The Empty Canvas  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

The Empty Canvas (1963) is a Italian drama film directed by Damiano Damiani. The screenplay by Damiani, Tonino Guerra, and Ugo Liberatore is based on the best-selling novel La Noia by Alberto Moravia.

Contents

Synopsis

Mediocre artist Dino is obsessed with young model Cecilia and distraught that she shares her sexual favors not only with him but with actor Luciani as well. In an effort to derail her plan to vacation in Capri with his rival, Dino proposes marriage, and when she rejects his offer he invites Cecilia to join him at the Rome estate of his domineering mother, a wealthy American, in the hope he can seduce her with his glamorous lifestyle. Despairing that he will never have a monogamous relationship with her, he crashes his sportscar into a wall. While recovering in the hospital, he realizes his feelings will never be reciprocated. When Cecilia returns from her trip assuming their liaison will continue, Dino announces the affair is over.

Production notes

The film was released in Italy as La noia (Boredom) and in France as L'ennui et sa diversion, l'érotisme (Boredom and its Diversion, Eroticism).

A dubbed English language version of the film was released in the United States by Embassy Pictures in 1964.

Principal cast

Principal production credits

Critical reception

In his review in the New York Times, Howard Thompson observed, "under Damiano Damiani's studied direction, the incidents move in stilted, crabwise fashion...Miss Davis...is truly a sight, looking like a Pekingese under a blonde bob and growling an atrocious Southern accent...At times, especially under-scored by Miss Davis's withering expression and lava lingo, the picture's overripe sexuality is downright funny."

Time magazine said it "is one of those "international" movie projects that appears to have been dreamed up by its principals...in a spirit of reckless unity...It is chiefly notable for the fun of watching Davis breast the New Wave plot with bitchy authority...Stretched too far to be believable, Canvas is the kind of overdrawn foolishness that frequently proves diverting."




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "The Empty Canvas" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools