![]() |
FILMS Part 1 |
Epics are historical films that recreate past events. They are expensive and lavish to produce, because they require elaborate and panoramic settings, on-location filming, authentic period costumes, inflated action on a massive scale and large casts of characters. Biopic (biographical) films are often less lavish versions of the epic film. Epics often rewrite history, suffering from inauthenticity, fictitious recreations, excessive religiosity, hard-to-follow details and characters, romantic dreamworlds, ostentatious vulgarity, political correctness, and leaden scripts. Accuracy is sometimes sacrificed: the chronology is telescoped or modified, and the political/historical forces take a back seat to the personalization and ideological slant of the story (i.e., the 'poetic license' of Oliver Stone's controversial JFK (1991) immediately comes to mind). Epics often share elements of the more elaborate adventure films genre and swashbuckler subgenre (e.g., the Robin Hood tale of The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)). They may be combined with other genre types too, including:
Epics have existed since the earliest days of American cinema, from D. W. Griffith's ground-breaking The Birth of a Nation (1915), to Cecil B. DeMille's Joan the Woman (1916), The Ten Commandments (1923) and The King of Kings (1927), to the giant Civil War epic and Best Picture winner Gone With The Wind (1939), to the fairly-recent Schindler's List (1993), Titanic (1997), and Ridley Scott's revamped 'sword and sandal' epic Gladiator (2000). Irreverent spoofs of Biblical films have also emerged, such as The Life of Brian (1979), with the Monty Python cast. Epics are often called costume dramas, since they emphasize the trappings of a period setting: historical pageantry, costuming and wardrobes, locale, spectacle, decor and a sweeping visual style. They often transport viewers to other worlds or eras: ancient times, biblical times, the Middle Ages, the Victorian era, or turn-of-the-century America. Unlike true historical epics, period films choose a specific historical period, and then superimpose fictional characters or events into the setting. Two of the Earliest Epics from Italy: Quo Vadis? and Cabiria Along with Enrico Guazzoni's epic Quo Vadis? (1912, It.) - often considered the first successful feature-length motion picture and one of the first films with over two hours running time, the influential three-hour Italian silent film from Giovanni Pastrone, Cabiria (1914, It.), was an early example of spectacular and monumental epic film-making. It laid the pattern and groundwork for future big-budget feature-length films (by the likes of D.W. Griffith - for his Judith of Bethulia (1914), The Birth of a Nation (1915), and later his Babylonian sequences in Intolerance (1916) - and Cecil B. DeMille). Its story of 3rd century BC Ancient Rome included sequences of the eruption of Mt. Etna and Hannibal's crossing of the Alps with elephants (with an early example of tracking shots). The landmark film was shot on location in North Africa, Sicily and the Italian Alps. It was also the first film to be screened at the White House. Silent Epics of D. W. Griffith:
The next Griffith film was another silent epic: Intolerance (1916), that studied the effects of injustice and intolerance in four separate yet inter-connected and parallel stories in different time periods (its Babylonian sequence with massive sets is still remarkable). Its theme of "Love's struggle throughout the ages" and its passionate plea for tolerance was a response to his Birth of a Nation critics. Griffith's Orphans of the Storm (1921) was set against the backdrop of pre-Revolutionary France, and followed the paths of two sisters (the Gish sisters) who were separated and raised in different environments - one by aristocratic nobles, the other by thieving peasants. Silent Epics of Cecil B. De Mille: The Biblical Epic Subgenre
De Mille continued during his early film career with a series of silent Biblical or religious epics - a specific subgenre. These 'swords-and-sandals' films, with a strong religious viewpoint, were set during Roman times in the ancient world, and were noted for casts of thousands in crowd scenes. His two-part silent version of The Ten Commandments (1923) included spectacular special effects for the parting of the Red Sea. This film foreshadowed the advent of future De Mille spectacles. He followed The Ten Commandments with King of Kings (1927), a beautifully-lavish yet reverential story of the life of Christ with a climactic resurrection scene (in color) and ascension. [King of Kings was re-released in 1931 with a synchronized musical score.] Other Silent Era Epics:
Raoul Walsh's imaginative Arabian Nights fantasy The Thief of Bagdad (1924) starred Douglas Fairbanks, Sr. with magical special effects and lavish production values including a flying carpet. King Vidor's epic war film The Big Parade (1925) told the heart-wrenching tale of the love between a French peasant girl and an American doughboy fighting WWI in Europe. Russian director Sergei Eisenstein's silent masterpiece The Battleship Potemkin (1925) portrayed the 1905 revolution through a microcosmic view of a mutinous uprising aboard a Russian battleship. Its pioneering montage/editing sequences in the bloody Odessa Steps sequence changed filmmaking forever. MGM - Epic Maker: In the mid-1930s, MGM won the Best Picture with its adapted version of Charles Nordhoff's and James Norman Hall's historical non-fiction novel, the sea-adventure epic Mutiny on the Bounty (1935). It featured on-location shooting in Tahiti, and Charles Laughton as the definitive Captain Bligh and Clark Gable as Fletcher Christian (both nominated for Best Actor, along with co-star Franchot Tone). It was MGM's most expensive film production since their Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1926), at $2 million. [An inferior remake, Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), starred Marlon Brando as Fletcher Christian.] Soon after, MGM produced the epic The Good Earth (1937), the last film of legendary producer Irving Thalberg - it was also an adaptation - of the Pearl S. Buck novel about Chinese peasants who faced, among other things, a devastating locust plague. During the 40s, epics didn't fare very well, due to the scarcity of the war years. One exception was the British Shakespearean film from Laurence Olivier, Henry V (1944), with an American release in 1946. Best Picture and Best Actor-nominated Olivier won a special Academy Award for "his outstanding achievement as actor, producer and director in bringing Henry V to the screen." Cecil B. De Mille's Biblical and Roman Empire Epics of the Sound Era:
