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Oedipe Roi

Titre original : Edipo Re
  • 1967
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 44min
NOTE IMDb
7,2/10
7,3 k
MA NOTE
Oedipe Roi (1967)
Drame

Sauvé de l'abandon et élevé par le roi et la reine, Œdipe est toujours hanté par une prophétie: il tuera son père et épousera sa mère.Sauvé de l'abandon et élevé par le roi et la reine, Œdipe est toujours hanté par une prophétie: il tuera son père et épousera sa mère.Sauvé de l'abandon et élevé par le roi et la reine, Œdipe est toujours hanté par une prophétie: il tuera son père et épousera sa mère.

  • Réalisation
    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
  • Scénario
    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Sophocles
  • Casting principal
    • Silvana Mangano
    • Franco Citti
    • Alida Valli
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,2/10
    7,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Scénario
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
      • Sophocles
    • Casting principal
      • Silvana Mangano
      • Franco Citti
      • Alida Valli
    • 26avis d'utilisateurs
    • 40avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 4 victoires et 4 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:34
    Trailer

    Photos41

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    + 33
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux14

    Modifier
    Silvana Mangano
    Silvana Mangano
    • Giocasta
    Franco Citti
    Franco Citti
    • Edipo
    Alida Valli
    Alida Valli
    • Merope
    Carmelo Bene
    Carmelo Bene
    • Creonte
    Julian Beck
    Julian Beck
    • Tiresia
    Luciano Bartoli
    Luciano Bartoli
    • Laio
    Francesco Leonetti
    Francesco Leonetti
    • Servo di Laio
    Ahmed Belhachmi
    • Polibo
    Giovanni Ivan Scratuglia
    • Sacerdote
    • (as Ivan Scratuglia)
    Giandomenico Davoli
    • Pastore di Polibo
    Ninetto Davoli
    Ninetto Davoli
    • Angelo
    Laura Betti
    Laura Betti
    • Jocasta's Maid
    • (non crédité)
    Pier Paolo Pasolini
    Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • High Priest
    • (non crédité)
    Isabel Ruth
    Isabel Ruth
    • Jocasta's Maid with a Lamb
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Scénario
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
      • Sophocles
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs26

    7,27.3K
    1
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    9
    10

    Avis à la une

    chaos-rampant

    The really real

    Another marvelous film by Pasolini.

    No one is as cinematically intense as this man, but it's not an ordinary intensity he affects. It does not result from the withholding of narrative or visual information, it is not primarily a dramatic intensity; Lean, Hitchcock, Kurosawa, all did some terrific work in that external mode where we see the struggling human being in the cleanly revealed world of choices and fates.

    Pasolini works his way around all that, starting with one of the most archetypal stories. Here we have anticipation, foreknowledge as fate. And of course there is some dramatic intensity in this and others of his films, but that's not what makes him special. He can create heightened worlds that we experience with a real intensity. It goes back to that film movement called Neorealism which thrived in postwar Italy, where the utmost goal was to soak up a more human, more universal conflict as we staggered through broken pieces of the world.

    Looking back now it seems stale, we have a much more refined sense of what is real, we can see the conceit of the camera. But two filmmakers emerged from out of this movement who did work in a more radical direction, moving the images closer to perception.

    Antonioni is one of the greatest adventures in film. Pasolini is the other. The larger point with him is to have an intensely spiritual experience of a whole new storyworld, to that effect he selects myths that we have more or less fixed notions about how they should be (this, Medea, his Gospel film) and films them to have invigorating presence in the now.

    Every artistic choice in the film reflects that; the dresses, the swords, the landscapes, the faces, it's all intensely unusual to what you'd expect from Greek myth, seemingly handcarved to be from a preconscious world outside maps and time. The camera also reflects that; he could have plainly asked of a fixed camera and smooth, fixed traveling shots from his crew, but evidently he wants that warm lull of the human hand. It's a different sort of beauty, not in some painted image but in our placement in evocative space.

    When Oedipus visits the oracle at Delphii, we do not have sweeping shots of some ornate marble structure as you'd expect in a Hollywood film. A congregation of dustcaked villagers is gathered in a clearing before a group of trees, the oracle is a frightening old crone attended by slender boys in masks. The roads are dusty, interminable ribbons dropped by absent-minded gods. A Berber village in Morocco stands for ancient Thebes. Sudden dances. Silvana Mangano. And those headgear! It's all about extraordinariness in the sense of moving beyond inherited limits of truth.

    It works. This is a world of divinity, causal belief, and blind seeing into truth that even though it was fated, we discover anew in the sands.

