When the screenwriter is 2500 years old

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 138

  • @Kurzula5150
    @Kurzula5150 Місяць тому +135

    An argument can be made that Kurosawa made use of the Greek chorus form in crowd scenes.
    Extras would be static watching a central drama, only to react in unison with the emotional beats.
    Thus exaggerating and giving greater weight to the emotions playing out.

    • @mienski0
      @mienski0 24 дні тому +8

      Not to mention, Throne of Blood just opens with a ghostly chorus.

  • @OuterGalaxyLounge
    @OuterGalaxyLounge Місяць тому +135

    Euripides telling us to smash that like button had me on the floor.

  • @ltjom
    @ltjom Місяць тому +94

    As an old theatre director who has done a handful of Greek plays, I appreciate this video

  • @ulaznar
    @ulaznar Місяць тому +66

    I think you already had a sponsor before this video, but I wanted to congratulate you for the progress you've made.Thank you master and mentor of cinema

  • @rosezingleman5007
    @rosezingleman5007 Місяць тому +119

    To paraphrase the character Lloyd Richards in All About Eve, all screenwriters should be 2500 years old!

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Місяць тому +18

      That wouldn’t help them because stars never die!

    • @amvlabs5339
      @amvlabs5339 12 днів тому

      great movie

  • @bearcb
    @bearcb Місяць тому +19

    The Trojan Women stroke me as a modern play: a Greek taking the point of view of the defeated enemies, women even, in the founding epic of Greek culture.
    25 centuries ago!!!

  • @abrahemsamander3967
    @abrahemsamander3967 Місяць тому +30

    I never actually heard of the phrases “foreignization and domesticization.” But they make tones of sense.

  • @therealinformalmusic
    @therealinformalmusic Місяць тому +18

    Some of the best commentary on classic Greek tragedy, unsurprisingly, can be found in Aristophanes when, for example, in “The Frogs”, Aeschylus and Euripides debate who was the better tragedian.

  • @Gargleon
    @Gargleon Місяць тому +20

    Love that these videos can teach me so much while still making me laugh, appreciate your hard work.

  • @marcobaianinhodemaua370
    @marcobaianinhodemaua370 Місяць тому +46

    Any video-essay on his hate of Pasolini?

  • @TakaD20
    @TakaD20 Місяць тому +29

    As great writer Youtubos put it: 'Don't call a man who has subscribed fortunate, for he may never do, as the is told in every video.'

  • @Vesnicie
    @Vesnicie Місяць тому +31

    1:58 - "Prologue-like". Aww! You quoted Henry V. That warms the cockles of my wizened grinch heart.

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Місяць тому +11

      That’s just great. Nothing like hot cockles.

  • @videovuer
    @videovuer Місяць тому +10

    Mr. Moviewise, you are so fun! Thank you for this whirlwind visit to Greece. I just saw the restoration of Seven Samouri today, a masterclass in movie making. Perhaps, a trip to medieval Japan??

  • @abrahemsamander3967
    @abrahemsamander3967 Місяць тому +17

    Very interesting video. Thank you. No ones really done a video on Greek tragedy movies before. I’ve been fascinated by the topic before.

  • @coltaine503
    @coltaine503 23 дні тому +4

    Okay, I think I've found the audience for one of the best jokes I've ever heard:
    A man walked into a Greek tailor shop and handed the tailor a pair of pants.
    The tailor looked at the pants and saw a long tear.
    He said to the customer, "Euripides?"
    Customer asked tailor, "Eumenides?"
    Thank you, thank you. I'll show myself out now.

  • @extilicon4279
    @extilicon4279 Місяць тому +12

    As an old Greek theatre whose directors have done some hands play, I appreciate this video

  • @krraika1847
    @krraika1847 Місяць тому +4

    14:19
    Just when I thought 1961's Antigone wouldn't show up, there it is! Admittedly, I only stumbled across it online but I still enjoyed it. Plus, I was surprised to see Irene Papas since I only knew her from Moustapha Akkad's films.

