| H. Hobart Cornell, photo courtesy Jeffrey Allision |
This was the spectacle of Cleopatra made by the venerable 20th Century Fox Hollywood studio. The movie itself was a side-show to its stars’ torrid and unabashed infatuation with each other. Cost overruns soared into the stratosphere forcing accountants and producers to ponder jumping out of their windows. Luckily, Los Angeles buildings were only 2 stories tall.
The movie shoot--in Italy, Spain, England, and even Egypt--transformed into a sort of circus bizarro designed by Narcissus featuring egos and libidos nakedly on-view. It was a planet-wide distraction that knocked cold war tensions out of the headlines and portended the burgeoning sexual revolution and extreme reality shows like Jersey Shore.
Yet there is some pathos at its core. The director, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, was sure he was achieving a cinematic marvel that would be one of the greatest movies ever made. Oh, yea, he was not alone. One of his major stars, Rex Harrison (as Julius Caesar), agreed with the director and nobly offered to forgo his own salary to help out. Just as nobly, Rex’s offer was declined.
The original Cleopatra --all 4 hours and 8 minutes--will be shown Saturday, December 10, 10:30am to 5pm, with presentations on its art direction and its authenticity issues.
---Hobart Cornell, Critic-at-large
3 comments:
Wake up, Richmond -- I can't believe there are not 100 comments already. This photo of VMFA movie-meister Trent Nicholas is a stroke of genius! And what a terrific idea to tie this exciting exhibition with a thematically related achievement in motion pictures. Nice going, all.
@Zieggirl You must be mistaken. The photo is not of VMFA movie-meister and film professor Trent Nicholas but H. Hobart Cornell, critic at large.
From a purely objective perspective, Cornell has admired the selection of this epic film which features a recently dead celebrity and former Virginian. Of consequence is that VMFA also has an exhibition about less-recently dead Egyptians.
A man of great taste, clearly. Looking forward to both - the film and the exhibition.
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