of themselves. They wouldn't even meet were it not for a preposterous Hollywood coincidence."[15]

The counterculture audience MGM hoped to draw largely ignored the film during its brief theatrical run and taken altogether the outcome was a notorious box office bomb. Production expenses were at least $7,000,000, and only $900,000 was made in the domestic release. It has also been described as "the worst film ever made by a director of genius" but it "is still absolutely watchable because of the magic of Antonioni's eye".[16] Over 20 years after the film's release, Rolling Stone editor David Fricke wrote that "Zabriskie Point was one of the most extraordinary disasters in modern cinematic history."[17] It was the only film Antonioni ever directed in the United States, where in 1994 he was given the Honorary Academy Award "in recognition of his place as one of the cinema's master visual stylists." Following early 21st-century screenings of pristine wide-screen prints and a later DVD release, Zabriskie Point at last garnered some critical praise, mostly for the stark beauty of its cinematography and innovative use of music in the soundtrack, but outlooks on the film were still mixed.[6] Director Stéphane Sednaoui referenced the film in his video for "Today" by The Smashing Pumpkins, where an ice-cream salesman steals his employer's ice-cream van, escapes to the desert, and colourfully paints the van while couples kiss in the desert.[18]

See also

References

Notes

  1. 513,312 admissions (France)[2]
  2. The music is performed by The Open Theater.[8]
  3. The scene has been described as a metaphor for her sadness and anger.[7]
  4. Harrison Ford has an uncredited role as one of the arrested student demonstrators being held inside a Los Angeles police station.

Citations

  1. 1 2 "Box office: business for Zabriskie Point (1970)." IMDb. Retrieved: October 18, 2011.
  2. "1970 French box office figures." Box Office Story. Retrieved: November 21, 2016.
  3. 1 2 Smith, Matt. "Zabriskie Point.' Brattle Theatre Film Notes {Brattle Film Foundation}. Retrieved: September 19, 2012.
  4. Chatman and Duncan 2004, p. 118.
  5. Medved and Dreyfus 1978
  6. 1 2 Allwood, Emma Hope. "Three things you don't know about Zabriskie Point." Dazed, July 2015. Retrieved: November 21, 2016.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Canby, Vincent. "Screen: Antonioni's 'Zabriskie Point'". The New York Times, February 10, 1970. Retrieved: February 2, 2010.
  8. 1 2 Out of the past." moviecrazed.com. Retrieved: February 2, 2010.
  9. Vagg 2010, p. 144.
  10. 1 2 3 "Making Zabriskie Point." chainedandperfumed.wordpress.com, November 17, 2009. Retrieved: January 29, 2010.
  11. 1 2 3 Mabbett 2010
  12. Fahey 2000
  13. Lowenthal and Fricke 2014, pp. 94–97.
  14. David Felton. Reprinted in its entirety"The Lyman Family's Holy Siege of America"(Two-part article). Rolling Stone 98, December 1971, pp. 40–60 and 99, January 1972, pp. 40–60. Steve Trussel's Mel Lyman archive website. Retrieved: November 21, 2016.
  15. Ebert, Roger. "Review: 'Zabriskiie Point'." Chicago Sun-Times, January 1, 1970. Retrieved: November 21, 2016.
  16. Craven, Peter. "Uneasy moments from master of angst." The Age, A2, May 17, 2008, p. 20.
  17. Fricke, David. "Zabriskie Point." phinnweb.org. Retrieved: February 3, 2010.
  18. "Commentary for "Today" music video." The Smashing Pumpkins 1991–2000: Greatest Hits Video Collection (Virgin Records), 2001.

Bibliography

  • Chatman, Seymour and Paul Duncan. Michelangelo Antonioni: The Complete Films. Koln, Germany: Taschen, 2004. ISBN 3-8228-3089-5.
  • Fahey, John. How Bluegrass Music Destroyed My Life. Chicago: Drag City, 2000. ISBN 0-965-61832-3.
  • Lowenthal, Steve and David Fricke. Dance of Death: The Life of John Fahey, American Guitarist. Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2014. ISBN 1-61374-522-2.
  • Mabbett, Andy. Pink Floyd: The Music and the Mystery. London: Omnibus Press, 2010. ISBN 9781849383707.
  • Medved, H. and R. Dreyfus. The Fifty Worst Films of All Time (And How They Got That Way). New York: Popular Library, 1978. ISBN 978-0-4450-4139-4.
  • Vagg, Stephen. Rod Taylor: An Aussie in Hollywood. Albany, Georgia: Bear Manor Media, 2010. ISBN 978-1-59393-511-5.

External links

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