Drama about love and intrigues in ancient Rome during the times of Nero.Drama about love and intrigues in ancient Rome during the times of Nero.Drama about love and intrigues in ancient Rome during the times of Nero.
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This movie has many real historical people portrayed, such as Peter the Disciple, Nero, Seneca among others. Although there is some historical truth, there are several examples of historical inaccuracy. For example, Nero's only child Claudia was a baby of five months, not a small child of 3 or so when she died.
Most of the cast performed very well, a few did not. The best was Frederic Forrest as Petronius. Klaus Maria Brandauer performed well as Nero, as did the great Max von Sydow as Peter. Marko Nikolic was the right person to play Tigellinus. However, Francesco Quinn was poor as Marcus Vinicius.
Although much of the series was entertaining and nicely-directed, some of it was dull and repetitive. There was too much focus on Roman dances and rituals, and too little on dialogue, character development and actual events.
Most of the cast performed very well, a few did not. The best was Frederic Forrest as Petronius. Klaus Maria Brandauer performed well as Nero, as did the great Max von Sydow as Peter. Marko Nikolic was the right person to play Tigellinus. However, Francesco Quinn was poor as Marcus Vinicius.
Although much of the series was entertaining and nicely-directed, some of it was dull and repetitive. There was too much focus on Roman dances and rituals, and too little on dialogue, character development and actual events.
This mini-series certainly lacks much of the pomp and splendour of the more acclaimed 1951 version but it isn't at all bad. Klaus Maria Brandauer portrays the Emperor Nero as more of a disillusioned actor than a tyrannical maniac with Frederic Forrest dominating as his artistic mentor trying to keep the wayward emperor from losing the plot completely. It hadn't the budget, so ends up as a much more theatrical style production than the Ustinov/Genn film; less brash and more subtle and nuanced as we set off to send the Christians to the lions. It's too long at 6 x 1 hour; and by the end you might be tempted to join the Christians - but give it a go; the two leads offer compelling performances.
Methinks the best screen version of Quo Vadis? ever made. Well, yeah, the plot is not so strong and evident as in the book, sometimes meandering and loosing its suspense among aesthetic subtleties. But the film is really and beautifully "strange", has an enigma and style, that other versions - with R.Taylor and the new one from Poland - definitely lack. It has the air of Roman decadence, the beauty of declining paganism and infant Christianity. At least I believe it has). Brandauer, Forrest and Syudov did excellent job in portraying their characters. Forrest's Petronius seems to be the biggest success of the cast (let alone Brandauer who is the one of the greatest actors ever) and accumulates the very essence of this dying world (IMHO). That's it. That is the way it happened, guys... ))) IMHO
Do NOT judge this production by the 2-hour version that was released on VHS in the US, which is a choppy and incomprehensible mess. I had the pleasure of watching the full-length 6-hour version available on DVD from the UK, and was spellbound. The deliberate pace and growing sense of menace are mesmerizing, as is the amazing visual and aural landscape; this is an ancient Rome we have never seen before, and far more authentic than most.
Director Franco Rossi was justly celebrated for his 1968 mini-series of The Odyssey, and this mini-series is equally powerful. Just as Bekim Fehmiu became the screen's best Ulysses, so Klaus Maria Brandauer may be the screen's best Nero. Now, I am hoping someday to see Rossi's version of The Aeneid (Eneide) that was broadcast on Italian TV in 1971.
I am undecided which version of QUO VADIS is more powerful, this one or the Polish mini-series from 2001; each has different virtues, and in many ways they complement one another. Certainly, either one towers over that Hollywood camp-riot starring Peter Ustinov.
Director Franco Rossi was justly celebrated for his 1968 mini-series of The Odyssey, and this mini-series is equally powerful. Just as Bekim Fehmiu became the screen's best Ulysses, so Klaus Maria Brandauer may be the screen's best Nero. Now, I am hoping someday to see Rossi's version of The Aeneid (Eneide) that was broadcast on Italian TV in 1971.
I am undecided which version of QUO VADIS is more powerful, this one or the Polish mini-series from 2001; each has different virtues, and in many ways they complement one another. Certainly, either one towers over that Hollywood camp-riot starring Peter Ustinov.
Looking for Quo Vadis at my local video store, I found this 1985 version that looked interesting. Wow! It was amazing! Very much a Ken Russell kind of film -quirky, stylized, very artistic, and of course "different." Nero was presented not so much as evil incarnate, but as a wacky, unfulfilled emperor who would rather have had a circus career. He probably wondered why on earth he was put in the position of "leading" an empire -it wasn't much fun, and fun is what he longed for. Klause Maria Bandaur had a tremendous time with this role and played it for all it was worth. Yes, Nero persecuted the Christians with a vengeance; one of many who did so. At one point one of his henchmen murmurs: "No one will ever understand we were simply protecting ourselves." He got that right.
Did you know
- TriviaAppearing in the film is Francesco Quinn, the son of Anthony Quinn and Marie Therese Rhen the daughter of Maria Schell and niece of Maximilian Schell.
- Alternate versionsAmerican videotape cuts the film to 122 m.
- ConnectionsVersion of Quo Vadis? (1901)
- How many seasons does Quo Vadis? have?Powered by Alexa
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