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Le calice d'argent

Original title: The Silver Chalice
  • 1954
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 22m
IMDb RATING
4.6/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Paul Newman and Virginia Mayo in Le calice d'argent (1954)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:54
1 Video
92 Photos
DramaRomance

A silversmith journeys to Jerusalem and Rome to create Christ's chalice with disciples' faces. Meanwhile, a fraudulent figure uses magic tricks to pose as the Messiah.A silversmith journeys to Jerusalem and Rome to create Christ's chalice with disciples' faces. Meanwhile, a fraudulent figure uses magic tricks to pose as the Messiah.A silversmith journeys to Jerusalem and Rome to create Christ's chalice with disciples' faces. Meanwhile, a fraudulent figure uses magic tricks to pose as the Messiah.

  • Director
    • Victor Saville
  • Writers
    • Thomas B. Costain
    • Lesser Samuels
  • Stars
    • Virginia Mayo
    • Pier Angeli
    • Jack Palance
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.6/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Victor Saville
    • Writers
      • Thomas B. Costain
      • Lesser Samuels
    • Stars
      • Virginia Mayo
      • Pier Angeli
      • Jack Palance
    • 57User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Silver Chalice
    Trailer 2:54
    The Silver Chalice

    Photos92

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Virginia Mayo
    Virginia Mayo
    • Helena
    Pier Angeli
    Pier Angeli
    • Deborra
    Jack Palance
    Jack Palance
    • Simon the Magician
    Paul Newman
    Paul Newman
    • Basil
    Walter Hampden
    Walter Hampden
    • Joseph of Arimathea
    Joseph Wiseman
    Joseph Wiseman
    • Mijamin
    Alexander Scourby
    Alexander Scourby
    • Luke
    Lorne Greene
    Lorne Greene
    • Peter
    David J. Stewart
    David J. Stewart
    • Adam
    Herbert Rudley
    Herbert Rudley
    • Linus
    Jacques Aubuchon
    Jacques Aubuchon
    • Nero
    E.G. Marshall
    E.G. Marshall
    • Ignatius
    Michael Pate
    Michael Pate
    • Aaron Ben Joseph
    Natalie Wood
    Natalie Wood
    • Helena as a Girl
    Peter Raynolds
    • Basil as a Boy
    Mort Marshall
    Mort Marshall
    • Benjie
    Booth Colman
    Booth Colman
    • Hiram
    Terence de Marney
    Terence de Marney
    • Sosthene
    • Director
      • Victor Saville
    • Writers
      • Thomas B. Costain
      • Lesser Samuels
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews57

    4.61.9K
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    Featured reviews

    MarieGabrielle

    Art deco sets...and young Paul Newman...

    This film is certainly an oddity but deserves some mention for the actors involved, and especially Jack Palance as "Simon the Magician".

    I too remember watching this around Easter at around age 10, it could be an interesting film for children who don't understand the historical issues of Emperor Nero,the Romans and conflicts of Christianity etc.

    As another reviewer mentioned, it is odd with unusual sets. Virginia Mayo, however, looks lovely as always, even with some over the top eyebrow makeup and gold eyeshadow.

    Paul Newman is a slave who must craft a special chalice for Jesus. Mayo, as royalty attempts to rescue him from his chains. Simon the Magician entertains Caesar but loses his mind in the end, building a special tower and wings to prove to Caesar that he can fly. He is just as much a God as any other, he proclaims.

    The film is theater and a bit campy as you get older but worth watching as a curiosity. 6/10
    4TheLittleSongbird

    Nero's "he didn't fly" can also be applied to this film

    Okay, The Silver Chalice is not that terrible, but considering the talent it was a huge disappointment and saw the worst work and films of almost everybody involved(apart from Jack Palance, he was in the Gor films and that bizarre Treasure Island adaptation).

    The Silver Chalice does have some good things. William V Skall's cinematography and Franz Waxman's score were nominated for Oscars and the nominations were deserving, the cinematography is beautiful and makes the most of the spectacle while the music positively sweeps, is lushly orchestrated in distinctive Waxman fashion and gives the film heart and pace. Jack Palance is enormously entertaining and maniacal as magician Simon, it's over the top- but you can say that that was in comparison to the rest of the performances- but in a deliciously gleeful way. Pier Angeli gives a heartfelt performance as well and Simon's flying off the sky scraping Tower of Babel is an unforgettable scene and close to being the highlight of the film.

    Paul Newman on the other hand is very wooden and ill-at-ease in his role, it is his debut(one that is understandably one he'd rather forget) but he was an amazing talent in acting and that did not come through here. Virginia Mayo is alluring but looks completely and utterly lost and Natalie Wood is quite charming but her acting is bland compared to her usual performances. Joseph Wiseman and Lorne Greene are largely wasted(Greene at least though had his concluding narration that was mildly powerful). They are hindered by very sketchily written characters and as dreary and stilted a script as you can get where the one memorable line is Nero's "he didn't fly"(for me it is one of, perhaps THE worst script for a biblical film). Victor Saville's direction never comes to life and the story feels overlong, stodgy and over-stretched with scenes that are either stagy, superfluous or unintentionally funny(some also like the fighting over the gown and with the dancers that would be better belonging somewhere else). The costumes are the opposite of lavish, rather a hodge-podge with some not fitting at all with the setting, with Palance donning the weirdest costumes of his whole career(especially the last one, admittedly he does wear them well). The make-up goes well over-the-top, Mayo is caked in it and it cheapens her looks, it's that ridiculous, and while a few sets are amazing most are bizarrely stylised that it gives the film a cheap look.

