Of the many negative
effects that the emergence of the auteur theory had on the cinematic world,
perhaps the most pernicious was the license that auterism gave some directors
to indulge their inclinations toward pretentiously ambiguous filmmaking.
Revered Italian director Michelangelo Antonioni offers ample evidence of this
phenomenon in both this film and its predecessor, Zabriskie Point (1970). Although Antonioni broke through
internationally with Blow-Up (1968),
a tight thriller with subtle artistic flourishes, Zabriskie Point and The
Passenger are opaque dramas more concerned with mood than narrative. Yet
while Zabriskie Point is interesting
for the way it captures certain attitudes of the counterculture generation, The Passenger has no such historical
significance. Instead, it’s murky story about the grand themes of alienation,
duplicity, and identity.
Jack Nicholson, delivering one of the least
interesting performances of his career, stars as David Locke, an American TV
reporter tracking down story leads in equatorial Africa. Returning to his hotel
one night, Locke discovers that a fellow traveler named Robertson has been
murdered, so Locke steals Robertson’s papers, adds his photo in place of the
dead man’s, and attempts to assume the Robertson’s identity. At first, this
seems like a path to excitement, since Robertson was a gunrunner; Locke accepts
payments from one of Robertson’s clients, and he also begins a romance with a
sexy college student. (She’s played by Maria Schneider, of Last Tango in Paris fame, but Antonioni never bothers to give her
character a name.) Eventually, Locke’s ruse unravels because he gets on the
wrong side of dangerous men. There’s also a subplot involving Locke’s wife, who
treks the globe looking for him. Everything culminates in a quasi-famous finale
involving an elaborate tracking shot that, over the course of seven minutes,
winds its way from a hotel room, into a courtyard, and back into the hotel
room.
Thanks to Antonioni’s refusal to provide explanatory details about
characters and scenes—to say nothing of his painfully slow pacing—The Passenger is the sort of thing
critics can spend decades dissecting, which means that many intelligent people
have provided viable interpretations of the picture. Consumed as
straightforward narrative, however, the film is borderline interminable.
Countless insignificant actions are allowed to unfold at excruciating length,
as if Antonioni hid meanings within the frame that the viewer is supposed to
discover. Furthermore, because The
Passenger features a distinct storyline, the movie weirdly straddles two
worlds—it’s neither purely artistic nor purely narrative. Ultimately, the film
is a bit like an abstract painting executed in a simplistic style: Where some
beholders perceive layers, others see only the bland surface.
The Passenger: FUNKY
About halfway thru' I turned on the Nicholson DVD commentary and watched it that way. Pretty great!
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