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Caravaggio

  • 1986
  • 1 Std. 33 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,5/10
7479
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Caravaggio (1986)
A retelling of the life of the celebrated 17th-century painter through his brilliant, nearly blasphemous paintings and his flirtations with the underworld.
trailer wiedergeben1:42
1 Video
73 Fotos
Zeitraum: DramaBiographieDramaGeschichteRomanze

Eine Nacherzählung des Lebens des berühmten Malers aus dem 17. Jahrhundert anhand seiner genialen, fast schon blasphemischen Gemälde und Liebäugeleien mit der Unterwelt.Eine Nacherzählung des Lebens des berühmten Malers aus dem 17. Jahrhundert anhand seiner genialen, fast schon blasphemischen Gemälde und Liebäugeleien mit der Unterwelt.Eine Nacherzählung des Lebens des berühmten Malers aus dem 17. Jahrhundert anhand seiner genialen, fast schon blasphemischen Gemälde und Liebäugeleien mit der Unterwelt.

  • Regie
    • Derek Jarman
  • Drehbuch
    • Derek Jarman
    • Nicholas Ward Jackson
    • Suso Cecchi D'Amico
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Noam Almaz
    • Dexter Fletcher
    • Nigel Terry
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,5/10
    7479
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Derek Jarman
    • Drehbuch
      • Derek Jarman
      • Nicholas Ward Jackson
      • Suso Cecchi D'Amico
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Noam Almaz
      • Dexter Fletcher
      • Nigel Terry
    • 42Benutzerrezensionen
    • 32Kritische Rezensionen
    • 55Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 3 Gewinne & 3 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:42
    Trailer

    Fotos73

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    Topbesetzung30

    Ändern
    Noam Almaz
    • Boy Caravaggio
    Dexter Fletcher
    Dexter Fletcher
    • Young Caravaggio
    Nigel Terry
    Nigel Terry
    • Caravaggio
    Sean Bean
    Sean Bean
    • Ranuccio
    Garry Cooper
    Garry Cooper
    • Davide
    Spencer Leigh
    • Jerusaleme
    Tilda Swinton
    Tilda Swinton
    • Lena
    Nigel Davenport
    Nigel Davenport
    • Giustiniani
    Robbie Coltrane
    Robbie Coltrane
    • Scipione Borghese
    Michael Gough
    Michael Gough
    • Cardinal Del Monte
    Dawn Archibald
    • Pipo
    Jack Birkett
    • The Pope
    Una Brandon-Jones
    • Weeping Woman
    Imogen Claire
    • Lady with the Jewels
    Sadie Corre
    • Princess Collona
    Lol Coxhill
    • Old Priest
    Vernon Dobtcheff
    Vernon Dobtcheff
    • Art Lover
    Terry Downes
    Terry Downes
    • Bodyguard
    • Regie
      • Derek Jarman
    • Drehbuch
      • Derek Jarman
      • Nicholas Ward Jackson
      • Suso Cecchi D'Amico
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen42

    6,57.4K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    Gordon-11

    I was lost

    This film tells the life story of the 17th-century painter, Caravaggio, from his adolescence to his death.

    I find "Caravaggio" not very easy to follow, because characters are not introduced by name; and it also does not help when Caravaggio is played by three different actors! There is little dialog in the film, as many messages are conveyed in the unsaid. This also adds to the difficulty in understanding the plot.

    It also tries to push boundaries by having obvious anachronisms. I find myself stopping to think whether these objects exist in those days, which adds to me being more lost. Though I did not particularly enjoyed "Caravaggio", I will give Derek Jarman's films another go though.
    8Falconeer

