An all-but-forgotten "international cinema" freak from the days when it was cool for mainstream film to struggle toward a classical literacy, Michael Cacoyannis' The Trojan Women is an essentially faithful adaptation of Euripides' progressive drama, and therein lies the sand in the clam. Whatever its popularity in its own day, and regardless of its influence and importance as a cultural touchstone, ancient Greek drama is pretty dry, stodgy, histrionic stuff when played straight, and Cacoyannis -- a thin talent who hasn't had a resonant or original idea in some 40 years of moviemaking -- plays it straight as a yardstick. Euripides' outline still resonates: after the fall of Troy, the surviving women in the occupied and decimated city wander amid the ruins, finally resisting the Greek army in its final strokes of oppression. As ex-queen Hecuba (Katharine Hepburn) protests at the top of her shaky lungs, near-mad Cassandra (Geneviève Bujold) is apprehended and shepherded off into a forced marriage, Andromache (Vanessa Redgrave) watches as her royal-lineage-bearing son is taken away to be executed, and Helen (Irene Papas) weathers both the manipulation of the Greeks and the furious animosity of the Trojan women. Explicitly anti-war and proto-feminist, and an interesting compliment to 2004's Troy, The Trojan Women is, nevertheless, hindered by an awkward cast yowling out stilted, Old World speeches. (The actresses, all of them fascinating to one degree or another, get no help from the director; in particular, the breathtakingly lovely Redgrave comes off disinterested and almost amateurish in her Sturm und Drang.) It impressed no one in 1971, but still, as the new, minimally supplemented DVD edition demonstrates, there's something chastening about the movie's faith in Euripides as dramatic fire, and oddly unsettling about its fidelity to genuine, paganized Greek landscapes. The mountainous compositions, their horizons manned everywhere by armed guards, are fabulously shot by workhorse cinematographer Alfio Contini, who also shot Antonioni's Zabriskie Point. Needless to say, no one could make this film today, with this caliber of cast; only in the era of New Waves was it possible to suggest that movie audiences might be interested in ancient drama sans the benefit of sex, digital crowds, or over-edited battle carnage. The Trojan Women may not work, but its very existence shames our popular film culture today.
▪ Factory sealed DVD
Manufacturer | Vivitar |
---|---|
Brand | Kino International |
Item model number | 10207307 |
Color | Pink |
Weight | 0.2 pounds |
Height | 4 inches |
Depth | 2 inches |
Product Id | 2641 |
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User Reviews and Ratings | 5 (1 ratings) 5 out of 5 stars |
UPC | 738329037628 |
For this ambitious screen version of one of the most powerful works of classic Greek theater, director Michael Cacoyannis (Zorba the Greek, the Cherry Orchid) "unleashes the talents of four of the screen's most exciting actresses" (NY Daily News). Four time Oscar winner Katharine Hepburn (The Lion in Winter, a Delicate Balance), Oscar winner Vanessa Redgrave (Julia), Oscar nominee Genevieve Bujold (Anne of the Thousand Days) seamlessly mesh into an unprecedented ensemble cast that "one could never hope to see on stage" (Pauline Kael, New Yorker). After their ten-year siege, the victorious Greek army seeks to curse those Trojans whom fate has yet spared. Separated from their children, denied their mourning and destined for slavery, the women of fallen Troy huddle within the parched wreckage of their once glorious city. Beautiful Cassandra (Bujold) is betrothed against her will despite her vanishing sanity. Andromache (Redgrave) discovers her son is to be executed to and end her royal bloodline. Helen (papas) desperately wields the arrogant beauty that leveled a city as she pleads for hr life. But it is Hecuba (Hepburn), widowed queen of Troy, whose enduring dignity and unfaltering strength makes cowards of Troy's captors.
The Trojan Women Drama Kino Lorber Not Rated
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