  • @abrahemsamander3967
    @abrahemsamander3967 Місяць тому +10

    I will say, I love the Irene papas Electra. And I intend to watch the other tragedies too. It’s so fascinating to watch Greek stories told by actual Greeks. From the Greek perspective. Albeit with some changes.
    And how different it is from how Hollywood tends to sanitize the stories.

  • @fontagnus
    @fontagnus Місяць тому +6

    Speaking of Irene Papas and Ancient Greece, anyone had the chance to watch Franco Rossi’s 1968 TV miniseries "The Odyssey"? It was a pretty faithful and realistic adaptation of Homer’s epic. If I recall correctly, I think there was a "Greek chorus" of women in at least one scene.

  • @Tigerfire75
    @Tigerfire75 Місяць тому +35

    So when you watch Pasolini does it make you want to rip out your eyes so you don't see what you did like sleeping with your mother? If so you might be a Greek tragedy.

  • @rosezingleman5007
    @rosezingleman5007 Місяць тому +15

    Best Patreon pitch ever!

  • @PolynicesEteocles
    @PolynicesEteocles Місяць тому +4

    This is wonderful. I'll leave it to the reader to guess why I might like this video. :)
    (been using these names in online settings since not too long after reading several of these in college)

  • @N_Loco_Parenthesis
    @N_Loco_Parenthesis Місяць тому +5

    Thanks for putting Mighty Aphrodite at the front of this video. I love that movie. It's a Greek comedy, you might say.

  • @professorxavier620
    @professorxavier620 10 днів тому

    I remember discovering the 1957 Oedipus Rex version during a school project and, just seeing those weird costumes, captivated me

  • @N_Loco_Parenthesis
    @N_Loco_Parenthesis Місяць тому +7

    Ah, but Pasolini did secure the service of none other than opera legend Maria Callas, Wiseman.

  • @morenofranco9235
    @morenofranco9235 17 днів тому

    I love your style of presentation. Cant wait to see more.

  • @matzell9755
    @matzell9755 Місяць тому +5

    That was one Hellas video

  • @Pana_DoP
    @Pana_DoP Місяць тому +10

    Sigh, we Greeks and our families.

  • @rpg7287
    @rpg7287 25 днів тому

    Goodness! You are talented! I never dreamed a video essay on the classic Greek plays could be so hilarious! 😂

  • @paulwilson3057
    @paulwilson3057 Місяць тому +2

    God be praised that you reminded me that I need to see 'The Trojan Women'!

  • @RaysDad
    @RaysDad Місяць тому +6

    IMO Iphigenia is one of the best films ever, and the performances of Tatiana Papamoschou in the title role and Panos Mihalopoulos as Achilles are among the best in movie history.

    • @Xenu
      @Xenu 29 днів тому +1

      Agreed. Cacoyannis's "Iphigenia" is the strongest adaptation of a Greek tragedy I've seen. Everything comes together perfectly in a way no other adaptation fully does. A Great film.

  • @bartolomeus441
    @bartolomeus441 Місяць тому +2

    The ad and "like and subscribe" was amazingly well edited in, I laughed so hard

  • @delightbydelusion
    @delightbydelusion Місяць тому +5

    Love me some Pasolini but this video is good too :)

  • @PseudoEchion
    @PseudoEchion 14 днів тому

    My favorite filmed tragedy would be peters Halls run of the Oresteia from 1983. Its on UA-cam, though it is not a movie but a recording of the stage performance it utilizes the striking and gutteral translation of Tony Harrison, one you wont be able to find online on a pdf! I would also like to mention Peter Dodd who did a short sort of abridged animated short of Prometheus Bound.

  • @johnpaulsylvester3727
    @johnpaulsylvester3727 Місяць тому +1

    So, I guess we won't be holding our breath for a review of Salo...

