Zabriskie Point(1970) ⭐ Premium
A student radical who flees Los Angeles in a stolen light aircraft after a campus protest turns violent.
Michelangelo Antonioni’s Zabriskie Point is perhaps the most beautiful disaster in Hollywood history. Released in 1970 as a high-budget attempt by MGM to capture the "youth counterculture" market, it was met with a critical savaging from mainstream press like Roger Ebert, who called it "silly and stupid". Yet, decades later, it stands as a visually devastating condemnation of American materialism that feels as hypnotic and polarizing as ever. The Story: A Drift Through the Desert Zabriskie Point(1970)
If the narrative feels thin, the imagery is anything but. Antonioni used his $7 million budget to "bite the hand that fed him," turning the American landscape into a surreal stage for existential angst. Movie Review – Zabriskie Point - PopCult Reviews A student radical who flees Los Angeles in
The film follows two young people adrift in a turbulent landscape: Yet, decades later, it stands as a visually
The Point of No Return: Revisiting Michelangelo Antonioni’s Zabriskie Point (1970)