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IMDbPro

O Colosso de Rodes

Título original: Il colosso di Rodi
  • 1961
  • Approved
  • 2 h 7 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,8/10
4,6 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
O Colosso de Rodes (1961)
Official Trailer
Reproduzir trailer2:26
1 vídeo
61 fotos
AventuraDramaEspada e sandáliaGuerraHistória

Durante as férias em Rodes, um herói de guerra ateniense se envolve em duas conspirações para derrubar o rei tirânico: uma dos patriotas de Rodes e a outra dos sinistros agentes fenícios.Durante as férias em Rodes, um herói de guerra ateniense se envolve em duas conspirações para derrubar o rei tirânico: uma dos patriotas de Rodes e a outra dos sinistros agentes fenícios.Durante as férias em Rodes, um herói de guerra ateniense se envolve em duas conspirações para derrubar o rei tirânico: uma dos patriotas de Rodes e a outra dos sinistros agentes fenícios.

  • Direção
    • Sergio Leone
  • Roteiristas
    • Ennio De Concini
    • Sergio Leone
    • Cesare Seccia
  • Artistas
    • Rory Calhoun
    • Lea Massari
    • Georges Marchal
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,8/10
    4,6 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Sergio Leone
    • Roteiristas
      • Ennio De Concini
      • Sergio Leone
      • Cesare Seccia
    • Artistas
      • Rory Calhoun
      • Lea Massari
      • Georges Marchal
    • 42Avaliações de usuários
    • 33Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    The Colossus of Rhodes
    Trailer 2:26
    The Colossus of Rhodes

    Fotos61

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    Elenco principal24

    Editar
    Rory Calhoun
    Rory Calhoun
    • Dario
    Lea Massari
    Lea Massari
    • Diala
    Georges Marchal
    Georges Marchal
    • Peliocle
    • (as George Marchal)
    Conrado San Martín
    Conrado San Martín
    • Tireo
    • (as Conrado Sanmartin)
    • …
    Ángel Aranda
    Ángel Aranda
    • Koros
    Mabel Karr
    Mabel Karr
    • Mirte
    Mimmo Palmara
    Mimmo Palmara
    • Ares
    Roberto Camardiel
    Roberto Camardiel
    • Serse
    Alfio Caltabiano
    • Creonte
    • (as Alf Randal)
    Jorge Rigaud
    Jorge Rigaud
    • Lisippo
    Yann Larvor
    Yann Larvor
    • Mahor
    Carlo Tamberlani
    Carlo Tamberlani
    • Xenon
    Félix Fernández
    Félix Fernández
    • Carete
    Ignazio Dolce
    Ignazio Dolce
    Antonio Casas
    Antonio Casas
    • Phoenician Ambassador
    Fernando Calzado
    • Sirione
    Arturo Cabré
      Álvaro de Luna
      Álvaro de Luna
        • Direção
          • Sergio Leone
        • Roteiristas
          • Ennio De Concini
          • Sergio Leone
          • Cesare Seccia
        • Elenco e equipe completos
        • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

        Avaliações de usuários42

        5,84.6K
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        Avaliações em destaque

        7Nazi_Fighter_David

        "I wanted so much but I die without getting anything."

        Leone served his apprenticeship in film by assisting various Italian directors as well as Walsh, Wyler and Melvyn Le Roy… By the late '50s he was writing scripts for gladiatorial epics, the genre in which he first gained directing experience, and took over "The Last Days of Pompeii" when the director Mario Bonnard fell ill before directing alone "The Colossus of Rhodes." Not until 1964, however, did he establish himself as a true original with his first film in what would come to be known as the Man With No Name trilogy…

        "The Colossus of Rhodes" begins in the island of Rhodes in the Mediterranean Sea 280 B.C.

        Rhodes is celebrating a proud day in her history… A magnificent statue will now dominate the seas… But the Colossus was erected in blood and the people in Rhodes do not want slavery… The chief of the rebels, Peliocles (Georges Marchal) needs a man like that visitor Dario (Rory Calhoun), who's a great warrior in Greece…

        Thar (Conrado San Martín)—who is in love with Diala (Lia Massari)—is no longer content with the power Serse (Roberto Camardiel) stupidly bestowed upon him… He wants this beautiful island to sell to Phoenicia, than he'll be the reigning monarch… Of course the rebels don't have enough men to attack them openly…

        There's only one plan, to enter the Colossus… But the Colossus is impregnable…How could they hope to get in? Rhodes' best soldiers are imprisoned underground… A heavy gate seals the only exit… This gate can only be opened by a control in the Colossus…

