La crescente ambizione di Giulio Cesare è fonte di grande preoccupazione per il suo caro amico Bruto, chi considera che insieme a Cassio abbiano tutti e due fortemente sottovalutato Marco An... Leggi tuttoLa crescente ambizione di Giulio Cesare è fonte di grande preoccupazione per il suo caro amico Bruto, chi considera che insieme a Cassio abbiano tutti e due fortemente sottovalutato Marco Antonio.La crescente ambizione di Giulio Cesare è fonte di grande preoccupazione per il suo caro amico Bruto, chi considera che insieme a Cassio abbiano tutti e due fortemente sottovalutato Marco Antonio.
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- Julius Caesar
- (as Sir John Gielgud)
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The most jarring for the military afficionados is the inappropriate armor and armament for the soldiers. The generals wear naval hats, and the armor is some kind of mish mash from other periods in history. I can only guess that this was done because the director liked the style (which was common for this period in film making for Hollywood to take such atrocious liberties with history).
It's worth it for seeing Chuck Heston's Marc Antony, but the version with Marlon Brando some yhears earlier (shot in black and white) is the one to see.
For all it's flaws, and there are many, this 1970 version staring Heston is worth a look. Heston plays Marc Antony as a passionate loyalist who seethes with the angst of betrayal, and does an ecellent job of it. Gielgud's Julius Caesar is solid, but I think the audience deserved someone with more gravitas and "a martial countenance", to borrow from the language of the time.
See it once.
Featuring a mixed cast of British and American actors, the result is mainly predictable but some surprises and disappointments also feature. One disappointment is Gielgud as Caesar. Sir John was a veteran Shakespearian by 1970 with a fine voice and tons of dignity. Yet at sixty-six he was a touch too old for the part. More to the point, the effete Gielgud lacked the masculine force to play this virile ex-general whose battlefield victories were said to be matched only by his conquests in the bedroom.
One surprise is the subtle portrayal of the conspirator Casca by American Robert Vaughan. "Sour" Casca, the cynical observer, is a minor character but sharply drawn and Vaughan makes him come alive during his few minutes on stage. Jill Bennet is sympathetic as the prophetic wife of Caesar but in the role of Brutus' wife the well-born Portia, Diana Rigg at age thirty-two looks luscious and is simply superb--Shakespeare in the finest style. Another veteran Shakespearian, Richard Johnson, is nearly as good as the jealous, manipulative Cassius.
Jason Robards plays Brutus like a wooden Indian for the first two acts. In the third act however--that is, after Brutus and Cassius have fled Rome--he seems to grow in the part and his acting gains conviction.
The importance of the plebeians to the play was understood by this director, who cast the roles carefully.
No one likes anyone that chews the scenery but Robards is the other end of the spectrum. He sounds like someone giving the morning farm report reciting Shakespeare.
The saving grace of this film is Charlton Heston. It is obvious, he is too old for the role, but his mere presence and performance make up for his age and the flatness in the rest of the production. His "Friends, Romans, Countryman," speech is the finest performance of that speech you will ever witness. It is worth watching this film, simply to witness Heston outshine everyone else in the cast. and make this film worth the watch for his performance alone.
It is sad. I think what this film could have been, had a better actor been given Brutus, but alas, that is not the case. Fast forward through the rest of the film and just enjoy Heston!
Lo sapevi?
- QuizRobert Vaughn says in his memoirs that Jason Robards, Jr. was very unhappy during the filming period, and dubious about the end result.
- BlooperCassius drinks from a wooden cup during the riot scene. When he throws the wooden cup it makes a sound as if it was glass.
- Citazioni
Julius Caesar: Let me have men about me that are fat; Sleek-headed men, and such as sleep o' nights. Yond Cassius has a lean and hungry look; He thinks too much: such men are dangerous.
- ConnessioniFeatured in History Buffs: Rome Season Two (2017)
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 57 minuti
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- 2.35 : 1