Escalation (1968 Italian film) explained

Escalation
Director:Roberto Faenza
Music:Ennio Morricone
Cinematography:Luigi Kuveiller
Editing:Ruggero Mastroianni
Runtime:89 minutes
Country:Italy
Language:Italian

Escalation is a 1968 Italian film directed and written by Roberto Faenza and starring Claudine Auger and Gabriele Ferzetti.[1] [2]

Cast

Reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Dealing as it does with the development of a peace-loving egalitarian into an impassive murderer and ruthless businessman, it seems likely that Escalation was intended as L'Enfance d'un Chef – Italian style. But the comparison with Sartre proves as hollow as the more obvious one with Antonioni (for the scene changes not so much from London to Milan as from the swinging world of Blow-Up [1966] to the sterile wasteland of The Red Desert [1964]). And although the artistic and philosophical pretensions of Roberto Faenza's first feature film seem to demand serious analysis, the disparity between intention and achievement is great enough to warrant a rather curt dismissal. Scenes like the final funeral procession display a real talent for visual composition, but Faenza seems constantly more concerned with lending a symbolic weight to his material than with what it actually signifies. Lino Capolicchio's interpretation of the generational hero as a blabbering moron further undermines the film's claims to seriousness. Perhaps Italian audiences are more attuned to this type of buffoon humour, but the idiom makes it hard for Anglo-Saxons to determine whether he's supposed to be like Hamlet or just Harpo Marx."[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Escalation . 15 April 2024 . British Film Institute Collections Search.
  2. Web site: Gabriele Ferzetti . Mymovies.it. November 30, 2010.
  3. 1 January 1969 . Escalation . . 36 . 420 . 101 . ProQuest.