        If you want to see how the Colossus is a huge trap don't miss this Sergio Leone's directorial debut
        mhrabovsky1-1

        The Colossus of Rhodes

        Word was that director Sergio Leone who stepped in during 1959 and took over directing "The Last Days of Pompeii" with Steve (Mr. Hercules, himself) Reeves wanted to make a sword and sandal film...at that time Italy was churning out the musclebulgers by the dozens.....Steve Reeves with that physique carved from granite was the king of these musclebulgers.....and to a lesser degree by another musclebulger named Mark Forrest. Leone employed all the members of "Last Days of Pompeii" he could hire....the one exception was he wanted Steve Reeves with that bulging physique to star but Reeves was committed to making "The Giant of Marathon" and "The Great White Warrior" and was not available.....How did I get this info??? I knew a friend of Reeves who talked to him and how Leone liked him and offered him the role in Colossus...... Rumor was a rather handsome but undernourished John Derek was the choice for Dario in the lead role...but a feud developed between Leone and Calhoun who was making another costume "epic" nearby in Italy was suddenly available. Calhoun had made his reputation during the 50s making westerns and was hired......anyhow, story is a typical Italian sword and sandal epic of evil rulers, mob scenes, tortures with whips and chains and a few lovely women to look at.....main story line concerns a giant erected statue called the Colossus which stands over the entrance of the harbor to the island of Rhodes in 280 BC. The Colossus drops oodles of fire and brimstone from it's bottom on any invading ships and invaders who try and enter unwelcome...... Calhoun in leading role as Dario looks out of place....he has that greased up hair do from the 50s he wore and those white shiny boot sandals he had on...ugh!!!! Lea Massari his off and on again love interest is very wooden with a large skin blemish right in the middle of her forehead!!! Where was the make up department????? Massari has all the charm of a wooden box and little to no sex appeal.....in most sword and sandal movies the women are skimpily dressed to the extreme to attract the male audience.....in Colossus the women are covered with full length togas and long dresses....go figure.....Mylene Demengeot who co starred with Steve Reeves in "Giant of Marathon" would have been a better female leading lady for this film....anyhow....there are still legions of sword and sandal fans out there who remembers all those gladiator films....the genre was resuscitated briefly in Russell Crowe's 2000 film "Gladiator".....word was the director wanted Steve Reeves to come out of retirement and play a role but Reeves was in declining health at the time and could not commit....so sad to see the king of these S&S films decline the role......only real criticism is this film is about 20 minutes or so too long coming in at 2 hrs and 15 minutes.......still not bad to see for sword and sandal fans.
        5Sergeant_Tibbs

        Well, at least Leone got better.

        Technically master director Sergio Leone's debut, The Colossus of Rhodes wasn't his first foray into swords-and-sandals epics. He was famously the second unit director for Ben-Hur and had to take over the reigns himself for The Last Days of Pompeii. Although he's known now for his Westerns, he certainly had a little niche going at the start. Unfortunately, there's fundamental flaws with that niche and it just doesn't hold up to today. Bland characters, bland story. It takes itself too seriously and ends up overly camp. It wants to have a camaraderie about war but it comes off awkward and childish ending with meaningless conflict and catastrophe. It's an interesting film and relatively watchable but it's terribly dated. While it has the pace of his subsequent films, it has none of the grit or tension. The most disappointing aspect is that the photography is incredibly flat. While the frames take a massive expanse for a debut, there's no depth and the sets are just obvious. Well, at least he got better.

        5/10
        6AlsExGal

        Before the man with no name...

        ...there was the movie that probably should not have been. It's not THAT bad, it's just surprising to see the director is Sergio Leone. But we all have to start somewhere don't we? And Leone started with this sword-and-sandals epic.

        In the year 280 BC, Rhodes is a rich and powerful seaport island nation. King Serse (Roberto Camardiel) has just unveiled the Colossus, a massive metal statue of the god Apollo that stands over the port entrance. Greek hero Dario (Rory Calhoun) is in town for the festivities when he's approached by Peliocles (Georges Marchal) to join in a slave uprising against the Rhodesian oppressors. Dario is reluctant until he learns that the Phoenicians are plotting to overthrow the king and take the city's treasures.

        This handsome production strives more for Ben-Hur or Spartacus style epic grandeur than Hercules Unchained B-movie pablum. Calhoun is a very dubious casting choice as the hero, and the French star Marchal is a more suitable lead. The costumes are nice and colorful, and the sets are very impressive, especially the Temple of Baal. At 127 minutes, this goes on about a half hour too long. However, there are some good action scenes, including an extended gladiator arena sequence. Unfortunately, a guy in a gorilla suit glimpsed briefly near the beginning never returns. This was the first credited directing job from spaghetti western maestro Sergio Leone, but his skill was not readily evident from this effort. Still, there's enough spectacle to keep this from being a complete waste of time.

