Blow-Up - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Blow-Up"
Blow-Up (1966)
Timing: 1:51 (111 min)
Blow-Up - TMDB rating
7.375/10
1191
Blow-Up - Kinopoisk rating
7.689/10
30838
Blow-Up - IMDB rating
7.4/10
72000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Executive Producer

Pierre Rouve
Executive Producer

Editor

Frank Clarke
Editor

Art Direction

Assheton Gorton
Art Direction

Costume Design

Jocelyn Rickards
Costume Design

Makeup Artist

Paul Rabiger
Makeup Artist

Original Music Composer

Photo Herbie Hancock #42705

Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock
Original Music Composer

Director of Photography

Photo Carlo Di Palma #115561
Carlo Di Palma
Director of Photography

Sound Effects Editor

Fernando Caso
Sound Effects Editor

Hairstylist

Stephanie Kaye
Hairstylist

Still Photographer

Arthur Evans
Still Photographer

Production Manager

Donald Toms
Production Manager

Screenplay

Edward Bond
Screenplay

Story

Sound Recordist

Robin Gregory
Sound Recordist

Wardrobe Supervisor

Rebecca Breed
Wardrobe Supervisor

Sound Editor

Mike Le Mare
Sound Editor

Clapper Loader

Mike Rutter
Clapper Loader

Dialogue

Edward Bond
Dialogue

Assistant Camera

David Wynn-Jones
Assistant Camera

Author

What's left behind the scenes

  • This is the first English-language film to fully depict female nudity.
  • In order to bypass censorship restrictions and release the film, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer created a shell company, Premiere Productions, which was not subject to censorship. As a result, the film was released uncut, and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer retained all rights to it.
  • Julio Cortázar can be seen in one of the photographs of homeless men taken by Thomas.
  • The Rolls-Royce that Thomas drives in the film belonged to English actor Jimmy Savile and was repainted from white to black for filming.
  • Antonioni was dissatisfied with the shade of green of the grass in Marion Park and ordered it to be repainted with green paint.
  • The famous propeller from the film was located in a restaurant of the same name in St. Petersburg on the Griboyedov Canal, opposite the Kazan Cathedral, for some time in the early 2000s.
  • A reference to the film can also be seen in Tim Burton's 'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory' (2005), in the scene where two gay men walk poodles before Charlie finds the money.
  • One scene in the film shows a fragment of a 'The Yardbirds' concert in which Jeff Beck breaks his guitar. This performance dates back to that brief period in the band's history when Beck and Jimmy Page played together – Beck left the band a few months after this performance. Initially, 'The Who' were contenders to replace 'The Yardbirds'.
  • The film is based on the short story 'Blow-Up' by Julio Cortázar.
  • To bypass censorship restrictions, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer created a shell company, Premiere Productions, which was not subject to censorship restrictions. As a result, the film was released uncut, and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer retained the rights to it.
  • In one of the photographs of homeless men taken by Thomas, the author of the original story, Julio Cortázar, can be seen.
  • The Rolls-Royce that Thomas drives belonged to English actor Jimmy Savile and was repainted from white to black for filming.
  • Antonioni was dissatisfied with the color of the grass in Marion Park and ordered it to be touched up with green paint.
  • The famous propeller from the film in the early 2000s was located in a restaurant of the same name in St. Petersburg on the Griboyedov Canal.
Did you like the film?

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