"Zabriskie Point" (1970)

Rod Taylor plays Lee Allen, a real estate tycoon who runs a huge land development company called Sunny Dunes.

This is a foreign film despite its California setting. Italian director Michelangelo Antonioni -- who uses the screen as an artist's canvas -- created a movie that's visually stunning but narratively weak. (And for Antonioni, that's the point.) It's is an ambitious essay about alienation, commercialization and radicalization in America.

The movie was released in March 1970 after going through five writers and nearly two years in production. It was 58-year-old Antonioni's first big flop and a crippling blow to his artistic reputation. But viewed today, free of the heavy air of debacle that haunted the film at its release, "Zabriskie Point" can be seen as a fascinating period piece.

The story follows a young man (Mark Frechette) who gets caught up in a riot that results in a cop getting shot. He runs, steals a plane and flies out over the desert where a beautiful young woman is driving her boss' car to his desert retreat.

The young woman is Daria (Daria Halprin), the real estate tycoon's lover and secretary. He is so taken with her that he  leaves the bargaining table in the middle of a $40 million deal just to speak casually with her on the phone. [The then-new Beneficial Plaza building at 3700 Wilshire Blvd. in Los Angleles was used for Lee Allen's headquarters. According to a Nov. 24, 1968, item in the Los Angeles Times, Antonioni chose the building because of its facade and architecture based on the Italian renaissance. But because it didn't look like Los Angeles, Antonion added palm trees.]

The real star of the movie is the desolate landscape of Death Valley and the vista from Zabriskie Point, the lookout that gives the movie its name and where Daria and Mark engage in a hallucinatory sex scene.

The movie climaxes with a spectacular explosion of the tycoon's opulent desert retreat.

An article from the September 1992 issue of Film Comment magazine, notes this about the final scene and Rod's role:

The house is the site of a secret meeting between Rod Taylor and some other cynical real-estate developers. Daria is to meet him there -- whether for work or an assignation is something Antonioni never makes clear.

(All the sequences relating to Rod Taylor and Sunny Dunes Realty come from the Sam Shepard script and spell out Antonioni's original intentions. He is contemptuous of the land exploiters -- and this well before ecology became a chic subject.)

Daria is to start driving away from the house, then stop her car, get out and, in rage and grief, "wish" for it to explode. It was probably the most expensive act of imaginative violence ever filmed.

As a bonus in the film, Harrison Ford appears in an uncredited role as an airfield worker. 

 

LINKS

Internet Movie Database: Full cast and credits

"May 1968 and After: Cinema in France and Beyond"

Review/description from Ozus' World Movie Reviews Web site

Zabriskie Point by Michelangelo Antonioni


www.rodtaylorsite.com