Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Michelangelo Antonioni, Cavaliere di Gran Croce OMRI (29 September 1912 – 30 July 2007) was an Italian modernist film director, screenwriter, editor, and short story writer. Best known for his "trilogy on modernity and its discontents" — L'Avventura (1960), La Notte (1961), and L'Eclisse (1962), as well as the English-language Blowup (1966), Antonioni "redefined the concept of narrative ...

  2. Michelangelo Antonioni, Italian film director, cinematographer, and producer noted for his avoidance of realistic narrative in favor of character study and a vaguely metaphorical series of incidents. His major films included Le amiche (1955), L’avventura (1960), L’eclisse (1962), and Blow-Up (1966).

  3. Michelangelo Antonioni. Michelangelo Antonioni [mikeˈland͡ʒelo antoˈɲoːni] 1 est un réalisateur, scénariste, monteur, producteur de cinéma, peintre, poète et écrivain italien né le 29 septembre 1912 à Ferrare en Émilie-Romagne 2 et mort le 30 juillet 2007 à Rome 2, 3 . Auteur de référence du cinéma moderne dès ses débuts en ...

  4. 27 de sept. de 2012 · Thu 27 Sep 2012 08.13 EDT. This is the centenary year of Michelangelo Antonioni. He was born on 29 September 1912 and died in 2007 at the age of 94, having worked until almost the very end. As ...

  5. Based on some of the work undertaken in the last four decades, and taking into account Pasolini’s lesson and studies on the circulation of ideas and the paradigms of art, Bourdieu ([1989] 2002), Sapiro (2009), Heinich (2014), Aguilar (2015), and Garramuño (2015), this monograph aims to offer a collection of proposals for theorising, understanding, and naming the presence of literary thought ...

  6. 21 de may. de 2002 · filmography. bibliography. articles in Senses. web resources. The films of Michelangelo Antonioni are aesthetically complex – critically stimulating though elusive in meaning. They are ambiguous works that pose difficult questions and resist simple conclusions. Classical narrative causalities are dissolved in favour of expressive abstraction.

  7. Michelangelo Antonioni. Writer: Blow-Up. Together with Fellini, Bergman and Kurosawa, Michelangelo Antonioni is credited with defining the modern art film. And yet Antonioni's cinema is also recognized today for defying any easy categorization, with his films ultimately seeming to belong to their own distinctive genre.