Cleopatra (Special Edition)

Cleopatra (Special Edition)
by Richard Burton, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Rouben Mamoulian, Darryl F. Zanuck

Cleopatra (Special Edition)
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Product details

Actor: Elizabeth Taylor, George Cole, Pamela Brown, Rex Harrison, Richard Burton
Director: Darryl F. Zanuck, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Richard Burton, Rouben Mamoulian
Cinematographer: Leon Shamroy
Cinematographer: Jack Hildyard
Editor: Dorothy Spencer
Editor: Elmo Williams
Producer: Peter Levathes
Edition: VHS Tape
Audio: English (Original Language), Analog
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, NTSC, Special Edition
Running Time: 246 minutes
Release Date: 2001-04-03
Audience Rating: Unrated
Publisher: Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation
Studio: Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation

VHS Movie Reviews of Cleopatra (Special Edition)

Movie Review: ok movie - try netflix instead
Summary: 1 Stars

OK film, but use Netflix to rent movies. Netflix response time is phenomenal. You don't have to buy DVDs anymore.

Movie Review: If You Really Want To See A Hot Marc and Cleo...!
Summary: 2 Stars

If you really want to know what went on between these two rent or buy HBO's excellent "Rome" series.

Their rendition of Cleo is a short,plain, 32A-cup, homely little drug addict with a realllly bad haircut! That she captures the lust of both Caesar and Marc even though no one might look at her even once on the street is testimony to how "hot" she must be in bed.

Contrast this to Liz Taylor who is as white as snow, aging and fairly fat (OK voluptuous to those in the same weight catagory.) Not only was the obvious display of cleavage distracting but I couldn't get over the eye makeup! Must have taken hours...for one eye...and just think how comfortable it would be if some of that glitter fell in her eyes! Inthe Rome series, their little Cleo gets by without any makeup until she duds herself up to march in and reclaim her throne from her fat little juvenile delinquent brother. Now THAT series had drama!

My hat is off to those who want the original 6(?) hour movie to be made available. I don't think I could stay awake if it was cut to 2 hours. A real snoozer, but could be a hilarious party movie if you were to get drunk.

Go with the "Rome" series!

Movie Review: Campy Cleopatra
Summary: 5 Stars

"Cleopatra" was the overhyped spectacle of the early '60s that nearly brought 20th Century FOX to its knees. There was the offscreen love affair between Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton (both married to other people) that overshadowed the movie. It's got cheesy dialogue, it indulges in camp spectacle... making it a classic. I used to watch "Cleopatra" all the time, and it's got staying power.

"Cleopatra" doesn't exactly aim for historical accuracy. It's about Liz Taylor and her numerous costume changes. She goes all out like a drag queen- she's the drama queen of ancient Egypt. Cleopatra is flirty with Julius Caesar (Rex Harrison,who looks ill at ease),who treats her like a daughter. She bears him a son---and gets a grand entrance that RuPaul would envy. She's Cleopatra, Queen of the Desert! The procession seems to go on forever. After Julius is offed on the Ides of March, she romances Mark Antony (Richard Burton), complete with dancing girls and milk baths. As an odd aside, the Vatican condemned "Cleopatra." But why? Bad taste? It's filled with campy lines such as Cleopatra praising her thighs and her bosom,for they "are known to bear children."

"Cleopatra" isn't meant to be take seriously. It's the Cleopatra Aux Folles. Like Priscilla, Cleopatra reigns as Queen of the Desert. She's fabulous!

Movie Review: Superb Superb Superb! Ancient Rome Brought to Life
Summary: 5 Stars

For Roman history enthusiasts this is one of the best films to recreate the nearly-vanished glory and grandeur that was Rome.

It brings to life the story of Julius Caesar and fall of the Republic followed by the rise of Augustus. This is familiar to everyone so I'll not repeat it here.

For Roman history enthusiasts there are other films that bring Rome to life but none that do as grandly.

Spartacus comes closest. Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire gives a good look at the later Roman Empire during the time of Marcus Aurelius and Commodus. Gladiator had some high points, especially the opening battle scene. Quo Vadis is not bad but extant prints are of low quality.
The recent HBO/BBC miniseries Rome was very good but suffered from some unnecessary dull storylines (proto-Mafiosi in the Aventine,? what nonsense) added to pad the running time. The 1980's Last Days of Pompeii TV mini-series with Ned Beatty is unwatchably poor (unavailable except on TCM AFAIK). Ben Hur was a grand spectacle but the focus was less on Rome than on the Christian aspect of the story.

