Orphic Trilogy - Criterion Collection (1950)
Facts
|
Orphic Trilogy - Criterion Collection
DVD Price: You save 10%! As of Jan 6 3:43 EST (details)
|
| Directed by | Jean Cocteau |
| Cast | Jean Marais, François Périer, María Casares, Marie Déa, Henri Crémieux and Jean Cocteau |
| Theatrical Release | November 29, 1950 |
| DVD Release | June 27, 2000 |
| Running Time | 225 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 037429148327 |
| Buy this item | $71.99 at Amazon.com As of Jan 6 3:43 EST (details) 3 DVD, Criterion, Usually ships in 24 hours, Box set, Black & White, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: French (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), English (Subtitled) Or 35 new from $57.17, 12 used from $23.99 |
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for Orphic Trilogy - Criterion Collection posters.
Similar Movies
User Reviews
Average user review:| Poetry from the Underworld |
Superlatives fall short in attempting to describe these magical, dreamlike films, so rich with myth & beauty & mystery. Cocteau accomplishes something very difficult: he manages to be in control of his symbols, but handles their reins with a deceptively casual touch, so that there's never a hint of didactic rigidity, which would be death to such works. The overall atmosphere remains mysterious, with meaning only partially glimpsed, something that's felt on a complex level. There's plenty of room for analysis, to be sure -- part of the fun is discussing the films with others! -- but it's never a cut-and-dried matter of Symbol A = Object B. Like actual dreams, they exist & work in many dimensions at once, never exhausting their depths.
There's a lesson here for modern filmmakers as well -- the special effects are simple, perhaps even crude by contemporary standards -- but they not only work superbly, they outshine the fanciest CGI available today. And why? Because they exist to serve the artistic purposes of the films & their creator, not simply to dazzle the audience with superficial technique & explosive eye candy. There's always the genuine sense of the unknowable, of the otherworldly -- these are films that plunge deeply into the psyche, draw their enduring power from that underworld, and reward repeated viewings.
And in case that sounds much too sober & daunting, let me add that they're both a visual & intellectual delight. Yes, there's plenty of Meaning ... but they're also out-and-out enjoyable, always offering something new & startling. You don't need a handful of university degrees to appreciate them! The simultaneous shock & pleasure of encountering the marvelous is more than sufficient.
In short, this collection is an essential work of art -- most highly recommended! June 19, 2008
| An Ephemeral Vision of Life and Death |
Based on the Greek myth of Orpheus, the main couple, Orpheus the poet and his wife the somewhat fragile Eurydice (killed by a motorbike instead of a snake), experience life in a world where they are presented with otherworldly temptations and serious life-changing contemplations.
They visit a strangely modern underworld where Orpheus seems to be looking for death/the Princess or perhaps Persephone (queen of the underworld - but she seems to be more like the temptress/siren in this movie) more than his recently departed wife. She seems to have a good sense of humor and reminds the participants of her plots not to look back lest they be turned into pillars of salt, as she remembers from the past.
There are all sorts of lovely visual metaphors like "kiss of death" and other ideas you pick up on as you are watching the story unfold. Just as in "The Blood of a Poet," we find humans moving through mirrors as easily as their underworld conspirators. Death falls in love with a poet, although we assume he fell in love with the idea of her first. In a way, he writes her into his life.
Everyone seems to live in reality all while moving from death to life and from life to death. Keeping up with who is dead and who is alive only makes it all the more fun. It is not quite as frightening as a horror movie, but somewhat like a twilight zone with an unexpected ending. I found this to be rather intriguing and it kept my attention better than most modern movies of today. There is something very elegant, contemplative and intriguing about the movies in Jean Cocteau's trilogy. I love the way the mirrors turn watery and how the characters move so easily from one world to the next.
~The Rebecca Review
October 13, 2006
| A superb centerpiece. |
| Astonish Us |
Watching these films it occurred to me--and I'm sure I'll get a lot of negative votes for this!--that Cocteau was at heart a poseur. He recognized the genius in his famous friends and collaborators (Picasso, Stravinsky, Satie, Apollinaire) but when it came to expressing his own, relied on a canny restatement of the Romantic idea of the suffering artist, one that would play well to the public but had little to do with the radical new art burgeoning around him. That may be too harsh, but I wonder if I'm alone in finding these movies a little too self-consciously poetic to be really moving. December 11, 2005
| When the death dies for love! |
Cocteau adapted the classic Orpheus's myth to the present times, but keeping the essential basis of the myth and its veil's mystery. The poetry literally loads the picture all along the way.
Blood of a poet constitutes undoubtedly, the first reference step you must ascend to higher peaks. The surrealist airs are present with all the frenzy of the First Opus; rapture images and seductive illusion, irreverence and disobey; a real captive journey through the Fourth Wall where the dreams and love live.
In Orpheus,we will assist to the dramatic premise: Orpheus is obsessed with his wife's death. Heuterbise and Cegeste will his fellows friends and his lamentations and complaints are at last satisfied when he will get the opportunity to get through the frontier between the life and death. She will visit to his beloved wife in clear reference to Dante and Beatrice but he will sign a pact with the underworld's Jury: he will return with his beloved wife with jus one condition: he won't be able to watch her under any pretext or reason.
To look behind: this is the most important reflection that feeds not only this fabulous myth but even an apparent far distant work as Faust: to look behind means to be frozen in the time's shadows; and Faust through the decision of becoming to the dead youth will establish his own agreement with Satan. But you have more: When Lot's wife in the Christian mythology looks behind becomes in salt's statue. The memories constitue a real matrix: it's seductive, the enviroment temperature is so warm and seductive that you can be engaged through your entire life. Narcisus comes to our mind when the human being, once has reached the experience's stage, pretendes, mistakenly, to get back to the ancestral origin: the naive innocence. If you decide to get back, you are committed to pay a prize, that's why Orpheus will be murdered in the Hades.
Finally in Orpheus' testament we assist to the last farewell of the poet. Inquired by the Great Jury Cocteau answers: "A film is the petrified image of the mind which resurrects the dead acts". He will be punished to live in his final days till the time will come for him to fade. The final encounter with Oediphus literally will invade you of perplexity and cosmic anguish; to be so close and unable to meet one each other.
Consider this film not only one of the twenty giants films one any age ever made but one of the ten top French films and perhaps one the three most admired and perfect film in the whole cinema's story. The other two to my mind would be: Carne 's Children of the paradise and Robert Bresson 's A man escapes.
When a rose vanishes, the poetry will wait for it and the cycle will start over and over! April 15, 2005
More reviews at Amazon.com ...