  • @azohundred1353
    @azohundred1353 Місяць тому +15

    You had me at Katharine Hepburn! I'll have to see The Trojan Women.

    • @track1949
      @track1949 Місяць тому +2

      It's worth the effort to find it to watch.

  • @KasumiRINA
    @KasumiRINA 24 дні тому

    6:47 nice to have my teapot represented. I legit got up on reflex on hearing that since I wanted to make tea and it was heating up.

  • @iolson38536
    @iolson38536 Місяць тому +1

    One of my favorite adaptations of Greek tragedy is the gospel musical "Gospel at Colonus" which was filmed for TV and available on UA-cam.

  • @gmansard641
    @gmansard641 17 днів тому

    I saw this production of Oedipus in a college literature class 40 years ago.

  • @SavedByGrace_CitizenEmperorユウ
    @SavedByGrace_CitizenEmperorユウ Місяць тому

    You had me at "Elektra"! How do I even know about this play's existence? Because Captain Marvel's Brie Larson is going to star in this exact play in London next year. ❤

  • @TheRealNinjoj
    @TheRealNinjoj 22 дні тому

    I'm not a screenwriter, but I do write / draw - and am perceptually at least 800,000 years old- so do think I owe tons of respect to the youth and their craft.

  • @MAFion
    @MAFion Місяць тому

    The new series about the Menendez brothers uses a gossip journalist (Nathan Lane) and his dinner guests as a Greek chorus. It was a pretty inspired way to use the classical convention.

  • @sdastoryteller3381
    @sdastoryteller3381 28 днів тому

    WHAT!?!? You didn't cover Spike Lee's classic Chi-Raq, the retelling of Aristophanes' Lysistrata. I'm actually shocked as this to me was one of the more creative ways of bringing Greek plays into the modern era.

  • @quite1enough
    @quite1enough 18 днів тому +1

    I absolutely loooove Pasolini

  • @bryanperdomo1283
    @bryanperdomo1283 Місяць тому

    I love this title.
    Reminds me of a certain guy who only makes Tarantino and Cohen brothers videos.
    CinemaStink or something.

  • @philipgwyn8091
    @philipgwyn8091 20 днів тому

    Imagine my surprise when a Greek chorus showed up in Combien tu m'aimes?

  • @N_Loco_Parenthesis
    @N_Loco_Parenthesis Місяць тому

    It'll be interesting to see the young Pasolini's take on Odysseus' RETURN, later this year. Il Ritorno, dir. Pasolini; Binoche, Fiennes, et al.

  • @ChrisKola
    @ChrisKola Місяць тому

    Your videos are great, glad I can get to one so quickly! Definitely taking some inspiration for some of my editing for future videos, lol

  • @michelele7949
    @michelele7949 Місяць тому +1

    Cottafavi’s translation is spot on, that’s exactly what he says
    But what’s wrong with Pasolini? He may be boring, I’ll give you that

  • @gubbothehuggo2771
    @gubbothehuggo2771 22 дні тому

    "I can hardly WAIT for the comments saying, 'you just don't get it."
    I'm going to keep it real with you, Moviewise. You are probably the only one here who has seen Straub-Huillet films. And from the sounds of it, rightfully so.

  • @hughleigh3959
    @hughleigh3959 Місяць тому +1

    This feels like an Aristotle lecture

  • @VicenteMarinho
    @VicenteMarinho 13 днів тому

    Such a subtle sponsor transition 😂

  •  Місяць тому +1

    Master of subtitles

  • @Makaneek5060
    @Makaneek5060 20 днів тому +1

    Greek theater is history's best sober acid trip, hell yeah.

