The Agony And The Ecstasy details

The Agony And The Ecstasy
Format: U DVD
Starring: Adolfo Celi, Diane Cilento, Alberto Lupo, Harry Andrews, Charlton Heston, Rex Harrison
Director: Carol Reed
Genre: Drama
Studio: 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Name Discs
The Agony And The Ecstasy
U Feature

DVD Information

Run time: 2 hours 10 minutes
Rental release: 26 Mar 2005
Main languages: English
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Most helpful review The Agony And The Ecstasy

  • One of the best

    Rated - 5.0 stars  
    By a customer from Chiswick, London , 14 Nov 2005

    [Highly rated reviewer]

    Not your usual Sir Carol Reed fare of “The Third Man” and “Odd Man Out” ilk, nevertheless the master’s hand is as evident in this huge spectacle as it was directing his first musical, the incomparable “Oliver” three years later. A lavish epic based on the Irving Stone best-seller “The Agony and the Ecstasy” is a rich dramatization, moving, fascinating and never dull despite a running time of 2 hours and 20 minutes. Although Michelangelo is the film’s principal character this is definitely not a “biopic” per se. The director has wisely opted to concentrate on just very few incidents of the artist’s life and so produced a lucid and powerful tangled web of ambition and greed nicely interspaced with scenes of action, love, drama, and art that remains one of the finest of the genre to come out of Hollywood, and which now, 40 years on, still outshines many of today’s digitalized so-called “spectaculars”.

    Charlton Heston and Rex Harrison, both excellent actors brought out the best in one another as they gamely sparred in this immortal film - one as the driven and haunted artist, the other as the austere Pope fighting to preserve the temporal power of the papacy against all odds, and although Heston is very, very good as Michelangelo he is easily outclassed by Harrison who dominates the entire production by his superb portrayal of Pope Julius II, one every bit as outstanding as his Academy Award Winning Professor Higgins of 'My Fair Lady'. Definitely worth seeing.
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All reviews

(5)
  • Like watching paint dry

    Rated - 1.0 star  
    By a customer , 24 Jan 2012
    Rubbish - it never gets going. Saying that this film is like watching paint dry is a very good analogy.
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  • The Agony and the Ecstasy

    Rated - 3.5 stars  
    By NICKJOJO (255 reviews) from Surrey , 08 May 2011
    If you like Charlton Heston in his epic type of roles you'll love this if not don't rent it. I do so i wasn't disappointed other than its a tad too long.
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  • Like watching paint dry...

    Rated - 3.0 stars  
    By InspectorSands (209 reviews) from London , 24 Jul 2009
    Okay, it's not that bad, but it never quite gets going. The first 10 minutes is taken up with a factual documentary telling us about Michelangelo and showing his amazing sculpture, it's a bit hokey and a far cry from Kenneth Clark's Civilisation. Then it kicks off the movie proper, but Heston is always just Heston while the Pope of the time is played by Rex Harrison, who is always mainly himself, though it's good to seem his less than the skirt-chasing, wily rogue than usual, his reverence for the artist's work is rather moving.

    It picks up after the 'Interval', which isn't really necessary as it's not a long film. Some lovely shots of north Italian landscape. The romantic subplot is a bit rubbish; at one point Diane Cilento encourages him by yelling, 'Go finish that ceiling...!' like some nagging housewife getting him to do the home decorating.
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  • chuck

    Rated - 5.0 stars  
    By a customer from england , 04 May 2008
    very nice clever movie with very good chemistry between the stars
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  • One of the best

    Rated - 5.0 stars  
    By a customer from Chiswick, London , 14 Nov 2005
    Not your usual Sir Carol Reed fare of “The Third Man” and “Odd Man Out” ilk, nevertheless the master’s hand is as evident in this huge spectacle as it was directing his first musical, the incomparable “Oliver” three years later. A lavish epic based on the Irving Stone best-seller “The Agony and the Ecstasy” is a rich dramatization, moving, fascinating and never dull despite a running time of 2 hours and 20 minutes. Although Michelangelo is the film’s principal character this is definitely not a “biopic” per se. The director has wisely opted to concentrate on just very few incidents of the artist’s life and so produced a lucid and powerful tangled web of ambition and greed nicely interspaced with scenes of action, love, drama, and art that remains one of the finest of the genre to come out of Hollywood, and which now, 40 years on, still outshines many of today’s digitalized so-called “spectaculars”.

    Charlton Heston and Rex Harrison, both excellent actors brought out the best in one another as they gamely sparred in this immortal film - one as the driven and haunted artist, the other as the austere Pope fighting to preserve the temporal power of the papacy against all odds, and although Heston is very, very good as Michelangelo he is easily outclassed by Harrison who dominates the entire production by his superb portrayal of Pope Julius II, one every bit as outstanding as his Academy Award Winning Professor Higgins of 'My Fair Lady'. Definitely worth seeing.
    • Was this review helpful to you?
    • (4) Yes |
    •  No (0)
 

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