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IMDbPro

Chronique d'un amour

Original title: Cronaca di un amore
  • 1950
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
3.7K
YOUR RATING
Chronique d'un amour (1950)
Antonioni is one of the most influential filmmakers of all times, indeed critics revere him as the 'creator' of Modern Cinema. His STORY OF A LOVE AFFAIR, aka Cronaca di un Amore, is his first feature film, a Noir thriller with sensual themes of yearning and jealousy. It is considered a masterpiece by Scorsese among others.
Play trailer1:17
1 Video
69 Photos
CrimeDramaRomance

Paola is a young, beautiful woman married to a wealthy entrepreneur. She meets her former lover Guido after seven years, but their relationship is marked by tragic events.Paola is a young, beautiful woman married to a wealthy entrepreneur. She meets her former lover Guido after seven years, but their relationship is marked by tragic events.Paola is a young, beautiful woman married to a wealthy entrepreneur. She meets her former lover Guido after seven years, but their relationship is marked by tragic events.

  • Director
    • Michelangelo Antonioni
  • Writers
    • Michelangelo Antonioni
    • Daniele D'Anza
    • Silvio Giovaninetti
  • Stars
    • Massimo Girotti
    • Lucia Bosè
    • Gino Rossi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    3.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michelangelo Antonioni
    • Writers
      • Michelangelo Antonioni
      • Daniele D'Anza
      • Silvio Giovaninetti
    • Stars
      • Massimo Girotti
      • Lucia Bosè
      • Gino Rossi
    • 26User reviews
    • 42Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Story of a Love Affair Trailer
    Trailer 1:17
    Story of a Love Affair Trailer

    Photos69

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    Top cast15

    Edit
    Massimo Girotti
    Massimo Girotti
    • Guido Garroni
    Lucia Bosè
    Lucia Bosè
    • Paola Molon Fontana
    Gino Rossi
    Gino Rossi
    • L'investigatore Carloni
    Marika Rowsky
    Marika Rowsky
    • Joy - la mannequin
    Ferdinando Sarmi
    Ferdinando Sarmi
    • Enrico Fontana
    Rubi Dalma
    Rubi Dalma
    • L'amica snob di Paola
    • (as Rubi D'Alma)
    Anita Farra
    Anita Farra
    • Un'amica di Paola
    Carlo Gazzabini
      Nardo Rimediotti
      Renato Burrini
      Vittorio Manfrino
      • Algardi
      Rosi Mirafiore
      • La cameriera del bar
      • (as Rosi Mirafiori)
      Vittoria Mondello
      Vittoria Mondello
      • Matilde Galvani
      Gino Cervi
      Gino Cervi
        Franco Fabrizi
        Franco Fabrizi
        • Il presentatore della sfilata di moda
        • (uncredited)
        • Director
          • Michelangelo Antonioni
        • Writers
          • Michelangelo Antonioni
          • Daniele D'Anza
          • Silvio Giovaninetti
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews26

        7.13.6K
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        Featured reviews

        prs10

        Film noir excellence

        A rich older man's belated desire to investigate his beautiful wilful young wife' mysterious past reignites old passions with tragic consequences. For those viewers who are uncertain of Antonioni's capacity to make enjoyably great films, this may be a revelation especially if you have a penchant for post-WW2 film noir with its attendant malaise and melancholia. With suitable B&W photography and accompanying musical score and boasting one of the screen's great beauties, Lucia Bose, in her prime, this film is a masterpiece.
        7treywillwest

        A semi- remake, semi- rebuke of the philosophy and morality of Double Indemnity.

        This is Antonioni's first feature. Released in 1950, it seems to me both a harbinger of the auturer's mature style while also being a semi- remake, semi- rebuke of Double Indemnity., from only a few years prior. .

        There is an extraordinary shot in this film, pure Antonioni, when the lovers meet on a bridge. The view is 360 degrees, we're not sympathizing with one lover more than the other. As the camera moves around its axis, our focus goes much beyond our traditionally intended targets as ship workers in the distance cohabitate the deepest focus with the characters we are following, who bicker over the merits of violating social morality.

        If Double Indemnity is fatalistic, this work is nihilistic. If traditional Noir-narrative leads to certain doom, this story leads to only one finality, and that is the randomness and chaos of life, death and love. In that way, this work reminded me most of Woody Allen's late- career "thrillers"-Match Point and Cassandra's Dream.
        bobsgrock

        Deep, dark desires produce deep, dark consequences.

        The feature film debut of future Italian cinema star Michelangelo Antonioni is quite conventional and straightforward as compared to his later works, which are generally regarded as masterpieces. Though not in that category, this film ranks as a very well-made melodrama that dares to also include exploration of the darkest of human desires, specifically within the context of marriage and fidelity.