    • @arbuz_kawon
      @arbuz_kawon 17 днів тому

      not so sober, they actually used a drink called kykeon, which features ergot, from which lsd was originally extracted

    • @Makaneek5060
      @Makaneek5060 17 днів тому

      @@arbuz_kawon well in my own case I'm sober

  • @James-Tanner
    @James-Tanner Місяць тому

    The subscribe to my patrion quote killed me

  • @liltick102
    @liltick102 Місяць тому +1

    ❤❤❤ commenting cuz this should have been atop my recommendeds

  • @KingOrest
    @KingOrest Місяць тому

    I’ve seen/own Elektra on dvd. Still want to see the other two he made.

  • @kyleheaser2385
    @kyleheaser2385 28 днів тому

    At 13:44 man falls down dead with hands to his side. Next shot he's on the ground with hands above his head.

  • @federicoferri5762
    @federicoferri5762 Місяць тому +1

    Man! How can you be so harsh on Pasolini??😭😭

  • @tim.a.k.mertens
    @tim.a.k.mertens 12 днів тому

    7:47 this tickles my gen z absurdist humour nerve

  • @Of_infinite_Faith
    @Of_infinite_Faith Місяць тому

    You should tackle the cinema of different countries, itsly, japan, iran, poland, etc...

  • @BonzoKilbourn
    @BonzoKilbourn Місяць тому +5

    Greeks created drama? The Gilgameshy Players would like a word. 😂

  • @r.a.mpictures
    @r.a.mpictures Місяць тому +1

    Looks like an old nightmare I had.

  • @jgritman
    @jgritman Місяць тому +3

    The BBC recordings of Peter Hall's theatrical Oresteia from 1983 are worth a watch - ua-cam.com/video/3UyouI7BUsI/v-deo.html

  • @greebo7857
    @greebo7857 Місяць тому +2

    William Shatner hasn't changed a bit....

    • @WUStLBear82
      @WUStLBear82 Місяць тому +1

      His waistline might disagree. Happens to most of us.

  • @p.d.stanhope7088
    @p.d.stanhope7088 Місяць тому +2

    It's all Greek to me. Literally & figuratively.

  • @parisulki729
    @parisulki729 16 днів тому

    The title and thumbnail have the makings of million views video

  • @LIKEDBUTTONPluto
    @LIKEDBUTTONPluto 18 днів тому

    At 15:03 what film is it I can’t find out which one of the Greek films is being talked about

  • @abrahemsamander3967
    @abrahemsamander3967 Місяць тому +2

    I never heard of Vittorio Cottafavi. I’ll have to check him out. I love budget enforced creativity.

  • @thecandlemaker1329
    @thecandlemaker1329 Місяць тому +1

    Not a fan of how you casually disparaged Hölderlin. In spite of his late onset mental illness, he is universally recognised as one of Germany's greatest poets, and his Greek translations in particular are seen as authoritative.

  • @j0nnyism
    @j0nnyism 20 днів тому

    The masks make more sense than watching the same face play many roles and attempting to convince yourself that that person is all those characters. Penguin effectively does the same thing. It’s just a very realistic mask

  • @Of_infinite_Faith
    @Of_infinite_Faith Місяць тому +1

    7:40 what's the song

  • @BenVaserlan
    @BenVaserlan Місяць тому

    Please do a video on Brian De Palma. NB: he's Tarantino's favourite director.

  • @hpoonis2010
    @hpoonis2010 Місяць тому +1

    I'd expect anything associated with Brecht to consist of vomit and farts delivered by a hunchbacked sailor with one tooth.

    • @TakaD20
      @TakaD20 Місяць тому +1

      See seem to have seen/read other parts of his work that I did.

    • @Mooseman327
      @Mooseman327 Місяць тому +1

      Someone's not a fan of the working classes, it seems.

  • @AndrewDederer
    @AndrewDederer Місяць тому

    Seeing the 1957 Oedipus Rex closed a circle I'd long held onto. This is the version of the play Tom Lehrer was referring to in his introduction to his "Theme tune" for that particular "flick"..
    ua-cam.com/video/mScdJURKGWM/v-deo.html

  • @Ah11yes
    @Ah11yes Місяць тому +1

    What do you think of Fellini Satyricon?

