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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN MUSIC, DANCE, AND FILM 749<br />

THE TROJAN WAR<br />

It may surprise all but the die-hard movie buff that many films inspired by<br />

Greece and Rome were made between the years 1888 and 1918. We shall begin,<br />

however, with Helen of Troy, produced by Warner Brothers in 1955, with Rossana<br />

Podesta as Helen and a musical score by Max Steiner. This epic is lavish in its<br />

production but, alas, weak in its script. Of a much lower caliber are two other<br />

cinematic treatments: Steve Reeves as Aeneas in The Avenger, also titled Last<br />

Glory of Troy; and Colossus and the Amazon Queen (1964), with Rod Taylor,<br />

Dorian Gray, and Ed Fury, a tale about two veterans of the Trojan War and their<br />

encounter with the Amazons; the main virtue of this romantic comedy is that<br />

its humor is intentional.<br />

ROMAN LEGEND<br />

Gate of Hell (director, Hiroshi Inagaki, 1955) is a tragedy of a warrior's desire for<br />

a married noblewoman set in twelfth-century Japan and based on the rape of<br />

Lucrèce. It won an Academy Award for the best foreign film of 1954.<br />

In a much lighter vein is Jupiter's Darling, starring Esther Williams and<br />

Howard Keel and directed by George Sidney, an amusing musical about Hannibal<br />

based on Robert E. Sherwood's play Road to Rome. Equally mythological<br />

is Roman Scandals. A fellow from Oklahoma (Eddie Cantor) dreams his way back<br />

to an ancient Rome that enjoys Busby Berkeley musical numbers.<br />

In addition to the Hollywood grand epics, countless movies of lesser stature<br />

dealing with early legendary Rome are available, for example, Romulus and<br />

Remus and Roger Moore in The Rape of the Sabines.<br />

ULYSSES AND THE ODYSSEY<br />

Ulysses (1954), an Italian film with English <strong>dia</strong>logue, has rightly received critical<br />

acclaim for its cinematic techniques and performances by Kirk Douglas (as<br />

Ulysses) and Silvana Mangano, who offers haunting portrayals of both Penelope<br />

and Circe. Viewers may judge for themselves the highly acclaimed Hallmark<br />

made-for-television movie The Odyssey (1997). For us it was a disappointment.<br />

Armand Assante set the tone by making the hero a bore; Bernadette Peters<br />

as Circe played Bernadette Peters; beautiful Isabella Rossellini, who should have<br />

been an ideal Athena, forgot she was a goddess and became the chum next door;<br />

and so on. The great actress Irene Papas as Anticlea did her valiant best with<br />

the banal script in these surroundings. Yet a very campy Hermes added a brief<br />

moment of relief and some visual effects were impressive, for example, angry<br />

Poseidon and the sea.<br />

A contemporary, topical, and yet mystical reuse of the Odysseus' theme has<br />

been made by the distinguished Greek director Theo Angelopoulos. In Ulysses'

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