L-eclisse.1962.1080p.criterion.bluray.dts.x264-... !exclusive! [UPDATED • 2027]
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L'Eclisse (The Eclipse) — directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, 1962 — is a landmark of modernist cinema and the final film in Antonioni's loosely connected "alienation" trilogy (following L'Avventura and La Notte). This release presents the film in 1080p resolution, encoded with x264 and paired with DTS audio, under the Criterion Collection Blu-ray restoration. L-Eclisse.1962.1080p.Criterion.Bluray.DTS.x264-...
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The film's famous final seven minutes abandon the characters entirely. Instead, the camera lingers on the inanimate objects and empty spaces where they used to meet: A leaking rain barrel. The cold glow of a streetlamp. Strangers getting off a bus. The darkening sky. Instead, the camera lingers on the inanimate objects
C. The Seven-Minute Coda (The Ending)
Special Features (Criterion)
Style
: Known for its radical cinematography, the film uses the architecture of Rome as a backdrop for the characters' internal isolation, culminating in a famous, experimental seven-minute sequence that omits the main characters entirely. Technical Details of this Version
Monica Vitti
The final chapter of Antonioni's informal "alienation trilogy" (following L'avventura and La notte ), L'eclisse stars as a woman who drifts into a tentative affair with a materialistic stockbroker, played by Alain Delon . The film is renowned for its striking architecture and its experimental, protagonist-free final seven minutes that symbolize the difficulty of human connection in the modern world. Video Quality: 1080p Restoration