    • @N_Loco_Parenthesis
      @N_Loco_Parenthesis Місяць тому +3

      I found it very indulgent. It's one of the most indulgent movies he ever made. The key word is indulgent. 😉

  • @AstasiiaUkna
    @AstasiiaUkna Місяць тому +2

    5:28 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @mercurialhypersprite9556
    @mercurialhypersprite9556 Місяць тому

    Hey man. Would you know where one could go to find out about good euro made for tv films? Speaking as such an astute cinephile paisano as yourself?

    • @JohnMoseley
      @JohnMoseley Місяць тому

      Closest I can come are the old BBC Plays for Today. Mike Leigh, Ken Loach and, best of all, Alan Clarke got their starts there and did amazing work. Leigh's 'Hard Labour' is a standout. Most of the 'plays' are really films, shot on location.

  • @AllenDobkin
    @AllenDobkin Місяць тому

    Moviewise, so funny.

  • @Kenny-the-Platypus
    @Kenny-the-Platypus Місяць тому +1

    I'm studying their plays. Wrong elective.

  • @drake9634
    @drake9634 Місяць тому

    I always forget that this is another channel by dovahhatty

  • @dmitrygenma3936
    @dmitrygenma3936 Місяць тому

    Thanks for your work. Check out Medea (2021) by Zeldovich, if you haven’t yet.

  • @j0nnyism
    @j0nnyism 20 днів тому

    All translations are adaptions. It’s impossible to get a perfect facsimile from one language to another. Meaning is more important

  • @nondescriptcat5620
    @nondescriptcat5620 3 дні тому

    My Big Fat Greek Tragedy

  • @spacemanspud7073
    @spacemanspud7073 Місяць тому +1

    I feel like im being watched! I just watch this two days ago. I liked it alot, the costumes obviously hooked me, with the only gripe is that the acting was too theatrical or corny at times (though it was good most of the time). I adore this style, and would love to see other Greek plays done in it, African myths would play great in this style too!

  • @henridarocha606
    @henridarocha606 Місяць тому

    Haven't you watched this version of Oedipus? It's very good.
    Christopher Plummer and Orson Welles. ua-cam.com/video/H4jPcyBu0Rw/v-deo.htmlsi=41hm80pGD9_6Eql8

  • @ElonMuskrat-my8jy
    @ElonMuskrat-my8jy Місяць тому +1

    Is the narrator Dovahhatty?

  • @lhistorienchipoteur9968
    @lhistorienchipoteur9968 3 години тому

    8:43 Wrong ! There is also a french film made in the 1950’s for television of « The Persians » by Aeschylus. It’s even uploaded to UA-cam: ua-cam.com/video/UEm0b7vUDJc/v-deo.htmlsi=QHYhNjFlN9CeeNPN

  • @ickyelf4549
    @ickyelf4549 7 днів тому

    Euripides, eupayferdes

  • @Makaneek5060
    @Makaneek5060 20 днів тому

    I am forever glad that Europe's holiest family was Jewish.

  • @bearcb
    @bearcb Місяць тому

    I thought I was the only one who disliked Pasolini as a director! He might have been a great writer (contributed to the screenplay of Nights of Cabiria, one of my favorites), but had no mastering of cinema language whatsoever. His movies look like made by a cinema student, and a bad one.

  • @j0nnyism
    @j0nnyism 20 днів тому

    Hexameter as in 6

  • @TheVid54
    @TheVid54 Місяць тому +1

    Hardly ever saw a greek tragedy I didn't like, although, as my favorite actor Richard Burton would say: the best way to watch anything by Bertolt Brecht is with skewers in your ears and eyes - needless to say I never saw the Brecht take on Antigone. I can give Pasolini a break simply because he cast Callas as Medea, but it was Cacoyannis who turned me on to them all, because apparently like Cottafavi, he made them into pulp peplum. I thank you for an enlightening viewpoint on the delightfully depressing genre of Greek tragedy.

