Antony and Cleopatra (1975)
Facts
| Directed by | Jon Scoffield |
| Cast | Richard Johnson, Janet Suzman, Rosemary McHale, Mavis Taylor Blake and Darien Angadi |
| Theatrical Release | January 4, 1975 |
| DVD Release | June 22, 2004 |
| Running Time | 161 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 012236132738 |
| Buy this item | $12.99 at Amazon.com As of Oct 12 11:19 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Lions Gate, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 37 new from $6.83, 10 used from $6.00 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| excellent performances |
| To Cool a Gypsy's Lust ... |
Nunn elegantly portrays the difference between Rome and Alexandria. Rome is presented as if in a bare, large, air-conditioned, brightly lit room. The background is pure white. Caesar and the Romans look clear eyed and freshly showered, shaved, with hair cut short and neatly combed, wearing pure white robes, so unwrinkled they might have been starched. Everything is simple and transparent, there is right and wrong, good and evil, truth and falsehood, and one's duty is to do right. That is, one's duty is to faithfully serve Octavius Caesar.
In Egypt nothing is pure or simple. The air feels thick and objects appear hazy, as if seen through a fine gauze. Intimate rooms glow warmly with gold, silken-satin colored fabrics, richly embroidered tapestries, and immense luxuriously upholstered cushions. Ancient flutes and harps provide music, the moody food of love. The shimmering heat of the desert is a palpable reminder of strong emotions, and Cleopatra's palace is a mirage.
Janet Suzman is a sensual alluring Cleopatra, a woman who used her sexuality to manipulate Julius Caesar, then Pompey the Great, and now Mark Antony. Little wonder that the Romans mistrust her, the serpent of old Nile. Her constantly and violently shifting moods keep Antony off-balance and intrigued. Her sighs and tears are like forces of nature, great winds and rains, and as loyal Enobarbus assures Antony, she is a great piece of work, not to be missed if you happen to be in Egypt. And yet, Antony makes a marriage of political convenience with Octavia, a holy, cold and chaste Roman matron, very much the opposite of Cleopatra, not a good match for a man who has cultivated the pleasures of the East. Eventually, Octavia, who was to have bound Antony and Octavius in peace, provides the pretext for open warfare when she returns to Rome and Antony is drawn back to his Egyptian lover. The ill-starred marriage is the critical point at which Antony's fate finally tips toward his tragic, inevitable defeat.
Richard Johnson, a lusty masculine Antony, is the one-time valorous soldier, now lost in the pleasures of his relationship with Cleopatra and hard-partying with the Egyptians. Antony, although a Roman, wears a beautiful multi-colored robe with gold chains and jewelry. Once a war-hardened soldier, he is now ensnared by the hedonism of the East, shown by his rich, flowing speech, slightly unkempt beard and longish hair, and habitual feasting and drunkeness. Relaxing with drink in what appears to be a plush seraglio, with his trusty second in command Enobarbus, Antony reluctantly persuades himself to return to Rome. He is no longer the hero who revenged the assassination of Julius Caesar and bargained with Octavius to rule the world.
Corin Redgrave is Octavius, the clear-sighted, goal-driven Roman who prevails through superior organization, discipline, deceit and treachery. Young, efficient, and ruthless, Octavius would be at home today as a brilliant hedge-fund manager with an MBA from Harvard, reshaping the world by taking over old corporate empires and destroying them to build anew. His clean aryan appearance and fascist ethos provide a chilling subtext for the war against Cleopatra and Egypt. Antony may be a dissipated worn-out warrior, but he is honorable. Octavius is soulless power-broker who lets nothing get in his way, admired and feared but never trusted or loved.
The ambiguous atmosphere of Egypt conforms with ever changing views of reality - metamorphoses - counterpoint to the Roman illusion of certainty. Antony says, "let Rome in Tiber melt." Cleopatra on hearing of Antony's marriage to Octavia threatens to melt gold and pour it down a messenger's throat, and let "Egypt melt into NIle." Having lost a key battle Antony feels "authority melt from me," and he compares his life to the shifting clouds in the sky that first appear one way, and then another. When Antony dies, Cleopatra grieves that "the crown o' the earth doth melt." Octavius wins, but Antony and Cleopatra elude him in a suicide pact. Even in defeat, as the final curtain comes down on the stage, the East, one feels, will go its own way. There are no simple answers in this play and Trevor Nunn, graciously, does not try to provide them. May 28, 2008
| Quite good but... |
| Good performance |
The director, Jon Scoffield did a good job of producing a good film particularly in view of the fact that Shakespeare's plays are essentially theatrical and are a challenge to bring on film. However, he managed to produce a good film on a low budget by focusing on the characters and verse rather than producing a spectacle.
In summary, a good movie well worth viewing. March 29, 2006
| Too Close |
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