The Gospel According to St. Matthew

Starring:Enrique Irazoqui, Margherita Caruso, Susanna Pasolini, Marcello Morante, Mario Socrate, Settimio Di Porto, Alfonso Gatto, Luigi Barbini, Giacomo Morante, Giorgio Agamben, Guido Cerretani, Rosario Migale, Ferruccio Nuzzo, Marcello Galdini, Elio Spaziani, Enzo Siciliano, Otello Sestili, Rodolfo Wilcock, Alessandro Clerici, Amerigo Bevilacqua
Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini
Studio: Water Bearer Films, Inc
Product Type: DVD
Editorial Review:
Amazon.com
Released in 1964, The Gospel According to St. Matthew marks an important shift away from the gritty urban realism of Pasolini's earlier films towards the visionary imagery of his later work. A committed but far from conformist Marxist, Pasolini took a powerful and immediate approach, with no false piety or sentimentality. Employing a cast drawn largely from the peasantry of Southern Italy, where the film was shot, the action has the feel of a mystery play reenacted for the camera. Enrique Irazoqui's Christ is part folk hero, part political agitator, but always pursuing his destiny with unswerving conviction. The disciples make for vivid contrasts in facial expression, while Susanna Pasolini (mother of) is unforgettable as Mary, distraught at the Crucifixion. The recourse to handheld cameras and zoom sequences is well ahead of its time, while the almost jump-cut editing and diverse soundtrack--including Bach, Mozart and the Missa Luba--enhance the sense of action being experienced as it happens. A classic of post-war cinema which has lost none of its urgent humanity. --Richard Whitehouse
Average customer rating:
- 3 *** for Legend's 2007 DVD, 5 ***** for Pasolini's film
- Bible Movie Classic
- THE ONE AND THE ONLY ESSENTIAL EVANGELICAL FILM
- Humble Authenticity
- The Gospel According to St. Matthew
|
The Gospel According to St. Matthew
Starring: Enrique Irazoqui , Margherita Caruso , Susanna Pasolini , Marcello Morante , and Mario Socrate
Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini
Manufacturer: Legend
ProductGroup: DVD
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Similar Items:
- The Gospel of John
- Jesus of Montreal
- The Last Temptation of Christ - Criterion Collection
- The Jesus Film
- The King of Kings - Criterion Collection
ASIN: B000LP5D5G
Release Date: 2007-03-27 |
Amazon.com
Released in 1964, The Gospel According to St. Matthew marks an important shift away from the gritty urban realism of Pasolini's earlier films towards the visionary imagery of his later work. A committed but far from conformist Marxist, Pasolini took a powerful and immediate approach, with no false piety or sentimentality. Employing a cast drawn largely from the peasantry of Southern Italy, where the film was shot, the action has the feel of a mystery play reenacted for the camera. Enrique Irazoqui's Christ is part folk hero, part political agitator, but always pursuing his destiny with unswerving conviction. The disciples make for vivid contrasts in facial expression, while Susanna Pasolini (mother of) is unforgettable as Mary, distraught at the Crucifixion. The recourse to handheld cameras and zoom sequences is well ahead of its time, while the almost jump-cut editing and diverse soundtrack--including Bach, Mozart and the Missa Luba--enhance the sense of action being experienced as it happens. A classic of post-war cinema which has lost none of its urgent humanity. --Richard Whitehouse
Description
(Faith) Along a rocky, barren coastline, Jesus begins teaching, primarily using parables. He comes to bring a sword, not peace, he says. He moves from place to place near the Sea of Galilee, sometimes attracting a multitude, sometimes being driven away and often attracting the attention of the Pharisees, the chief priests, and elders. They conspire to have him arrested, beaten, tried, and crucified, just as he prophesied. After he dies, he appears to his disciples and gives them final instructions.
Customer Reviews:
3 *** for Legend's 2007 DVD, 5 ***** for Pasolini's film.......2007-05-14
The information Legend provides on the back cover of the DVD is confusing/misleading/mistaken...