Showman De Mille reshot his own silent era 1923 film in the mid-1950s in the wide-screen Technicolor format on a grander scale. His 70th (and final film), The Ten Commandments (1956) starred actor Charlton Heston as the Hebrew leader Moses, performing special effects plagues before Yul Brynner as the Pharoah Rameses, and parting the Red Sea for the Israelites. The film's sole Oscar win was for its special effects. [In the same year, producer Michael Todd's epic travelogue presentation of Jules Verne's 1872 novel Around the World in 80 Days (1956) won Best Picture.] Other 50s and 60s Grand-Scale Biblical and 'Sword and Sandal' Epics: In the 50s, the sound era brought more Biblical, historical, or Grecian/Roman times epics, alongside the development of colorful wide-screen CinemaScope to lure viewers away from their home televisions with free programming. Mervyn LeRoy's and MGM's full-scale, big-budget Quo Vadis (1951) with Robert Taylor and Deborah Kerr, told the tale of Emperor Nero's (Peter Ustinov) times and Christian persecution, and included great spectacle, costumes, romance, and action. Using sets left-over from Quo Vadis (1951), MGM followed with Joseph L. Mankiewicz's hit Julius Caesar (1953), a star-studded, faithful Shakespearean adaptation with James Mason, John Gielgud, Louis Calhern (as Julius Caesar) and Marlon Brando (as Marc Antony). In the same year, Columbia produced the opulent, non-widescreen historical/religious epic Salome (1953) with Rita Hayworth as the title character Princess and Charles Laughton as King Herod.
Former bodybuilder Steve Reeves starred as the mighty-muscle-bound Hercules, the Greek mythological hero, in two films, Hercules (1958) - a big hit when released internationally in 1959, and its rushed-into-production sequel Hercules Unchained (1959). [The series continued without Reeves and director Pietro Francisci at the helm, in a number of Italian-made B-film sequels and other muscle-man epics - the real 'sword and sandal' films of the era.] By the mid-50s and for the decade afterwards, many of these kinds of epics were typecasting various players, such as Victor Mature, Charlton Heston, Yul Brynner, Richard Burton, Jean Simmons, Peter Ustinov, and Stephen Boyd. Richard Burton starred as the title character in writer-director-producer Robert Rossen's Cinemascopic epic Alexander the Great (1956). [Other epic films about Alexander the Great, directed by Oliver Stone and Baz Luhrmann, are to be released in 2004 and 2005 respectively.] William Wyler's and MGM's beautifully framed, eleven Oscar-winning blockbuster film Ben-Hur (1959), derived from Major General Lew Wallace's A Tale of the Christ, was a remake of the earlier classic silent film of the same title with Ramon Novarro and Francis X. Bushman. This newer version, a $15 million three and a half-hour remake, starred Charlton Heston as the title character, and Stephen Boyd as his childhood friend/Roman enemy Messala, and included the same exciting slave galley battle scene and memorable chariot race.
Epic star Charlton Heston portrayed legendary 11th-century medieval Spanish hero/warrior Rodrigo Diaz de Bivar (El Cid) who united the Moors and Christians under one King, with Sophia Loren in Anthony Mann's spectacular and handsome-looking El Cid (1961), an adaptation from French playwright Pierre Corneille's work. Nicholas Ray reprised the intelligently-told King of Kings (1961), another tale of the life of Christ starring Jeffrey Hunter and narrated by Orson Welles. Dino De Laurentis produced Barabbas (1962) which starred Anthony Quinn as the murderous thief who was haunted for life after being freed by Pilate and exchanged for Jesus. Another Biblical epic, director Robert Aldrich's Italian-made Sodom and Gomorrah (1962) depicted the destruction of the two sinful cities with expensive production values.
Anthony Mann's big-budget historical epic The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964) with Stephen Boyd chronicled events in ancient Rome. And George Stevens' The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965) featured many Hollywood and international stars in unexpected roles - including Charlton Heston as John the Baptist and Max Von Sydow as Jesus. Director John Huston's epic three-hour The Bible (1966) was a misnomer when all the other directors in producer Dino De Laurentiis' extensive project bowed out. [A subtitle was added to the film's title, making it The Bible: In the Beginning, referring to the fact that only the first 22 chapters of Genesis were included, with the story of Creation, Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, Cain and Abel, Noah's Ark and the flood (with Huston as Noah himself), and the patriarchal story of Abraham and Sarah.] Biographical (Biopics): Another subgenre of epics are 'biopics' or biographical works, that dramatize the life of an actual historical figure (usually a 'Great Man', politician or President, entertainer, inventor/scientist, military leader, artist, sports hero or celebrity). Genre hybrids are common in this sub-genre. In many cases, these films put an emphasis on the larger events (wartime, political or social conditions) surrounding the person's entire life as they rise to fame and glory.
Artists and literary authors have also inspired biographical film epics, such as two films from Vincente Minnelli. His film Madame Bovary (1949) starred James Mason as Gustave Flaubert on whose classic novel the film was based, and another film, Lust for Life (1956) featured Kirk Douglas as tormented Dutch painter Vincent Van Gogh. Also, Billy Wilder's The Spirit of St. Louis (1957) dramatized the historical figure of 27 year old Charles Lindbergh (James Stewart), the "Lone Eagle." (Also see the dramas genre for sports biopics). More recent examples of biographical epics include the following films:
|