Tag Archive: Monica Vitti


LA RAGAZZA CON LA PISTOLA  directed by Mario Monicelli (Italy, 1968)

“All you need to make a movie is a girl and a gun”, said Jean-Luc Godard and Mario Monicelli set out to prove him right in this enjoyable comedy caper from the late 1960s.

This particular girl with a gun is Assunta Patanè, a beautiful young Sicilian woman who, having been seduced and abandoned by an oily Latin-lover sets out to murder him to restore her honour.

She is supported in this mission by the women in her community who are all dressed in black as if in mourning for the loss of her maidenhood.

They give her a gun, passport and a one-way ticket to pursue the philanderer who has fled to Britain.

Carlo Giuffrè is perfectly cast as the caddish Vincenzo Macaluso whose ‘wham bam thank you m’am’ seduction technique brings out the killer instinct in Assunta.

On first arriving in Scotland, the language problem is pronounced as is the cultural shock of seeing men in skirts for the first time.

Assunta knows only a few words of English but ,miraculously, even those who say they can’t speak Italian somehow transform into fluent speakers and soon everyone in England has mastered her mother tongue. Continue reading

L’ECLISSE directed by Michelangelo Antonioni (Italy, 1962)

Mostly, we watch movies as a means of seeking relief from the worries and tedium of everyday life but, with deliberate perversity, Antonioni’s L’Eclisse (Eclipse) makes no attempt to cater to this desire for contrived entertainment or escapism.

It’s a movie about nothing and everything with a plot so paper-thin it would fit on a post-it note. My summary would be : A young woman leaves her older husband – she meets a younger man – she doesn’t love either – she doesn’t know what she really wants.

The setting is Rome, but apart from the frenetic activity of the city’s stock exchange it looks like a ghost city. Many shots would not be out-of-place in the Sci-Fi classic, The Day The Earth Stood Still. When we do see the inhabitants, most of them look haunted, bored and ill at ease.

The narrative is linear yet the story feels as mysterious and enigmatic as one of David Lynch’s waking dream sequences. Continue reading

L’AVVENTURA directed by Michelangelo Antonioni (Italy, 1960)

Where has Monica Vitti been all my life?

I am at a loss to explain how I’ve reached mature adulthood without ever seeing her in a movie before.

This is all the more shameful as this constitutes a neglect of classic Italian cinema which, having lived in the country for 16 years, is indefensible.

I now pledge to put this right by ravaging my local ‘mediateca’.

In L’Avventura, Vitti as Claudia looks so thoroughly modern and fills the screen in this curious, but pretty great Antonioni movie. In one scene she is waiting outside a hotel in a small town and gets surrounded by a horde of horny men trying to catch her eye. She remains coolly aloof throughout this ordeal. Continue reading