    In conclusion, The Silver Chalice is not a terrible film with the cinematography, score and Palance making it halfway watchable, but as a whole it, like Simon, didn't fly with everybody involved deserving far better than this. 4/10 Bethany Cox
    4Nazi_Fighter_David

    A bizarre religious epic!

    Based on a best-seller by Thomas B. Costain, and directed by Victor Saville, "The Silver Chalice" was one of the studio's early CinemaScope films, and was really a variation on Fox's "The Robe," the first CinemaScope movie that had been a huge success in 1953... The action follows a group of Christians who are dedicated to preserving Christ's Holy Cup twenty years after the Last Supper...

    Since Newman had the lead as a young Greek silversmith, sold into slavery, then chosen by the Christians to design a chalice for the Cup, becomes involved in battles and orgies, and must decide between the pagan world represented by a courtesan (Virginia Mayo) and the Christian world represented by his young, innocent wife (Pier Angeli). There is also a mad pagan magician (Jack Palance), who wants to destroy the chalice and establish his own religion, replacing Christ's miracles with black magic...

    Newman was ideally cast as a Greek, because of his classic features, but he makes his film debut at particularly unfortunate time... 1954 was the year of "The Wild One" and "On the Waterfront," and Brando was at the height of his popularity...
    prjdean

    underrated epic

    Having read all of the various reviewers'comments, I wonder at all the negative opinions : "The worst film ever made according to Paul Newman and many of his fans" - "a tax write -off along the lines of THE PRODUCERS "- "almost unintentionally bad like an Ed Wood feature". I think none of that is true. Surprisingly I find much of this movie highly entertaining. Paul Newman really need not be ashamed of his debut work - he certainly looks right as Basil and for the most part, he acts the part convincingly - he does especially well in his scenes with Pier Angeli- obviously MGM thought they had real chemistry because they were soon re-teamed in SOMEBODY UP THERE LIKES ME. Jack Palance's over the top Simon the Magician is a great villain - you hate him but love his outlandish behavior that climaxes with his attempt to fly off a giant tower. Virginia Mayo in a badly written part wins your sympathy as the 'bad" girl/courtesan. The stylized sets are often criticized - but it is their very oddness that adds a special,dreamlike quality to many scenes. This was not a cost cutting measure by Warners, as some have suggested. In fact, this film was quite a moneymaker upon its initial release. Perhaps the most successful element of the entire project is Franz Waxman's beautiful, moving music score- one of the best of the period - it holds up to many listens. I think viewers today who see this in pan&scan format can not appreciate its beauty when seen in a theater in Cinemascope & Stereophonic Sound - I saw it on re-release in the 60s and it was impressive( available on a widescreen version great out of print laser disc and recently released on DVD ). Certainly not a great movie , it still has an entertainment value most reviewers are missing.
    5jjnxn-1

    Paul looks good in his toga but....

    Paul looks good in his toga but otherwise is absolutely dreadful in his screen bow. It shows the advantage of the studio contract system that this wasn't the end of his career. His two follow-ups studio assignments, Somebody Up There Likes Me and The Rack, did a great deal to restore his reputation and put him on the superstar track.

    Not that anyone else in the picture gives that much better of a performance. Virginia Mayo buried under a mountain of eyeliner is lost in a character that makes no sense. As the younger version of her character Natalie Wood makes a brief appearance and makes it abundantly clear that it was a good thing she never decided to become a blonde. Pier Angeli is quiet and subdued as Deborra and therefore manages to be the standout person in the cast because she doesn't declaim to the heavens. Speaking of which Jack Palance chews enough scenery for a raft of movies and while it's amusing at first it becomes tiresome in the long run.

    As awful as the general film is the production design is a gaudy mini masterpiece of astoundingly bright colors and geometric shapes. It's the highlight of an otherwise mediocre bordering on horrible movie.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The Sicarii were a group of Jewish zealots and assassins who opposed Roman rule in the years before the destruction of Jerusalem. They were known for the small daggers, sicae, which they carried under their cloaks and used to quickly assassinate Romans. The culprits would then disappear into a crowd. The term 'cloak and dagger' comes from their actions.
    • Goofs
      (at around 1 min) Basil and Deborra enter the set from behind the cut, painted, and layered scenery, completely spoiling the intended trompe l'oeil effect of rooftop domes.
    • Quotes

      Saint Peter: [last lines, Peter is speaking about the Silver Chalice to Basil and Deborra, and he utters his lines in the tone of a heroic speech] It will be restored, but for years and for hundreds of years, it will lie in darkness; where, I know not. When it is brought out into the light again there will be great cities, and mighty bridges and towers higher than the tower of Babel. It will be a world of evil and long bitter wars. In such a world as that the little cup will look very lonely. But it may be in that age when man holds lightning in his hands, and rides the sky as Simon the Magician strove to do it will be needed more than it is needed now.

    • Crazy credits
      and introducing Paul Newman
    • Connections
      Featured in American Masters: You Must Remember This: The Warner Bros. Story - Part 1 (2008)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 24, 1955 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Silver Chalice
    • Filming locations
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Victor Saville Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $4,500,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 22m(142 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.55 : 1

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