Caligula (film)
Caligula | |
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File:Movie dvd cover caligula.jpg | |
Directed by | Tinto Brass(later disowned) |
Written by | Gore Vidal (later disowned), Malcolm McDowell, Massolino D'Amico, Tinto Brass (the latter three are all uncredited) |
Produced by | Bob Guccione Franco Rossellini |
Starring | Malcolm McDowell Teresa Ann Savoy Helen Mirren Peter O'Toole |
Music by | Sergei Prokofiev Aram Khachaturyan Bruno Nicholai (under the pseudonym of "Paul Clemente") |
Distributed by | Produzioni Atlas Consorziate (Italy) Independent Artists (USA) |
Release dates | August 14, 1979 Italy February 1 1980 USA |
Running time | 156 min. (US Unrated version) |
Language | English |
Budget | $17,500,000 (initial) $22,000,000 (final) |
Caligula (USA/Italy) is a 1979 film directed by Tinto Brass (with additional scenes filmed by Bob Guccione and Giancarlo Lui) about the Roman Emperor Gaius Caesar Germanicus also known as "Caligula". Caligula was written by Gore Vidal and co-financed by Penthouse magazine, though the script underwent several re-writes after Tinto Brass and Malcolm McDowell found Gore Vidal's interpretation of the infamous Emperor to be unsatisfactory. The producers were Bob Guccione and Franco Rosselini. The film was budgeted at about 20 million dollars and ended up grossing around 30. The production advertised itself as "the most controversial film in history. Only one movie dares to show the perversion behind Imperial Rome..."
It stars Malcolm McDowell as the Emperor and chronicles his rise and fall as the brief ruler of the Roman Empire. The film focuses heavily on Caligula's infamously deranged sexual practices, as well as those of his contemporaries.
Multiple versions
Caligula was shown in various versions, including:
- An unreleased version, shown in a limited private screening at the Cannes, was 210 minutes long.
- A 150 minute Italian cut; it was basically a shortened version of the U.S. edition. It was eventually pulled out of release on favour of Franco Rossellini's re-edited version (more on which below), but a briefly released VHS tape exists, though it is now out-of print and is considered a major collector's item.
- The unrated U.S. version, running 156 minutes and holding the honour of being the most widely seen cut of the film. It enjoyed a limited, albeit highly profitable, run in the American cinemas. This version contained several scenes with sexually and violently explicit content, including orgies, masturbation, fellatio, anal fisting, female urination, beheading prisoners using a lawn-mower-type device (which is unlikely to have existed in reality), and slamming an infant on the stone steps like a rag doll. It was highly controversial and would certainly have received an X rating from the MPAA. The DVD release of this version is available in a blue cover.
- The U.K. version, running 144 minutes. Aside from the removing 12 minutes of explicit footage, the editors included some replacement shots, derived from Tinto Brass' principal shoot, as well as remainder footage from Bob Guccione's re-shoots. Just like the older Italian cut, this version is also out-of-print these days, but is actively hunted for by various collectors.
- Guccione eventually authorized an R-rated cut released in 1981, 105 minutes long, which earned the film wider distribution. Contrary to popular belief, majority of the cut footage was that of various dramatic scenes, which many felt brought the pace to a screeching halt (this was due to the botched editing). In this version all of the hardcore, bloody and violent footage was either trimmed or replaced with yet another set of alternate shots and angles. Though the controversy over the film's content drew large crowds, virtually none of the most excessive scenes were included in the R version. But strangely, the audience's reaction was much more positive than to the uncut 156 minute version.
- In 1984, Franco Rossellini, unhappy with Bob Guccione's final edit of the film, re-edited an extended, pre-release print of Caligula, which may or may not have been the infamous 210 minute version. This new edition of the film, re-titled as Io, Caligola clocked in at 133 minutes, but the Italian censors had it cut down to 86 minutes (!). However, after a huge backlash, they allowed it to be brought up to 123 minutes. The missing ten minutes are no doubt responsible for a few jump cuts that occur throughout the film. This version has been released on DVD, but is available exclusively in Italy.
- The second R-rated version saw light in 1999. It was released straight to DVD and contained no alternate angles. Various shots simply repeated themselves continuously instead of using the different takes of scenes seen in the R-rated theatrical release, causing numerous continuity problems and a disorienting, nauseating feel to the viewers. The rest of the cuts and trims, however, were based on the 1981 censored release. This DVD version clocked in at 102 minutes. This version was released with a red cover.
- A few months later, the FilmFour channel, frustrated by the lack of any extended version of the film available in the U.K. (only the low quality 1981 censored version was still in print), released their own cut of Caligula, running approximately 140 minutes (the missing 16 minutes can be mostly attributed to the PAL overspeeding and time compression.) It was essentially the same as the 156 minute version, but lacked all of Bob Guccione's footage (much to his anger). Those missing bits were the lesbian tryst and a handful of sexual inserts during the imperial bordello sequence.
Both the new R-rated version, the 156-minute cut and the Io, Caligola version have been released to DVD in various countries. The 1981 R-rated cut was released briefly on DVD in the U.K.
Critical reaction
The film was heavily panned by critics. Roger Ebert gave it zero stars, describing it as "sickening, utterly worthless, shameful trash"; a generation later it remained on the list of his most hated films. Both Peter O'Toole and Malcolm McDowell have since expressed regret in participating in the film. The director, Tinto Brass, disowned the film altogether, since the film was taken out of his hands and given to Bob Guccione's close friend Giancarlo Lui to complete the editing. Gore Vidal, the writer, also disowned the film, but that happened much earlier than the incident with Brass and for an entirely different reason. Gore and Tinto had major creative differences over the subject matter, and though both had strong ideas concerning Caligula's reasons and motivations behind the madness, neither could find a common ground. The majority of those behind the film backed Tinto Brass, which infuriated Gore Vidal, who left the project bad mouthing the entire production.
Cast
- Malcolm McDowell -- Caligula
- Peter O'Toole -- Tiberius
- Paolo Bonacelli -- Cassius Chaerea
- John Gielgud -- Nerva
- Helen Mirren -- Caesonia
- Teresa Ann Savoy -- Drusilla
- Lori Wagner -- Agrippina
- John Steiner -- Longinus
External links
- Caligula at IMDb
- The Caligula SuperSite(WARNING CONTAINS MATERIAL THAT MAY BE DEEMED OFFENSIVE OR NOT WORK SAFE)