The grandeur of Cleopatra's entrance to Forum alone is worth the price of admission. The included making-of documentary explains that the set designer thought the real Rome forum (which still exists as a ruin in downtown Rome) was thought too small. The filmakers recreated it a Cinecitta larger-than-life.

Elizabeth Taylor acting has been criticized but the movie was conceived as a star vehicle for her. She was an enormous star at the time; the movie would not have been made without her. The documentary details an aborted early attempt at filming on soundstages in London. After spending huge sums on sets and months in pre-production, Taylor fell ill and nearly died. An emergency tracheostomy was needed to save her life. Filming stopped for months. When it resumed in Rome with a new director, all the previously shot footage was scrapped. New Director Mankiewicz shot so much new footage shot that he entertained thoughts of having two 3-4 hour films. The first would have been Caesar and Cleopatra and the second was to be , Antony and Cleopatra. This idea was scrapped when Twentieth Century Fox was nearly bankrupted by production cost over-runs. The extra footage has been lost (for now).

Richard Burton had become a middling star after a few moderately successful film role but it was his role as King Arthur in Camelot on Broadway that rocketed him to the top. Oddly enough, it was this Broadway musical that made Burton the biggest star in Hollywood.

The pairing of the two stars inevitably led to their relationship. Great pains were taken to keep the secret but was the romance was eventually revealed. There is a famous first photo of the two of them together lounging on a boat at a beach near Rome. There was great fear of a public backlash as both stars were married. Clergy in the US denounced the relationship and called for the film to be boycott.

I'm a fan of Burtons but I can see some of the shortcomings of his performance. If he intended it to be over-the-top, he succeeded.

Rex Harrison is superb as Caesar. Some of Caesar's lines are tinged with inappropriate humour. In this the filmakers got it wrong While Caesar was famous for rousing speeches intended to fire up the legions before battle, he was not a stand-up comedian.

Roddy McDowall is quite good as a young Ovtavian and actually does resemble the famous Augustus of Prima Porta found at Livia's villa near Rome. His role is harmed by editing that makes him inexplicably pop up at the end of film. Almost no context is given for his having been chosen Caesar's heir. In fact Octavian had endeared himself to Caesar for his (minor) actions as aide-de-camp during the Civil Wars. Octavian was also Caesar's great-nephew. After Caesar's assassination he is adopted as Caesar's son according to his will and begins to refer to Caesar as his father. Among the Romans, this adoption of one man by another via a will was unheard of. Octavian's referring to himself as the son of Caesar thereafter would have been considered wholly appropriate. Octavian's rivalry with Antony was poorly explained. Fourteen years passed beween the death of Caesar and the defeat of Antony and Cleopatra during which time the realtions between them varied from friendship to war. After the defeat of Cleopatra, her son (by Caesar)Caesarion was killed. The film does not dwell on this fact.

The Battle of Actium was poorly realized but I can't hold that against the rest of the film.

Some of the supporting characters are a bit jarring. Archie Bunker as Casca and Rollin Hand as Rufio play their roles acceptably well but you can't help but associate them with their TV characters.

I give this my highest recommmedation; it is arguably the best film about ancient Rome ever made.

Movie Review: Cleopatra, Queen of Denial
Summary: 4 Stars

This epic blockbuster was interesting and entertaining on many levels, though I wonder if when it was released it was considered either a box office or a critical success. It obviously had a huge budget, so I wonder if it was able to make enough at the box office to pay for itself. Lavish costumes and sets, battle scenes with hundreds of extras, not to mention the big stars: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Rex Harrison, Roddy McDowell, and Martin Landau. It was long--it took me three nights spread out over a few months to wade through it. I can imagine the theaters complaining, since they could have fewer showings per day, and the audiences must have also been complaining about the length, too. It was undoubtedly ballyhooed with massive hype, making it even harder to live up to the expectations.

