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"Cleopatra" Revisited
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The 70mm Newsletter
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Written
by: Rick
Mitchell. © 2006, by Rick Mitchell - Universe rights reserved |
Date:
25. May 2006 |
The 1963 version of "Cleopatra" is still the most expensive western
hemisphere film ever made when adjusted for inflation, and that and the
behind-the-cameras stories related to its production still make it the butt
of jokes about filmmaking excesses. These issues were factors in reviews of
the film when it finally premiered. But no one has really seen it since
then. Aside from a possible screening at
Bradford, England, the last known
70mm presentation was a fading print at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood in
the early Seventies. 35mm prints of varying length and quality have
occasionally played at various venues, including one earlier this year at
the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. 16mm anamorphic prints of the 189
minute general release version were available for rental from Films
Incorporated, some of which may have found their way into the libraries of
film collectors, but otherwise most viewings of the film have been via video
from various sources. And, as a recent screening proved, "Cleopatra"
is a film that needs to be seen on the big screen, ideally from a 70mm
print.
The announcement that "Cleopatra" was to be included in this
year's "Great
To Be Nominated" program at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
stirred interest among local Wide Screen and 70mm buffs as to what kind of
print would be shown, as Schawn Belston of 20th Century Fox is the only
studio preservationist who had been given a mandate to restore and strike
new prints of all the studio's Wide Film productions.* The announcement that
a new 70mm print would be shown had a lot of people salivating and those who
attended the screening were well rewarded, for the new print was stunning,
possibly even looking better than original prints when one allows for
improvement in print stocks over forty years. A representative of
Fotokem
Laboratories, which struck the print, said the negative was in perfect
shape.
"Cleopatra" in 70mm is perfect verification of my recent comments
about the potential benefits of reviving 65mm for production. Unlike in
"South Pacific", Shamroy used shorter focal length lenses for many of the
film's full shots. Thus, not only do you feel that you are in the huge sets
with the characters, you see details that would be lost in even the most
high end home HD system, including Ms. Taylor's throat and vaccination
scars, for which no attempt was made to hide with makeup. And in the mob
scenes, most notably the famous entry into Rome, details in the faces of the
literal cast of thousands are quite visible.
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Chace Productions has also done a superb job of translating the original six
track dub to the DTS Special Venue format now used for 70mm presentations.
I don't know if the production recording of "Cleopatra" was done
multi-channel, Fox was the only studio to record that way until the early
Sixties, but voices and effects are placed with their on screen source with
little obvious panning except where the source moves across a cut. And Alex
North's score is presented in its full dynamic range. (Unfortunately the
Academy chose to leave the curtains open during the overture, en“tracte, and
walkout resulting in that music sounding too loud and shrill since, as those
moments were normally played with curtains closed, they were dubbed with a
higher volume and accentuation of the highs to punch through the heavy
material.
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As a reasonably literate costume spectacle, "Cleopatra" is also the
quintessential example of the Fifties-Sixties roadshow film. In the United
States, the practice of roadshowing a film, presenting it as if it was a
major stage production in a large theater at higher admission prices, with
reserved seats, two shows a day, etc., goes back to Adolph Cukor's
presentation of "QUEEN ELIZABETH" with Sarah Bernhardt in 1912. Over the next
40 years it was frequently used to open major films in New York and special
unusually long films like "THE BIRTH OF A NATION" (1915), "BEN-HUR" (1925), and
"GONE WITH THE WIND" (1939) in major cities around the country. It was a
technical necessity, and a key to the promotion of Cinerama, but it was
intentionally made a key component of mid-century exhibition by Michael Todd
in his development of Todd-AO. By the early Sixties, adults, especially
those from middle America, who were no longer regular moviegoers, did flock
to roadshows, seeing them as special events, as Todd intended. The subjects
had the appeal of being "high class", as they were either adaptations of
popular stage shows or historical epics, often with religious overtones.
