Italian director Antonioni dies in Rome

Influential Italian filmmaker Michelangelo Antonioni has died at the age of 94.

Influential Italian filmmaker Michelangelo Antonioni has died at the age of 94.

Considered the cinematic father of modern angst and alienation, Antonioni had a career spanning six decades which included the Oscar-nominated Blowupand the internationally acclaimed L'Avventura (The Adventure).

Antonioni 's deliberately slow-moving and oblique movies were not always crowd pleasers, but films such as L'Avventuraturned him into an icon for directors like Martin Scorsese, who has described him as a poet with a camera.

Antonioni was born in 1912 in the northern Italian city of Ferrara. He directed his first feature, Cronaca di un amore (Story of a Love Affair),in 1950 at 38.

READ MORE

Over the next two decades Antonioni worked with some of the greatest names in post-war Italian cinema, like Marcello Mastroianni, but it was not until the 1960s that he emerged on the international stage.

He scored his first real international success in 1960 with L'Avventura, an exploration of the emotional sterility of modern society.

His second breakthrough picture came in 1966 with the English-language Blowup, set in "swinging 60s" London, which turned him into a cult figure for moviegoers and moviemakers.

Many audiences found his pictures, with their long lingering shots, plodding and pretentious. Others hailed him as one of the founding fathers of European avant-garde cinema.

He was awarded Venice's Golden Lion in 1983 and a US Academy Award in 1995 for his lifetime achievements.

Antonioni's death last night followed that of Swedish film legend Ingmar Bergman, who died yesterday aged 89.