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Caravaggio

  • 1986
  • 1 h 33 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,5/10
7,4 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
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.
Reproduzir trailer1:42
1 vídeo
72 fotos
Period DramaBiographyDramaHistoryRomance

Um relato da vida do famoso pintor do século XVII através de suas pinturas brilhantes e quase blasfemas e seus flertes com o submundo.Um relato da vida do famoso pintor do século XVII através de suas pinturas brilhantes e quase blasfemas e seus flertes com o submundo.Um relato da vida do famoso pintor do século XVII através de suas pinturas brilhantes e quase blasfemas e seus flertes com o submundo.

  • Direção
    • Derek Jarman
  • Roteiristas
    • Derek Jarman
    • Nicholas Ward Jackson
    • Suso Cecchi D'Amico
  • Artistas
    • Noam Almaz
    • Dexter Fletcher
    • Nigel Terry
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,5/10
    7,4 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Derek Jarman
    • Roteiristas
      • Derek Jarman
      • Nicholas Ward Jackson
      • Suso Cecchi D'Amico
    • Artistas
      • Noam Almaz
      • Dexter Fletcher
      • Nigel Terry
    • 42Avaliações de usuários
    • 31Avaliações da crítica
    • 55Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 3 vitórias e 3 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:42
    Trailer

    Fotos72

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    Elenco principal30

    Editar
    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
    • Direção
      • Derek Jarman
    • Roteiristas
      • Derek Jarman
      • Nicholas Ward Jackson
      • Suso Cecchi D'Amico
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários42

    6,57.4K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    Scoopy

    Strange, artistic, memorable

    This is not a mainstream movie. You may be very distracted by the presence of jokey 20th century anachronisms in this otherwise grave movie about the artistic genius, Caravaggio. 17th century merchants use hand-held calculators, modern instruments play at the parties, local scribes use typewriters, servants dress in modern dinner jackets. I sure don't know what it all means. I guess you can impute many meanings to it.

    You may also be irritated by the director in his insistence that everyone is motivated by homoerotic impulses. This facet of the presentation is really more about Derek Jarman than Caravaggio.

    Well, I'm not sure that the movie has much to say about Caravaggio at all. After all, Caravaggio shocked his era with his revisionist hagiography - saints with peasant faces, torn clothes and dirty fingernails - probably realistic but iconoclastic in its time, and contrary to a century of previous tradition. Moreover, Caravaggio almost invented the modern system of a consistently represented light source, showing the actual impact of light on his subjects. These key points are barely touched by the script.

    But I think you probably should just let those irritations wash over you, and accept the movie for what it is. It uses the style and mood of his paintings to reflect his life, and it incorporates that precise aesthetic into the movie's own visuals. The movie looks like what Caravaggio's own moving pictures might have looked like if he could have created them in 1600.

    Is it a good movie? Who knows? It's not so well remembered after a decade or so, but it exhibits a memorable gift for creating and sustaining a mood, and for breathing life into Caravaggio's canvases. It also speculates about the everyday life that must have circulated around the creation of those masterpieces.

    I was willing to forgive a lot of artistic pretension and rhetorical dialogue for the superb visuals and atmosphere, and I took vivid memories away from the film. You may feel the same way.
    treeline1

    Artistic license

    Michelangelo Caravaggio was an important Italian painter who led a short, tumultuous life. He surrounded himself with earthy street people who became the models for his paintings.

    If you're looking for a biopic about the life of Caravaggio, look elsewhere. This chaotic and bizarre interpretation of his life by avant-garde director Derek Jarman is like seeing art history on a bad acid trip. The story opens well enough around the year 1600, and I thought I was seeing things the first time I saw someone in a 20th century tuxedo. I scratched my head at the calculator, but the motorbike and truck were too much. The use of anachronistic images and odd sound effects (trains, crashing ocean waves) was too jarring and distracting for me. There is little dialogue and the narration was incomprehensible. As a fan of Caravaggio's work, I did enjoy the scenes that showed models posing for his famous paintings, but the rest - a montage of unrelated scenes showing his depraved lifestyle - was just distasteful and speculative. I learned nothing of the man and more about the director.

    Tilda Swinton made a memorable screen debut in the puzzling role of a young street woman and a very young Sean Bean is interesting as her companion, but Nigel Terry was a confusing and off-putting Caravaggio. Not recommended.
    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.
    4kingsinead

    Beautiful to look at, but lacking a third dimension

    What we know of Caravaggio suggests a strutting brawler with a healthy sense of entitlement who lived amongst whores and thieves and hustlers and put them on canvas. His works' themes were sex, death, redemption, above all, finding the sacred within the profane. He lived at a time where homosexuality carried a death sentence and political intrigue normally involved fatalities in a society defined by the maxim "strangling the boy for the purity of his scream".

    You can't fault Derek Jarman for his cinematography, nor his recreations of Caravaggio's paintings and you certainly can't accuse the man of shying away from the homosexuality. But frankly, Jarman never strays beyond 80s caricature. Italian patronage becomes the 80s London art scene complete with pretty waiters and calculators. Sean Bean is a sexy bit of Northern rough oiling his motorbike. Tilda Swinton performs a transformation worthy of a Mills and Boons ("Why, Miss Lena, without that gypsy headscarf, you're beautiful..."). Jarman provides Caravaggio with a particularly trite motive for the murder which left him exiled.

    This could have been a visually stunning treatment of a man whose life was dangerous, exciting, violent and decadent but who nonetheless elevated the lives of ordinary people to the status of Renaissance masterpieces, looked on by Emperors and Kings. Instead, what you get is Pierre et Gilles do Italy. The pretty bodies of young boys are shown to perfection, but never the men who inhabit them. Jarman appears to satirise the London art scene, showing it shallow and pretentious. To use Caravaggio and Renaissance Italy to make the point is to use a silk purse to make a pig's ear. In fairness, this film remains visually stunning, but ultimately as two dimensional as the paintings it describes.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Tilda Swinton's debut.
    • Erros de gravação
      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.
    • Citações

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

      [Ranucchio kisses him]

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      The end credits scroll down the screen (top-to-bottom).
    • Conexões
      Featured in Arena: Derek Jarman - A Portrait (1991)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      MISSA LUX ET ORGIO
      By kind permission of Casa Musicale Eco (Milan)

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    Perguntas frequentes18

    • How long is Caravaggio?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 1986 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origem
      • Reino Unido
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Zeitgeist Films
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Italiano
    • Também conhecido como
      • Караваджо
    • Locações de filme
      • Limehouse Studios, Limehouse, Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Studio)
    • Empresas de produção
      • British Film Institute (BFI)
      • Channel Four Television
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • £ 450.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 3.774
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 532
      • 21 de abr. de 2002
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 30.525
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 33 minutos
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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