Although many are put off by its four hour three minute (minus intermission)
length, the film actually holds up very well and the beautiful images
created by production designer John De Cuir and his many associates and
captured by the great Leon Shamroy, ASC keep one“s eyes glued to the screen
even in intimate dramatic scenes. Based on his earlier films, director
Joseph L. Mankiewicz apparently preferred the deep focus approach that was
in vogue when he began directing in 1946, thus most of those dramatic scenes
are played in beautifully composed and lit medium to medium close two shots,
editor Dorothy Spencer going to loose close-ups only when it¹s dramatically
valid to do so.
Mankiewicz is the best known exponent of the ³canned theater² school of
filmmaking. Though he could rise to the cinematic occasion in films like
"FIVE FINGERS" (1952) and the unfairly underrated NO WAY OUT (1950), most of
his films were essentially well photographed recordings of actors delivering
smart dialog. And "Cleopatra" is in many ways a photographed play.
(Second unit director Andrew Marton claims Mankiewicz“s original intent was
to do a costume epic with no battles; Marton was brought in by Darryl F.
Zanuck to punch up what action scenes had been
shot.) Fortunately most of the talk is interesting, primarily of a political
nature dealing with the ambitions of the various characters. And it is well
played and delivered by the largely British classically trained cast. (It“s
a bit unnerving to recognize Carroll O“Connor as one of Caesar“s assassins!)
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If there is one flaw in this area, it“s the star herself. While not as bad
as bitchily reviewed when the film originally opened, Ms. Taylor does lack
the "to the manor born" regal authority that Claudette Colbert had in De
Mille's 1934 version or that Katharine Hepburn or Bette Davis in their prime
might have brought to the role. Too often she comes across like a singer
straining for a high note that's just out of her reach.
There is one other 65mm film on the "Great To Be Nominated" schedule,
"Airport" (1970). Although Universal has been striking new prints of many of
the 35mm films in its library, inquiring minds are now wondering what kind
of print of that film will be shown.
* (For the record: including the CinemaScope 55 productions
"Carousel" and
"The King and I", and
"My Fair Lady", to which it has some rights, 20th Century Fox
has 12 wide negative films. With the pre-1986 MGM films,
"Around the
World in 80 Days", and Kenneth Branagh's "Hamlet", Warner Bros has 12 if you also
count its two three panel Cinerama films. And with its acquisition of the
post 1986 MGM-United Artists library, which includes "Porgy and Bess", Sony
now has 9-1/2; "MacKenna's Gold" (1969) having been shot partially in 65mm and
partially 35mm anamorphic. Disney has 4, plus the Technirama shot "Sleeping
Beauty" has been preserved in 65mm.
Similarly Universal has the Technirama shot "Spartacus" and the VistaVision
shot "Vertigo" preserved in 65mm added to its two original 65mm productions.
The rights certain other films are a subject for further research.)
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2011 Update after May 7th screening
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Back
in 2006, the Academy ran the first new 70mm print of "CLEOPATRA"
(1963) in over forty years and it blew everybody who saw it away. What
looked like a newer print was run at the Egyptian last night and what I
wrote in 2006 still holds:
An addendum, this screening, for I was sitting in the fourth row, reinforced
something I've been thing about which might keep theaters on life support a
few years longer, reaching back 60 years to offer audiences an experience
they can only have on the big screen of a theater. Not by blowing up the
gargantuan mal-de-mer closeups with which some many contemporary films are
shot but by choosing exciting subject matter and shooting it in a way that
the audience feels pulled into and involved with the characters and the
story, something which was standard procedure even for B movies in the good
ole film days. And shooting in 65mm would be a plus,
Super Dimension 70 an even bigger
plus. Obviously films like this can't be released every week, but two or
three well ballyhooed ones that audiences could look forward to as they did
in the early roadshow era might encourage others over 30 to take in a movie
more than they do now. Of course I've got a better chance of getting an
editing job than some executive coming up with the nerve to do this.
Incidentally, in70mm.com tries to keep an
updated list of screenings of
70mm and other wide screen films around the world.
Rick Mitchell
Film editor/Film Historian
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