        Chance also plays a large role here, helping to reunite former lovers who pick up where they left off, ironically thanks to the woman's husband hiring a private detective to follow her as he suspects she is having an affair. What follows is often high-strung, dense and very moving as Antonioni shows us the most desolate shots of the beautiful city Milan. Many of the establishing shots are long shots of corridors, streets and other walkways that create great sense of alienation, isolation and illicit activities. The ending may require a bit of explaining but still fits the overall tone of elegy and bitter sadness. A powerful and moving Italian melodrama that certainly could be used as a template for American filmmakers today.
        chaos-rampant

        The beginning of the cycle of suffering

        Suffering is an inate response to life, this is one of the inescapable principles of existence. Antonioni saw far in the career that followed, farther than perhaps any director in cinema, but here he begins where it's proper, with life as a cycle of suffering, a seemingly random pattern of recurring time where we're denied what we most desire, happiness eludes us and our dreams and hopes are thwarted and frustrated.

        Too young to see a true reality, Antonioni nonetheless sees clearly the reality of illusions. First that the cycle we call life is not blindly, randomly spun, and that we're to be held accountable for our part in the spinning, foremostly that our pursuit of happiness as we like to think is really the deluded pursuit of satisfying desire.

        The crucial point that connects these is, rather poignantly, a death, and it happens not once but twice, mirrored identical the second time like a prefiguration of Vertigo. As with Vertigo, this borrows the world of film noir to speak of karmic wheels and the mechanisms that control them, a Double Indemnity scenario where secret lover and wife calculate to get rid of the rich husband.

        In a magical touch, the plotted murder happens of its own accord, seemingly out of the whim of an agent of a higher court passing by.

        It's not then just a matter of what begins as thought and desire invariably manifests in imminent reality, this is a powerful inspection of mind, but moreover that having devoted themselves by all means to the pursuit of that desire, a passion born of ego and craving, the obstacle that stood in their way now removed, the two protagonists realize how impotent they remain to pursue that desire, how desire is by its nature an insatiable attribute. Their punishment, which is not divine but of their own doing, is the toll exacted on their conscience.

        This first appearance in Antonioni of karma as the force that keeps going the cycle of suffering is not perfect by any means, it seems at the same time to imply questions of moral order, whether or not for example wishing for a crime to happen is a crime in itself, spiritual in nature. And all of this is more verbose than need be, something Antonioni would excise in a few years.

        We find things in this debut that Antonioni would elaborate upon in wonderful ways, the ineffability of connection, the city as a cold, alienating limbo where souls in transit struggle for meaning, the transparent reality that extends outside the frame to suggest an entire world and flow of life with or without these characters (indeed we find here, abetting this, the beginnings of his amazing sound work, where the city traffic is always audible), but all these are in nascent form here.

        What stands out for me is the true perception that begins to form in Antonioni's cinema. Meaning our idea of reality is just that, an idea born of our own habits and various storytellings, which clouds our soul and needs to be challenged, dismantled, removed from our eyes so that we can see life as it is.
        dbdumonteil

        When Antonioni was still neorealisming....

        Although Antonioni was part of the Italian Nouvelle Vague ,like Fellini,he began as a director of the neorealism school.He did not cut,however, the best of De Sica ,Rossellini and Visconti.

        Best part comes from a sensitive Massimo Girotti but he's not really given a scene to shine -as he had in Visconti's "Ossessione" -.Lucia Bosé gives a good but a bit icily impersonal performance.

        "Cronaca di un amore" is an interesting movie,if only for the things it forecasts: -the screenplay takes the shape of a private investigation,predating by ten years the second part of "l'avventura" and "blow-up" -the scenes displaying wealthy people living in luxury and exchanging futile conversations will be fully developed in "la Notte" But the most interesting subject is responsibility.Is a crime we intend to commit really a crime?This subject was rarely treated in Italian cinema ."Blow up" will come back to appearances .

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        Storyline

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        Did you know

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        • Trivia
          Michelangelo Antonioni's feature film directorial debut. He wanted to cast Gene Tierney as Paola, but since he was an unknown European director he could not get her. Eventually he met then 19 year old Lucia Bosè, who had been Miss Italy 1947, while having lunch at fellow director Luchino Visconti's house. While initially skeptical over her maturity, Visconti convinced him to audition her.
        • Goofs
          After Paola says, "Leave me alone," the camera moves to follow her as she collapses onto her bed. In the upper right corner of the frame, a white drape can be briefly seen before it is pulled out of the path of the camera.
        • Connections
          Featured in Les films de Marco Ferreri (2008)

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        Details

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        • Release date
          • June 1, 1951 (France)
        • Country of origin
          • Italy
        • Language
          • Italian
        • Also known as
          • Paula
        • Filming locations
          • Idroscalo, Milan, Lombardia, Italy
        • Production company
          • Villani Film
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

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        • Gross worldwide
          • $528
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

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        • Runtime
          • 1h 38m(98 min)
        • Color
          • Black and White
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.37 : 1

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