  • @realfake8269
    @realfake8269 Місяць тому +2

    THE PROBLEM with adaptations, is that we dont see Ancient Greeks as normal Humans like us: we too much base on the Statues and scenes from pots that were static of course...
    - People were not static, they did not speak like stiff automatons, and those words were common words, what the normal people used. I guess actors were much more bodily expressive than us, with no cameras and effects whatever.
    See our misconceptions: we thought till recently that statues were pure white elegant marble....
    Adaptations with surealism are just incompetent, or without budget
    Some movies/series about i.e. 1800 England are much more realistic recently, instead of rigid and stiff like previous decades. Hope this expands.
    An anthropologist, with a historian and an archaiologist, would adapt these Plays better.

    • @Laurelin70
      @Laurelin70 23 дні тому

      Though you have to take into consideration that plays, especially tragedies, in ancient (archaic and classical) Greece were actually religious rituals. So they had to be played with solemnity and hieratic attitude, since they showed the myths of the fathers. With the evolution of costumes and culture, they became more and more stories about human flaws and contrasts.

    • @realfake8269
      @realfake8269 23 дні тому

      @@Laurelin70 Please, is this true that they started as religious rituals? I want to learn more about this.
      I also understand that Rituals should be Stiff in our modern minds, but thats my point, that we dont know their ways of expression - the people that made Dionysus a god, could not be stiff I guess, and would use expresionism to the utmost....maybe!

    • @Laurelin70
      @Laurelin70 23 дні тому

      @@realfake8269 According to Aristotle, at the origin of tragedy would stand the rites in honor of Dyonisus. And even if other more modern scholars don't share the same hypotesis about the etymology of the words, they are still convinced about the religious origin of the theatre (just recently visited an exhibition here in Rome about that, and the guide said that at first theatrical plays, especially tragedies, were represented during religious festival or holidays).
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_tragedy

  • @daviassumpcao5095
    @daviassumpcao5095 Місяць тому

    what makes you watch movies from artists you don't like?

    •  Місяць тому +6

      How would you know if you don’t watch at least a few of their movies?

    • @daviassumpcao5095
      @daviassumpcao5095 Місяць тому

      i agree but in some cases like pasolini i guess you'll know what you think after salò and gospel according to matthew, i personally would have stopped there

  • @lazybear236
    @lazybear236 Місяць тому

    No nod to Anouilh?

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Місяць тому

      That rabbit hole was enticing but much too deep. With Anouilh I’d end up talking about Giraudoux and Cocteau (all Jeans) and Goethe, and Racine and Corneille and Seneca.

  • @uchil3916
    @uchil3916 Місяць тому +2

    thank god, I'm not the only one who hates pasolini. I thought I was going crazy

  • @Mr.Picturemaker1
    @Mr.Picturemaker1 25 днів тому

    Petition to make a video on Mr.Bean.

  • @jjoanna2
    @jjoanna2 Місяць тому

    lol :) I also hate Pasolini ! ... and i love Barry Lyndon (the musical theme at the end of your vid) always waiting impatiently for your next yt upload. Maybe one day you could make an analysis of Norman Jewison's musical adaptation of Fiddler on The Roof and Jesus Christ Superstar or Franco Zefifrelli's adaptation of Taming of the Shrew and Romeo and Juliette (?) I'm curious of your opinion. I love these movies so much !

  • @fan2jnrc
    @fan2jnrc 26 днів тому

    How is it possible to make a video on the subject without mentioning Jean Prat's fabulous 1961 French TV adaptation of Aeschylus' "The Persians", with music by Prodromides?
    Nothing I see in this video comes close.
    m.ua-cam.com/video/UEm0b7vUDJc/v-deo.html