Zabriskie Point - posters, covers, wallpapers

Lots of posters, covers and wallpapers for the movie "Zabriskie Point"
Zabriskie Point (1970)
Timing: 1:53 (113 min)
Zabriskie Point - TMDB rating
7.107/10
383
Zabriskie Point - Kinopoisk rating
7.572/10
9851
Zabriskie Point - IMDB rating
6.9/10
18000

Backdrops, wallpaper

Backdrop to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #240204HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #240203Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #240205HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #240206HD Ready 731p
Backdrop to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #240207HD Ready 720p

Posters, covers

Poster to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #2402082K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #2402093K 1772p
Poster to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #2402102K 1440p
Poster to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #2402115K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #2402122K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #2402133K 1772p
Poster to the movie "Zabriskie Point" #2402142K 1500p

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is named after the location “Zabriskie Point” in Death Valley.
  • A 17-minute scene that was not included in the film, called “The Violent Sequence,” whose main theme was composed by Richard Wright, the keyboardist for Pink Floyd, later became the basis for the song “Us & Them” from the famous album “The Dark Side of the Moon.”
  • Harrison Ford appeared in the film, but all scenes with him were cut during editing.
  • Conservatives condemned Antonioni for burning the American flag, the Oakland sheriff accused the director of coming to incite popular uprisings, and the state authorities launched an investigation into alleged "anti-Americanism".
  • Mark Frechette worked as a carpenter. He was accidentally spotted on the streets of Boston when he got into an argument with a woman. This kind of explosive personality was exactly what was needed for the film envisioned by the outstanding film master Michelangelo Antonioni.
  • A real house in Keefry, Arizona was used for filming. A replica of it was used for the explosion scene, built near Southwestern Studios in Keefry. Building the replica cost $100,000, and its explosion was filmed with 17 cameras.
  • In the original finale of the film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, an airplane wrote the words “Fuck You, America” in the sky, but MGM president Louis F. Polk ordered it and many other scenes cut from the film. James I. Aubrey, who replaced Polk in that position, restored many of the deleted scenes to the film, but not the episode with the airplane.
  • The orgy scene involved 100 people, half of whom were recruited from Joseph Chaikin's experimental theater troupe, the Open Theatre, and the other half from among the hippies.
  • Conservatives condemned Antonioni for burning the American flag, the Oakland sheriff accused the director of coming to incite popular unrest, and the state authorities launched an investigation into alleged "anti-Americanism".
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