    Poetic and haunting film

    Derek Jarman has crafted a beautiful and unique work of art in "Caravaggio". Perhaps the fact that I have a great love for the work of the real Michelangelo Caravaggio, influences my judgment just a bit; It was quite enjoyable to see the paintings come to life, and to witness how they might have actually been created. In fact, much of Jarmans poetic film has the look of a lush, living painting. There is much to admire here besides the aesthetics; the talented and beautiful cast, led by Nigel Terry, the intense-looking Sean Bean, as Ranuccio, and the elegant Tilda Swinton, as Lena; the woman loved by two very passionate, and tormented men. The acting is all around excellent, but Nigel Terry as Michelangelo really stands out. He is great to watch, and brings life to a man the world knows not so much about. Also actor Dexter Fletcher was quite funny and likable in his portrayal of the younger Caravaggio. More than a historical, biographical account of the painter, this is more the study of a classic love triangle. Caravaggio's models were mostly street people, many of them also criminals, and it seemed that he often became personally involved with his subjects. His love for 'Lena' seems to be as strong, if not stronger, than his love for 'Ranuccio'. And this divided love has tragic consequences, for all involved. I didn't find "Caravaggio" an overly gay film, as the subject wasn't focused on obsessively, like other films of this nature tend to do. The love affair between Lena and Michelangelo was given as much attention as the relationship between him and Ranuccio. Therefore those who might feel a little uncomfortable with the subject matter, need not be, as it is actually quite accessible. Recommended, especially for admirers of the painter Caravaggio. As mentioned earlier, there are scenes that are modeled exactly on the paintings. To see these come alive is really something to behold. There is a new region 2 DVD from Germany that features the most beautiful transfer I have ever seen of any film. It comes close to "High Definition" quality, I recommend this as well.
    peedur

    Remarkable

    Few moviegoers would know that the real Caravaggio was a convicted criminal and even by today's standards, a hell raiser. Rome's police records list fourteen citations in six years, from public nuisance to several violent assaults. In May of 1606 he murdered a friend, one Ranuccio Tomassoni in a sword fight. Added to these lurid details, his sexual interests show that he freely drifted from the Vatican's ordained model. This makes Caravaggio an interesting person, but a highly complex candidate for a biographic investigation on film.

    While Derek Jarman's film captures (with delightful conceit) many of the surface details of Caravaggio's life, it's a work of startling genius because it succeeds on a far more profound level. Jarman tells the story of Caravaggio rather like Caravaggio would paint, infusing it (effortlessly) with the central themes of his life's deepest convictions, creating a portrait which reflects the subject and the artist with equal relevance. What's more, many of the same themes that have been identified with both artists - sexuality, transcendence, violence, censorship, politics (religious/sexual) and the tumultuous source of creative identity are present in both men. It works as very few films do. This is also an unusually accessible film for Derek Jarman. The performances are entertaining and it's filmed with astounding beauty and simplicity. This film is a masterpiece.

    However, because of it's homosexual themes and personal tone, "Caravaggio" is likely to be appreciated only by those viewers who weary of film as simple diversion and long for something more challenging. This is a powerful artistic statement, but it flew under the radar during a decade of British film-making where "Gandhi", "Chariots of Fire" and "A Room With A View" represented the best of what was being made. While those films are great in their way, this film value is greater in terms of bravura and personal expression. See it if you can.
    secondtake

    Brave, gorgeous, self-indulgent, and completely relevant

    Caravaggio (1986)

    It's easy to be frustrated by movie that seems by its title to be one thing but is so clearly something else. This is no bio-pic of the great artist. It doesn't even create (to me) a more abstract sense of what it might have meant to be such an artist, or to be creative and tormented and a scrappy, sometimes ill man.

    Instead it's a movie that uses some themes, and some paintings, of Caravaggio and builds a completely invented (to my knowledge) story line. For one thing, it's set in some fairly recent time--the 1920s or 30s, perhaps? And it's highly highly British, which is no flaw, but it feels part of a 1980s London underground in the expressions and vocabulary. If you can open up to all that, you've made a first step. If you can't, forget it. Run to another version (like the terrific new Italian one from 2007).

    The second step is key, too, however, for many of you. This is an overtly homo-erotic, or at least homosexually charged fantasy. It has no overt sex (though there is lots of kissing all around) and it does includes some female actors (including a fabulous Tilda Swinton), but there are lots of "pretty boy" scenes and a sensibility that is just frankly different than the usual film world mainstream.

    That's a great thing. That doesn't however make the movie completely work. It's worth watching if you are prepared for its tone, and it's brilliant in some sense, utterly original, a kind of high production value, high culture flip side to the films of Andy Warhol (if that makes any sense at all). There are excesses in violence, bloody, death, love, corporal pleasure and corporal torture--but these are exactly what the 1980s were all about. Think of Robert Mapplethorpe.

    It's not my own world at all, but I found it a kind of thrill to see made so rich and colorful, so unexpected every turn. And so photographically beautiful. It is at times disturbing and moving, but mostly it is pretty and fascinating. It lacks a more usual structure, but you get used to that and learn to like it.
    6ElMaruecan82

    As beautiful as it is confusing...

