Marked Eyes - 1964
 Tuesday, March 21, 2023 at 03:55PM
Tuesday, March 21, 2023 at 03:55PM Robert Hossein is a pulp genius and master stylist. He makes more from less than any director I can think of. His simple, evocative camera movements align with his unpredictable, powerful editing to generate suspense, tension, arousal - lotta shockingly hot stuff for the era, as usual in his pictures - compassion and ever-deeper involvement in the story.
This is Hossein's most direct narrative. It seems to be about exactly what plot says it is, which is almost weird, given the multi-layeredness of his other pictures. And it's no less hypnotic for that.
This is also his most Noir Noir. BLONDE IN  A WHITE CAR is so weird and singular I'm not sure it's a Noir at all.  This features not one but two femmes fatale. The young, seemingly innocent one in  her little girl pajamas casually walking around a filthy basement  bashing at everything with a razo-sharp hatchet while blithely  blackmailing her victim is peak Hossein.
Hossein co-stars with Michéle Morgan, and treats her austere, enigmatic face and balletic grace - wait til you see her glide through the forest in her chic city shoes – as Antonioni treats Monica Vitti: an infinite, glamorous, cinematic mystery.
Hossein's genius is something of a mystery, too. He's a pure cinematician working with the most low-brow, pulp material that he turns into poetry. His father's (!) beautiful, lyrical score works in exact opposition to the grit of the story, thus raising even more contradictory emotions.
 Antonioni,
Antonioni,   Michele Morgan,
Michele Morgan,   Monica Vitti,
Monica Vitti,   Robert Hossein
Robert Hossein  