        Warner Brothers actually restored this and put this one on DVD, with commentary even. And yet they never got around to doing the same for Showboat. The speed in technology changes - DVD to Blu, physical to streaming, and throw in the Great Recession of 2008, and you see what seems like some strange choices by the studios. This one is often on Turner Classic Movies since Warner Bros. owns the rights. It is probably worth a watch for the novelty of it all.
        6pninson

        Satisfying spectacle

        Now that this film is at last available on DVD (having never been issued on tape or laserdisc), more people will get a chance to see it and hopefully it will be better appreciated. Until now, the only way to see it was to wait for it to show up on TCM, which happened once or twice.

        While this is Sergio Leone's first credited film as a director, you won't see the hallmarks of the distinctive Leone style. He's working here more as a director for hire, just as Stanley Kubrick had done the year before with "Spartacus." Rory Calhoun is woefully out of place, his hairstyle wildly anachronistic (full of that greasy kid stuff), he grins idiotically at inappropriate moments and gives his inane dialogue all the gusto it deserves. The story is fairly straightforward, although refreshingly free of the ersatz piety that infects so many epic Hollywood films of the era. There's a lip-smacking taste for brutality, as some of the heroes are fiendishly tortured; this appears to have been a hallmark of Italian epics of the time.

        Where this movie works --- and it does --- is in the spectacle itself. You might not think that set decoration, production design, costumes, and cinematography can carry a picture, but in this case these elements are so well done it more than offsets Calhoun's dorky performance and the weaknesses of the plot. Bear in mind when you watch this that Leone did not have a computer to work with. Everything that you see had to be built or painted, and it's remarkably effective.

        The film is perhaps a bit overlong, but the story has enough energy to carry the action sequences and bring all those incredible sets to life. The supporting cast is good enough to make up for Calhoun, although the dubbing is poorly done.

        It's not as sophisticated as "Spartacus", but it's certainly more effective than, say, "Clash of the Titans." If you like sword-and-sandal films, this one is well worth your time.

        Enredo

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        • Curiosidades
          O Colosso de Rodes (1961) is set during the time following Alexander the Great's death (323 BC) but before the rise of the Roman empire (27 BC), known as the Hellenistic era. Most sword-and-sandal epics of the 1950s and 1960s were set in either classical Greece or even earlier (Hércules (1958), Ulysses (1954), O Gigante de Maratona (1959)) or the later Roman period (Ben-Hur (1959), O Magnifico Gladiador (1964), Quo Vadis (1951)). The only other films made during the peplum era to use a Hellenistic setting are Aníbal, O Conquistador (1959), A Revolta dos Bárbaros (1960) and O Cerco de Siracusa (1960).
        • Erros de gravação
          The picture dates itself to 280 BCE. The island of Rhodes is shown as an independent state, which is true enough for the time; however, it's alleged to have a king although Rhodes was a republic at the time. The king bears an uncharacteristic non-Greek name: Serse, an Italian corruption of Xerxes, a Greek corruption of an Iranian name that it scarcely resembles. The king receives an ambassador from Phoenicia - at the time an integral part of the Seleukid Empire (Syria). Greece is referred to as if a united country, which at the time was untrue - divided as it was between Attika, Lakaidemon, the Akhaian League, the Aitolian League, Epiros, Makedon, and other states.
        • Citações

          Mirte: [seductively] I can grant your most secret desire.

          Darios: Which one?

        • Versões alternativas
          There are several different versions, running from 126 minutes to 142 minutes. The French version is shortest but has some longer shots than English and German version. The Italian original is available in a restored 142 minute long version which contains all scenes. The main title sequence also differs between versions.
        • Conexões
          Edited into Calígula e Messalina (1981)

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        Perguntas frequentes15

        • How long is The Colossus of Rhodes?Fornecido pela Alexa

        Detalhes

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        • Data de lançamento
          • 11 de agosto de 1961 (França)
        • Países de origem
          • Itália
          • França
          • Espanha
        • Idioma
          • Italiano
        • Também conhecido como
          • El coloso de Rodas
        • Locações de filme
          • Bay of Biscay, Atlantic Ocean
        • Empresas de produção
          • Cine-Produzioni Associate
          • Procusa
          • Comptoir Français de Productions Cinématographiques (CFPC)
        • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

        Especificações técnicas

        Editar
        • Tempo de duração
          • 2 h 7 min(127 min)
        • Cor
          • Color
        • Proporção
          • 2.35 : 1

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