    I tend to define myself as an artist and I consider my mind broad enough to welcome any artistic license coming from a director whom I also consider an artist... but when a historical biopic supposedly tells you the story of an artist of the caliber of Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio and by some burst of inspiration, the director Derek Jarman decides to insert anachronistic details that go from people wearing suits, tuxedos or sights as incongruous as a bike or a typewriter... I can help but feel a certain resistance to whatever should appeal to me at that moment. To put it simply, that turned me off.

    We're speaking of a few random scenes that didn't affect the story in a way or another, and their needlessness made me even angrier... I know there's a way to interpret everything, maybe some iconoclastic approach to a man who himself was a revolutionary painter and initiator of the Baroque school, with its high contrast of lights and dark shadows and very expressive style, maybe it was Jarman's ambition to pay tribute to the painter and the project took him so long and underwent so many incidents he didn't care for realism, using the 'Italy of his memory' according to his photographer, but there are so many magnificent shots in the film that recreate the texture of the latest years of the Renaissance and even the color of the initial painting that my mind kept wondering Why? What was the purpose to all that?

    Now, I've said it... and having said that, I can say that I enjoyed the look of the film and its recreation of some of Caravaggio's paintings, not that I could recall them all, in fact, I'm not familiar with his work but that didn't matter at all, any scene could have been painting material and last films to made me feel that were "Barry Lyndon" and "Cries and Whispers" (with its long contemplative monologues told in voice-over, the film did have a Bergmanian quality of its own). The use of contrast, the dust and even the dirt looked somewhat appealing creating a sort of shadowy texture that enriched the skin complexion, it's a marvel of recreation and the first twenty minutes had me literally hooked. The part with Dexter Fletcher playing young Caravaggio (the one who impersonated Bacchus in a famous painting) with the ambiguous strange relationship going with a Cardinal (Michael Gough) was my favorite.

    The second part is more of a ptachwrok of scenes where it's difficult to keep a certain feeling of continuity but we get the attraction between the painter (now older, played by Nigel Terry) and two models (Sean Bean who's way too good looking not to be distracting ) and Tilda Swinton. The scenes works so well visually but the narration keeps us in the shadow, and maybe it betrays the fact that Jarman was so immersed in his character that he only left us a few breeches to wriggle through, as a character study, I didn't find the passionate artist or whatever wood made the fire of his creativity burn, the passion was there but it was diluted in that feeling of detachment, of randomness that made it very hard to follow... it's hard to make movies about painters, to understand their painting, you've got to see their vision, to hear their mind and I guess I simply couldn't connect myself and my mind was stubbornly sticking to these iconoclasts details that they gave me the feeling tat Jackman didn't care for authenticity, only for mood.

    In my prime as a movie watcher, I would have given the film another 'chance' (or myself) but I don't think I would get it any better, anyway, it is a good film but looks more like an art-house for which the word 'pretentious' was invented, a picture meant for students, rather than a biopic for the average watcher. I didn't like the film for several reasons and perhaps the most vivid one is that it makes me feel like a conventional schmuck who can't enjoy art or understand it. I wouldn't call it pretentious but there's something rather vain in the way one appropriate himself a character and twists his life like that, even for the sake of art. Or maybe to use a hackneyed version, I didn't get it and now, I'm among the users who rated the film low enough to earn it a rating above 7...

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    Romanze

    Handlung

    Ändern

    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      Tilda Swinton's debut.
    • Patzer
      A typewriter is used, a saxophone is played, a train and steamship hooter are heard. In addition one of the characters plays with a (very advanced for the time of the movie) credit card-sized calculator with beeping buttons. These items are included deliberately as a stylistic decision of the filmmakers, not "goofs" of people unaware of the absence of these items in the 1500s and 1600s.
    • Zitate

      Caravaggio: [after being stabbed by Ranuccio Caravaggio touches the wound and blood] Blood brothers!

      [Ranucchio kisses him]

    • Crazy Credits
      The end credits scroll down the screen (top-to-bottom).
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Arena: Derek Jarman - A Portrait (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      MISSA LUX ET ORGIO
      By kind permission of Casa Musicale Eco (Milan)

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 7. September 2006 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Zeitgeist Films
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Italienisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Караваджо
    • Drehorte
      • Limehouse Studios, Limehouse, London, England, Vereinigtes Königreich(Studio)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • British Film Institute (BFI)
      • Channel Four Television
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 450.000 £ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 3.774 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 532 $
      • 21. Apr. 2002
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 30.525 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 33 Min.(93 min)
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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