There are two ways to look at it. First, as an epic telling of an historical tale of wars, conquest, the Roman Empire and the dynasty of Egypt and the pharaohs, not to mention Cleopatra. The lavish costumes, sets, and battles certainly contributed to the success of this way of looking at it. Richard Burton was very believable as Mark Antony, a warrior with two fatal weaknesses--women and wine. Perhaps that wasn't too much of a stretch for him. Though Burton came first, I was reminded of Russell Crowe's Oscar winning performance in Gladiator. Both actors were able to convince that they were warriors, yet there was something deeper than that in there as well. Elizabeth Taylor was great at the thrust and parry of seduction and court intrigue, but I couldn't picture her as Cleopatra, she was just too pale to be Egyptian. Besides, she is an Icon of Beauty in her own right, and I found it hard to suspend disbelief. No matter how well she acted, I was always aware that it was Elizabeth Taylor; no matter how much mascara she wore, Liz Taylor, baby. Rex Harrison, even more so. What was Henry Higgins doing pretending to be Julius Caesar? I half expected Dr. Doolittle to talk to the animals. Strangely though, Roddy McDowell was much more successful at portraying Octavian, but I will get to that later, as it pertains to the second way of looking at Cleopatra, the epic blockbuster.

The second way of looking at it was just to enjoy the spectacle, and as much as possible speculate on the drama backstage. Draw parallels with the way Cleopatra uses theatrical techniques to make the most of her power as queen of the Nile. She always seems to be bathing when conducting her diplomatic negotiations. There is one scene where she entertains Mark Antony with a Cleopatra look-alike, and another where she makes her entrance wrapped in a carpet. At other times she is presented as the Queen of the Nile, making another dramatic entrance on the royal barge, and the hype and ballyhoo very much comments ironically on the hype and ballyhoo surrounding Elizabeth Taylor: Big Fat Movie Star. At times I couldn't help imagining Britney Spears or J. Lo in the role, but I digress.

Backstage drama galore, as there was a budding romance between Taylor and Burton, which must have driven the tabloids wild. I think it might have contributed to the bad reviews as there was a lot of wagging of fingers and tsk-tsking over the fact that Liz was still married to Eddie Fisher. But that added a lot of spice to the mix, making the scenes between the two an intriguing guessing game, looking for clues to their infidelity, tracking the precise moment when they fell in love. You could follow this trail from The Sandpiper, all the way through Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolfe?

Finally, Roddy McDowell. His portrayal of Octavian was very well played, especially in the way he used the withering remark, stealth, guile, cunning, and even a well-placed hissy fit or two, while debating in the Roman Senate. Contrast him with Mark Anthony, who may have been a drunk and besmitten with Cleopatra, but he was a strong warrior who fought his battles bravely. McDowell's Octavian was the man you loved to hate, as he achieved his power not through battle, at least not personally, but by manipulating the emotions of the Senate and the masses. He was a perfect demagogue, working the crowd into a fever pitch, getting them to beg him to start a war with Egypt. He gave one of his best performances as the villain, making the fall of Anthony & Cleopatra all the more tragic.

So, I will give this a thumb up, just as Siskel and Ebert might have, or possibly a Roman Emperor would give to a gladiator who had fought bravely. It is entertaining on many levels, though some of the levels aren't the ones intended.

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Summary of Cleopatra (Special Edition)

Richard Burton, Rex Harrison and Elizabeth Taylor star in one of the greatest screen spectacles ever made - the story of the Queen of the Nile and her love affairs with Julius Caesar and Mark Antony. The film is distinguished by superb performances from Burton and Harrison (nominated for an Oscar), but at its center is Elizabeth Taylor in one of the most glamorous roles of her career. Astounding in scope and grandeur, the picture won Oscars for cinematography, sets and special effects. It's famous moments include moviedom's most flamboyant entrance - Cleopatra's dazzling arrival in Rome. Bolstered by a talented supporting cast and utterly stunning backdrops, here is a truly epic portrayal of the woman who conquered two of Rome's greatest soldiers, affected the course of history, and became synonymous with beguiling beauty - Cleopatra.
This 1963 extravaganza, directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, is certainly an epic historical drama with all the elements: elaborate sets, intricate costuming, name actors, a factual basis, and an overlong script (just over four hours). But the acting is well performed and the backdrops are lush, making this a film worth seeing. Elizabeth Taylor is Cleopatra, the Egyptian queen who seduces Julius Caesar (Rex Harrison) in a political move to hold onto her empire. When Caesar is killed in the Roman Senate, Cleopatra looks to Marc Antony (Richard Burton) for his support, practically enslaving him with her wiles. Taylor is dramatic in her role, at times overly serious, but stunning nonetheless as the woman described as "well versed in the natural sciences and mathematics. She speaks seven languages proficiently. Were she not a woman one would consider her to be an intellectual." While the film does seem to drag at moments, it deserves the four Oscars it won for cinematography, art direction-set direction, costumes, and special effects. Don't confuse this Cleopatra with the 1934 version directed by Cecil B. DeMille and starring Claudette Colbert. --Jenny Brown

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