Marty and Woody on Mike and Ingmar
Martin Scorsese on Michelangelo Antonioni; Woody Allen on Ingmar Bergman.
“Where almost every other movie I’d seen wound things up, “L’Avventura†wound them down. The characters lacked either the will or the capacity for real self-awareness. They only had what passed for self-awareness, cloaking a flightiness and lethargy that was both childish and very real. And in the final scene, so desolate, so eloquent, one of the most haunting passages in all of cinema, Antonioni realized something extraordinary: the pain of simply being alive. And the mystery.”
“To meet him was not to suddenly enter the creative temple of a formidable, intimidating, dark and brooding genius who intoned complex insights with a Swedish accent about man’s dreadful fate in a bleak universe. It was more like this: ‘Woody, I have this silly dream where I show up on the set to make a film and I can’t figure out where to put the camera; the point is, I know I am pretty good at it and I have been doing it for years. You ever have those nervous dreams?'”
August 18th, 2007 at 10:10
yeh! i was so blown away by the fact that the NYT got scorsese and allen to riff on their fave auteurs.