L'eclisse (1962) Instant

L'eclisse (1962) Instant

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.

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. L'Eclisse (1962)

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" The film begins at the end of things: