
A Year: Day to Day Men: 12th of May
Green Lives on Water
Michelangelo Antonioni’s “Blow-Up” wins the Grand Prix at Cannes on May 12, 1967.
“Blow-Up” is a 1966 British-Italian mystery thriller film directed by Antonioni about a fashion photographer who believes he has unwittingly captured a murder on film. This film was Antonioni’s first production entirely in English. The actor in the film’s photographer role was David Hemmings, chosen by Michaelangelo Antonioni after Sean Connery turned down the role. Hemmings at that time was not a major star but acting in small theater productions in London.
There were several known stars in cast of this film, Including John Castle and Vanessa Redgrave. However there were several noted cameo roles. One of these cameos was the musical group The Yardbirds, who performed “Stroll On” near the end of the film and smashed their instruments. In that scene of the nightclub, Michael Palin, not yet a member of Monty Python, can be seen in the crowd watching the Yardbirds.
The plot was inspired by a short story by Julio Cortazar entitled “The Devil’s Drool”, based in part on the life of swinging London photographer David Bailey. The film was scored by jazz pianist Herbie Hancock- the first of his many soundtracks. Except for the music for the opening and closing title and credit sequences, the music is diegetic. Herbie Hancock noted: “It is only there when someone turns on the radio or puts on a record”.
“Blow-Up” won the Grand Prix du Festival International du Film in the main competition section of the 1967 Cannes Film Festival- the highest honor of the festival. The film was also nominated in the categories of Best Director, Best Original Screenplay and Best British Film for the 1967 Academy Awards.
The American release by MGM, a major Hollywood studio, of this counter-culture era film with its explicit sexual content was in direct defiance of the contemporary standards of the Production Code. MGM did not gain approval for this film. The film was also condemned by the Nation Legion of Decency, a United States Catholic organization which rated films. The collapse of the Production Code was foreshadowed when MGM released the film through a subsidiary distributer and “Blow-Up” was shown widely in North American cinemas despite the code. In 1968 the MPAA rating system was established when the Code was abandoned.