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Beyond the Clouds

 
Movies:

Beyond the Clouds

  • Directors: Michelangelo Antonioni; Wim Wenders
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Erotic Drama, Ensemble Film
  • Themes: Brief Encounters, Filmmaking, Infidelity
  • Main Cast: John Malkovich, Kim Rossi Stuart, Ines Sastre, Sophie Marceau, Fanny Ardant
  • Release Year: 1995
  • Country: DE/IT/FR
  • Run Time: 113 minutes

Plot

The many ways in which men are fascinated, compelled, and confused by their attraction to women are explored in this four part drama. As a filmmaker (John Malkovich) tries to sort out his plans for his next film, he considers several stories about women and the men who love them. Silvano (Kim Rossi Stuart) meets Carmen (Ines Sastre) and immediately asks her for a date, but despite his attraction, he can't follow through on his feelings for her. The director spies a woman on the streets (Sophie Marceau) and follows her obsessively, but when he finally meets her, he's disappointed, despite their mutual physical attraction. Roberto (Peter Weller) and his wife Patricia (Fanny Ardant) have to deal with their anger about each other's infidelities, as well as their problems with their lovers, Olga (Chiara Caselli) and Carlo (Jean Reno). And Niccolo (Vincent Perez) falls in love at first sight with a young woman (Irene Jacob), unaware that she is studying to become a nun. Par-Dela Les Nuages was Michelangelo Antonioni's first film after a massive stroke derailed his directorial career in 1985; Wim Wenders served as his collaborator on the project. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Beyond the Clouds hardly seems the work of an 83-year-old man who has suffered a debilitating stroke, though it does come off as the film of an older man: contemplative, rueful, even playful. With the help of his wife (who communicated to the crew and actors verbally for her speech-impaired husband) and colleague Wim Wenders (who is credited with the prologue, epilogue, and entr'actes), Michelangelo Antonioni offers four stories about chance encounters that may lead to love. As in his best films, Antonioni masterfully portrays the yearning for meaning beyond simple physical coupling, and by dealing four variations on the theme, he's able to sustain interest without seeming repetitive. The most effective of the four stories are the opening and closing episodes, both involving slow dances of seduction with similar outcomes, but for very different reasons. (In the closing story, Irène Jacob's reply to Vincent Perez's "Can I see you tomorrow?" has to be one of the great blow-off lines in screen history.) John Malkovich, who plays a stand-in for Antonioni in the film's framing scenes, and Sophie Marceau are an intriguing couple in the second episode, but their encounter is too sketchy to register. Peter Weller and Fanny Ardant can't seem to bring any real conviction to their tired roles of the disaffected bourgeois couple, though Ardant and Jean Reno do get in a wonderful exchange at the end of the story. Approaching her, he says, "There's a cure for everything." Entering his embrace, she replies, "That's what disturbs me." The film is packed with Antonioni's visual signatures, particularly in his use of doors and windows as frames within the frame of the screen. And it does feature a lovely scene between Marcello Mastroianni and Jeanne Moreau, who come off much more animated than they were over 30 years before in Antonioni's La Notte. Finally, in a scene presumably directed by Wenders but clearly under the influence of Antonioni, the film closes with a crane shot up the side of a hotel with peeks into four rooms, a shot that, as one critic noted, actually recalls Ernst Lubitsch. Not two directors you'd find mentioned in the same sentence, but there are definitely moments in this film where Antonioni is almost as playful as his predecessor, without losing his own famous touch. ~ Tom Wiener, All Movie Guide

Cast

Peter Weller - Roberto; Chiara Caselli - Olga; Irène Jacob - Young Woman; Veronica Lazar; Marcello Mastroianni - Maestro; Vincent Perez - Niccolo; Jean Reno - Carlo; Jeanne Moreau - Woman; Giula Urso; Enrica Antonioni - Boutique Manager; Carine Angeli; Alessandra Bonarota; Laurence Calabrese; Tracey Caligiuri; Herve Decalion; John-Emmanuel Gartmann; Sherman Green; Suzy Lorraine; Cesare Luciani; Muriel Mottais; Bertrand Peillard; Sara Ricci; Sophie Semin; Sabry Tchal Gadjieff; Jean-Philippe Revel; Frere Daniel Bourgeois

Credit

Ulrich Felsberg - Co-producer, Vittorio Cecchi Gori - Co-producer, Esther Walz - Costume Designer, Beatrice Banfi - First Assistant Director, Michelangelo Antonioni - Director, Wim Wenders - Director, Michelangelo Antonioni - Editor, Claudio di Mauro - Editor, Peter Przygodda - Editor, Pierre Roitfeld - Executive Producer, Brigitte Faure - Executive Producer, Vincent Arnardi - Musical Direction/Supervision, Thierry Lebon - Musical Direction/Supervision, U2 - Songwriter, Van Morrison - Songwriter, Judith Gayo - Makeup, Thierry Flamand - Production Designer, Alfio Contini - Cinematographer, Robby Müller - Cinematographer, Philippe Carcassonne - Producer, Stephane Tchalgadjieff - Producer, Denis Barbier - Set Designer, Christian Guillon - Special Effects, Michelangelo Antonioni - Screenwriter, Tonino Guerra - Screenwriter, Wim Wenders - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

La Villa del Venerdi; Last Tango in Paris; New York Stories; Identificazione di Una Donna; Short Cuts; Nuit d'été en ville; Besieged; Playing by Heart; An Affair of Love; Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her; Friday Night; Un robe d'été; Ecstasy
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Wikipedia: Beyond the Clouds (1995 film)
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Beyond the Clouds

Theatrical poster
Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni
Wim Wenders
Produced by Philippe Carcassonne
Stéphane Tchalgadjieff
Written by Tonino Guerra
Wim Wenders
Francesco Marcucci (uncredited)
Michelangelo Antonioni (book "That Bowling Alley on the Tiber River", screenplay)
Soheil Ghodsy (French adaptation)
Music by Bono
Adam Clayton
Van Morrison
Laurent Petitgand
Cinematography Alfio Contini (Antonioni segment)
Robby Müller (Wenders segment)
Editing by Michelangelo Antonioni
Peter Przygodda
Lucian Segura
Distributed by Kidmark, a Division of Trimark Entertainment (Italy)
Mercure Distribution (France)
Artificial Eye (UK)
Sceneries Distribution (USA)
Release date(s) October 27, 1995 (Italy)
January 24, 1996 (France)
January 10, 1997 (UK)
October 8, 1999 (USA)
Running time 112 min
Country France / Italy / Germany
Language French / English / Italian

Beyond the Clouds (Italian: Al di là delle nuvole) is a 1995 Italian-French-German film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni and Wim Wenders.[1]

Cast and roles

References

External links



 
 

 

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