    The sequence where a feverish Oedipus confronts his father at the crossroads will stay with me for a long time, the running, the sun, the distance where tethers are pulled taut.
    10returning

    Authenticity is not the issue

    We do ourselves no favour by fixating on how well a film uses every little detail and line in an original text. Certainly, by those standards this is a mediocre, and possibly lazy, film at best. But at the same time there is the problem of being so liberal in one's adaptation that every goes sour, the latest attempt at "Vanity Fair" is a perfect example. But this film, along with Bresson's "Pickpocket," should stand as the rules of adaptation for every young director. Both films are very interpretative, but the directors aren't so naive as to think that mere plot details can constitute a film. So what pushes this film beyond a mere surface-level adaptation? In this case, it takes a deep insight into the nature of Greek tragedy itself. Tragedy's dualism (the representational and the chaotic) is prevalent in all Pasolini's works, it was especially essential in his "Gospel," and I was excited to see how it played out in its own source, and the results are absolutely fantastic. Visually imaginative and so intellectually superior to its contemporaries it seems out of place in film.

    5 out of 5 - Essential
    6XxEthanHuntxX

    The Terrible Truth And Denial

    Pasolini tells the drama of a man who knows his destiny from the beginning but does not accept the awareness of evil, tries to escape an atrocious future, but is inevitably entangled in it. The director uses Oedipus, of a classic archetype, to tell the human condition, the inadequacy of those who know they must die, but are unable to accept it.

    The Moroccan setting that hides a fantasy Greece, between desert and villages of shepherds, mountains, cities built with clay and destroyed by plagues, is wonderful. A film written in images, dialogues reduced to the essentials, use of captions as in the silent era, intense photography and - for the first time in a Pasolini film - use of color that renders the ocher chromatism of the desert well.

    The film have some substantial flaws, especially the storytelling. But the great Pasolini-style shine's brightly throughout the film and Franco Citti is just amazing as Edipo himself.
    9johannes2000-1

    Hauntingly beautiful!

    I was very impressed, I really do think that this is a masterpiece! Pasolini used the original text of Sophocles' tragedy, so the story is tightly knotted, which gives the whole film a tangible urgency. There are, apart from the at times stunning amounts of extra's, only two main actors. Silvana Mangano as Giocasta only appears halfway through the movie and has hardly any lines, but she plays her part impressively by her facial expressions and her stature. Franco Citti as Oedipus is the absolute core of the movie, he dominates the screen with his rugged and fascinating face, he laughs and cries and screams, and all the time stays totally convincing as the self-assured ego-tripping hero, who gradually slips into the awareness that his whole life is based on unspeakable crimes and that he is toyed with by the gods and fate. Some reviewers opinioned he acted way over the top, but I assume it was all deliberately so orchestrated by Pasolini, emphasizing the origin of a Greek tragedy that had to be delivered from an open-air rostrum to a distant audience.

    The locations are dazzlingly beautiful, Morocco in fact, not Greece, but it works wonderfully well, as do the weird costumes which look like they were sowed and tinkered by the crew or the many locals themselves, but with the amazing effect of something out of a dream (or nightmare). The musical score is extremely subtle, at many times just the soft bleak rhythmic blows of a single drumstick, with an almost haunting effect.

    Strangely enough the prologue and epilogue are set in modern times, this doesn't add anything as far as I'm concerned, but as it was it gives us yet some other beautiful images, with the same vast green lawns and waving tree-tops in the opening and closing scene, completing a perfect circle.
    7christopher-underwood

    past events and just who did what with whom and for why become rather wearing.

    The early and late sequences filmed within Italy are some of the best Pasolini has filmed. His confident and measured pace as well as his eye for composition and love of such basics as trees and sky and grass are a joy to behold. As for the rest, it can be very taxing. The Moroccan desert and mountain scenery is wondrous and the placing and movement of large numbers of peoples impressive but there is a lot of ponderous and somewhat languorous adherence to this titular tale. The associated screaming and passionate pondering as to the ins and outs of past events and just who did what with whom and for why become rather wearing.

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Sophocles, the author of the original Greek tragedy on which this film is based, is given no on-screen credit.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Dias de Nietzsche em Turim (2001)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Oedipus Rex?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Is this movie based on a book?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 9 octobre 1968 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Italie
      • Maroc
    • Langues
      • Italien
      • Roumain
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Edipo, el hijo de la fortuna
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Maroc
    • Sociétés de production
      • Arco Film
      • Somafis
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 2 364 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 44min(104 min)
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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