DVD - Wide Screen Learn more
Enter a zip code
Audio commentary by Peter Brunette, author of The Films of Michelangelo Antonioni; music-only audio track; theatrical trailers.
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Credits. [1:26]
2. Free in the Streets. [3:40]
3. Solo Shoot. [5:39]
4. Photographic Objects. [5:17]
5. Bill and Patricia. [3:10]
6. No Time for Them. [2:00]
7. Search for Landscapes. [4:33]
8. Couple in the Park. [3:46]
9. The Lady Protests. [2:30]
10. Antique Fever. [4:28]
11. Someone You Know? [6:22]
12. His Visitor. [5:47]
13. Say What You Want. [4:19]
14. Topless. [5:02]
15. What Develops. [3:54]
16. Blowups. [1:32]
17. Sequence of Events? [3:05]
18. Swingers Interlude. [2:46]
19. Murderous Outline. [5:54]
20. Scene of the Crime. [4:56]
21. Eyewitness. [3:01]
22. Stolen Pictures. [2:25]
23. Ricky Tick (Stroll On). [6:24]
24. Finding Ron. [5:21]
25. Not Finding the Body. [4:25]
26. Tennis Game. [4:02]
A cinematic time capsule that distills the very essence of the swinging London of 1966, filmmaker Michelangelo Antonioni's provocative art house hit remains a brilliant psychological thriller. David Hemmings portrays a British fashion photographer whose voyeuristic tendencies compel him to take pictures of a couple he sees embracing in the park. Upon making blow-ups of the images, he notices details indicating that a murder might have been committed: Returning to the park, he finds the body of the man he photographed. As the woman in the case, Vanessa Redgrave made a vivid impression and entered the ranks of stardom. Her participation in what was then thought to be a highly erotic sequence involving nude modeling helped lend notoriety to the film, which upon release was condemned by the Legion of Decency and other watchdog organizations. It's obvious today that, for his first English-language film, Antonioni was less interested in developing a Hitchcockian narrative than he was in capturing attitudes and images that, to him, symbolized the social upheaval of the times. Blow-Up is suffused from first frame to last with the "mod" and "pop" sensibilities that many in the '60s thought so corrosive. It would seem that the film risks feeling dated today, but it's really no less powerful thanks to the richness and complexity of Antonioni's vision. Multilayered and at times deliberately obtuse, Blow-Up still casts a hypnotic spell over viewers, and repeated viewings often reveal additional details and meanings. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations