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Cleopatra

 
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Cleopatra

  • Director: Cecil B. DeMille
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Historical Film
  • Movie Type: Historical Epic, Romantic Epic
  • Themes: Rise To Power, Crowned Heads
  • Main Cast: Claudette Colbert, Warren William, Henry Wilcoxon, Gertrude Michael, Joseph Schildkraut
  • Release Year: 1934
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 112 minutes

Plot

Film historian William K. Everson once observed that the secret to the success of Cecil B. DeMille's 1934 Cleopatra is that DeMille subtly reshaped the known historical events into a contemporary "gold-digger makes good" scenario. Exhibiting the same determination with which Barbara Stanwyck sleeps her way to the top in 1933's Baby Face, Queen Cleopatra (Claudette Colbert) uses her feminine wiles to become sole ruler of Egypt. By turns kittenish and cold-blooded, Cleopatra wraps such otherwise responsible Roman worthies as Julius Caesar (Warren William, who wittily plays his role like one of his standard ruthless business executives) and Marc Antony (Henry Wilcoxon) around her well-manicured little finger. To emphasize the "contemporary" nature of the film, DeMille adds little modernistic touches throughout: The architecture of Egypt and Rome has a distinctly art-deco look; a matron at a social gathering clucks "Poor Calpurnia...well, the wife is always the last to know"; and, after Caesar's funeral, Mark Anthony is chided by an associate for "all that 'Friends, Romans, Countrymen' business!" Cleopatra's barge scene and her suicide from the bite of a snake marked two of the most memorable sequences in DeMille's career. Remarkably, for all the enormous sets and elaborate costumes, Cleopatra came in at a budget of $750,000 -- almost $40 million less than the 1963 Elizabeth Taylor remake. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Ian Keith - Octavius; C. Aubrey Smith - Enobarbus; Ian MacLaren - Cassius; Arthur Hohl - Brutus; Leonard Mudie - Pothinos; Irving Pichel - Apollodorus; Richard Alexander - Gen. Philodemas; Lionel Belmore - Fidius; Harry Beresford - The Soothsayer; John Carradine - Roman; Edgar Dearing - Murderer; Claudia Dell - Octavia; Grace Durkin - Iras; William Farnum - Lepidus; Kenneth Gibson - Scribe; Ferdinand Gottschalk - Glabrio; Wilfred Lucas - Roman Greeting Antony; Robert Manning - Aelius; Edwin Maxwell - Casca; William V. Mong - Court physician; Charles Morris - Cicero; Jack Mulhall - Roman greeting Antony; Wedgewood Nowell - Scribe; Eleanor Phelps - Charmian; Hal Price - Onlooker at procession; Jayne Regan - Lady Vesta; Jack Rutherford - Flavius; George Walsh - Courier; Bruce Warren - Scribe; Dorothy White - Dancer; Robert Warwick - Gen. Achillas; Florence Roberts - Lady Flora

Credit

Travis Banton - Costume Designer, Cecil B. DeMille - Director, Anne Bauchens - Editor, Rudolph G. Kopp - Composer (Music Score), Victor Milner - Cinematographer, Cecil B. DeMille - Producer, Franklin Hansen - Sound/Sound Designer, Bartlett Cormack - Screenwriter, Vincent Lawrence - Screenwriter, Waldemar Young - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Cabiria; Joan the Woman; Das Weib des Pharao
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Wikipedia: Cleopatra (1934 film)
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Cleopatra
Directed by Cecil B. DeMille
Produced by Cecil B. DeMille
Written by Waldemar Young
Vincent Lawrence
Bartlett Cormack (adaptation: historical material)
Starring Claudette Colbert
Warren William
Henry Wilcoxon
Joseph Schildkraut
Music by Rudolph G. Kopp
Milan Roder (uncredited)
Cinematography Victor Milner
Editing by Anne Bauchens (uncredited)
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) October 5, 1934
Running time 100 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Cleopatra is a 1934 epic film directed by Cecil B. DeMille and distributed by Paramount Pictures, which retells the story of Cleopatra VII of Egypt.

It was written by Waldemar Young, Vincent Lawrence and Bartlett Cormack, and was produced and directed by Cecil B. DeMille.

Claudette Colbert stars as Cleopatra, Warren William as Julius Caesar, Henry Wilcoxon as Marc Antony, Joseph Schildkraut as King Herod, and Ian Keith as Octavian.

In 1934 the Hays code had just taken effect, so DeMille got away with using more risque imagery than he would be able to in his later productions. He opens the film with a naked, strategically lit slavegirl holding up incense burners as the title appears on screen.

Claudette Colbert

The film is also memorable for the sumptuous art deco look of its sets (by Hans Dreier) and costumes (by Travis Banton), the atmospheric music by Rudolph Kopp, and for DeMille's legendary set piece of Cleopatra's seduction of Antony, which takes place on Cleopatra's barge.

The film won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography (Victor Milner), and was nominated Best Picture, Best Assistant Director (Cullen Tate), Best Film Editing (Anne Bauchens), and Best Sound, Recording (Franklin Hansen).

It has been released for home viewing several times, most recently as a 75th anniversary DVD edition in 2009 by Universal Studios Home Entertainment.[1]

Cast

References

  1. ^ Chaney, Jen (2009-04-09). "A Pair of DVDs From a 'Loose' Era". Washington Post (The Washington Post Company). http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/06/AR2009040602212.html. Retrieved 2009-04-12. 

External links



 
 
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Charmian (character)
Iras (character)
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