Alexander the Great

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AMG AllMovie Guide:

Alexander the Great

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Plot

The short life and quick death of Alexander the Great is recounted in this literate historical epic. Decked out in a blonde wig, Richard Burton stars as the Grecian warrior who conquered the known world while only in his twenties, then wept because there were no more worlds left to conquer. While the film's 141 minutes are occasionally bogged down by near-existential dialogue sequences (What doth it profit a man etc. etc.), the battle sequences are among the best and most accurate ever filmed. Fredric March and Danielle Darieux costar as Alexander's parents Philip of Macedonia and Olympius, Claire Bloom does what she can with the nothing role of Alexander's wife Barsine, and Michael Hordern and Harry Andrews are cast as Demosthenes and Darrius, respectively. Lensed in Spain and Italy, Alexander the Great conquered no new worlds at the box-office, perhaps because Richard Burton, brilliant though he was, hadn't yet attained "saleability". ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Review

While it is arguably better than Oliver Stone's more recent remake, the 1956 Alexander the Great is a rather mediocre epic. Part of the problem is simply the passage of time; the fight scenes which might have looked rather realistic in the 1950s now seem to be rather paltry in numbers and lacking in imagination. That lack of imagination is present throughout; it's as if director Robert Rossen all of a sudden found himself behind the camera with neither a real vision nor a real passion for the project. In the right circumstances, Rossen could be a director of insight; that's far from the case here. It's not that his work is actually bad, but an historical epic about a larger-than-life character demands someone at the helm whose direction is equally larger-than-life, if not moreso. Rossen is hampered by a script that thinks it is delving deeper into its characters than it actually is, resulting in some leaden speeches that end up quite platitudinous. Alexander undergoes a tremendous character change, but the psychological depth that would underscore that transformation is missing. Under the circumstances, Richard Burton is left to do little more than declaim in a vague and empty fashion; he does not provide the grandeur that the character demands and that the writers have largely omitted. Much better is Fredric March as his father, practically stealing much of the movie from Burton. Claire Bloom does quite nicely with a nothing part, and the supporting cast is solid throughout. Alexander gets a lot of the facts right, which earns it points; it's just a shame the facts were not presented in a more cinematically engaging fashion. ~ Craig Butler, Rovi

Cast

Stanley Baker - Attalus; Niall MacGinnis - Parmenio; Peter Cushing - Memnon; Michael Hordern - Demosthenes; Barry Jones - Aristotle; Marisa de Leza - Eurydice; Gustavo Rojo - Cleitus; Ruben Rojo - Philotas; William Squire - Aeschenes; Helmut Dantine - Nectanebus; Peter Wyngarde - Pausanius; Julio Pena - Arsites; Jose Nieto - Spithridates; Carlos Martínez Baena - Nearchus; Larry Taylor - Perdiccas; Jose Marco - Harpalus; Ramsay Ames - Drunken woman; Mario De Barros - Messenger; Ellen Rossen - Amytis; Virgilio Teixeira - Ptolemy; Riccardo Valle - Hephaestion; Frederick Ledebur - Antipater

Credit

André Andrejew - Art Director, David Ffolkes - Costume Designer, Robert Rossen - Director, Ralph Kemplen - Editor, Mario Nascimbene - Composer (Music Score), Robert Krasker - Cinematographer, Robert Rossen - Producer, André Andrejew - Set Designer, Cliff John Richardson - Special Effects, Robert Rossen - Screenwriter

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Alexander the Great (1956 film)

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Alexander the Great

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Robert Rossen
Produced by Executive producer:
Gordon Griffith
Producer:
Robert Rossen
Written by Robert Rossen
Starring Richard Burton
Claire Bloom
Frederic March
Danielle Darrieux
Michael Hordern
Harry Andrews
Music by Mario Nascimbene
Cinematography Robert Krasker
Theodore J. Pahle
Editing by Ralph Kemplen
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s)
  • March 28, 1956 (1956-03-28)
Running time 135 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Alexander the Great is a 1956 American sword and sandal epic film written, directed and produced by Robert Rossen with Gordon S. Griffith as executive producer. It was released by United Artists and starred Richard Burton as Alexander.[1]

Contents

Plot summary

In the beginning of the film, Demosthenes is agitating for war to resist Philip II's takeover of Greek city-states.

While Philip II is leading a campaign to take over Olynthus, he is informed that his spouse Olympias has born him a son whom she claims is "a god born of a god." Philip is angry because he suspects that Olympias has committed adultery and that she was not impregnated by a god; however, General Parmenio advises the king to let Alexander grow up and succeed him.

Alexander grows older and receives instructions in history, mathematics, logic, and other subjects from Aristotle in Mieza. Alexander is eager to rule and tells his tutor that like Achilles he would rather have a "short life with glory" than a "long life of obscurity." Philip then decides to send Alexander to the Macedonian capital, Pella, as a regent to rule the city while Philip is away fighting wars. This was done to prevent Olympias from spreading rumors about her husband's death. Alexander uses this opportunity to rule in his own right—he becomes neither a pawn of his mother nor his father. Alexander later joins Philip and they go on campaigns of conquest together to take over places such as Athens in the Battle of Chaeronea in 338 BCE. After the battle is won, Alexander demands that no Greek city-state ever bear arms against Pella and that they supply men, arms, and ships for the war against Persia.

Philip II divorces Olympias accusing her of "unfaithfulness" and marries Attalus's niece Eurydice thereby making her the new queen. This move creates a chasm between Alexander and his father not only because Alexander's mother has been repudiated but also because his succession hangs in the balance since some men in Philip's court see him as a bastard.

Pausanias, a loyal friend of Alexander, assassinates Philip II whereupon Alexander kills Pausanias then and there. At this juncture, Alexander claims the loyalty of all Macedonians and assumes the titles of his father, and he tells all Macedonians that the Treaty of Corinth still stands. Memnon is exiled for not pledging his loyalty to Alexander.

Alexander embarks on his mission to conquer the whole of Asia. Memon, who is now in Darius III's court, advises him to retreat strategically and attack Alexander when his supplies run out. However, the lords of Persia underestimate the "boy" Alexander and resolve to fight him at Granicus.

After the victory at Granicus, Alexander goes to Phrygia and unravels the knot made by King Gordius by cutting it.

Before the battle in Babylon, Alexander states that the lunar eclipse which some of his men thought was a bad omen means that "the Persian moon will be eclipsed by the Macedonian Sun" with which Aristander the seer agrees. After victory in Babylon, Darius III flees to the Caspian Gates to build and gather up an army; the dispirited commanders of Darius III kill him. In his will, Darius tells Alexander, "Take my daughter, Roxane, for your wife...that our worlds may become as one." Alexander then orders the lords of Persia that had committed regicide to be impaled upon stakes for their betrayal against their former kings.

At a drunken revelry in Babylon, Alexander declares, "I am the son of God" (Zeus) and "the world is my domain....We will march to the end of the world." In Athens, news reaches that Alexander is in India and is conquering there whereupon Aeschines proclaims, "He has outdone the gods."

Alexander takes his status to heart, his arrogance and paranoia increasing to unstable proportions, but the bold young leader's conquests come to an end after he kills his close friend, Cleitus, with his spear after a drunken argument. Grief-stricken and humbled, Alexander returns to Babylon from India, losing many of his men in the process. He marries Roxane at Susa, but falls ill soon after. When asked upon his deathbed to whom he will leave his empire, Alexander whispers, "To the strongest."

Cast

See also

References

External links


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