Legend's DVD contains two versions of The Gospel According to St. Matthew ...
Version #1
- Colorized
- Dubbed in English
- No Subtitles
- Approx 90 minutes (not the complete film)
- Anamorphic widescreen
- Playable from the Main Menu
Version #2
- Black and white
- in Italian
- With English subtitles that are always on
- Approx 137 minutes (the complete film)
- Widescreen, but not anamorphic
- Playable from Special Features
- Pasolini's great film speaks for itself
- Thank you Legend for making a watchable, complete version of the film available
Bible Movie Classic.......2007-05-12
A lesser known movie , but ranks up there with the CLASSICS.
THE ONE AND THE ONLY ESSENTIAL EVANGELICAL FILM.......2007-04-02
I now have both the English overdubbed version and the English subtitled version. As far as I can tell there is not available here an Italian only version made from an original master restored with the skill and grace of Criterion, nor a version which lets you choose to cancel the subtitles or change languages, and this is the only gripe about this great cinematic presentation of the first Gospel (first in the Canon, not in the chronology).
I must therefore choose between a version in which scenes seem to have been cut and the speed turned up and English imposed, or a more authentic version seen through the spider's veil of white English letters across the entire bottom half of the screen, blocking the gripping visuals and the profoundly sincere faces of the nonprofessional actors.
Nevertheless, this film remains in every way the one cinematic production of the Gospels we ever need watch, and need watch again. It is hard to believe it is over forty years since my father first brought me to see this movie at a public theatre, and I find it now as fresh and compelling and communicative in a near sacramental way as then. It is a true epiphany and a revelation.
The Virgin Mary is astonishingly authentic and appropriate. The director no doubt heard Saint Bernadette Soubirous's observation that every representation of the Virgin which she saw in painting or in sculpture was far too old.
Here the young Mary appears fifteen or younger, and has a face which speaks volumes with one gaze, or silent squint. This is truly the best Mary ever filmed, and the most memorable, and she actually fuels earnest and true devotion, unlike most any other film or staged photo, especially Zefarelli`s (sp.). All else looks like Monty Python in artificiality after contemplating this pure young Virgin Mary.
For this reason alone may we thank Pasolini. Within this young Mary we see a woman capable of hearing the Annunciation with more understanding, trust and courage than would be possible in any other human soul, a Mary capable of the valiant Visitation, and a Mary capable of that greatest revolutionary prayer, the Magnificat, long chanted in traditional monastic choirs long before the Hail Mary was ever pieced together. She shows great courage despite her uncertainty at the Epiphany. And she conveys this all within this film without a spoken word.
Of course the older Mary at the Crucifixion and the Resurrection was played equally effectively by Pasolini's own mother, sharing with us fully her agony, the sword which pierced her heart, and her ultimate joy and hope at the resurrection.
There is so much which is great about this movie and so far I have mentioned only one character. Watch Peter as he goes out to weep bitterly after the triple denial, or John, the Beloved Apostle. Saint John the Baptist, the only Saint to predecease Jesus, is so excellent in a modern, prophetic, verbal, preaching, intellectual and professional manner that he seems from a different movie, or time, as he was. Clearly he has the intellectual courage to confront Herod and any other earthly power. Saint Joseph is quietly amazing, as he hears the advice of the Angel and does not put Mary aside quietly but trusts in Faith and takes on his great responsibility. The Angel is absolutely amazing, authentic, awe-inspiring, confidence inspiring. Please see this film.
Herod also gets his job done as a corrupt ruler who rots in his own greed and corruption and violence. The scene of deceiving the Magi, his death among his court, and the rest are very well done. The scene of his soldiers slaughtering all the young and baby boys in a desparate attempt to annihilate the Messiah must call to mind the insane and stupid violence against helpless children of our present time, yet these scenes might be easily overlooked in our contemplation of the many uplifting scenes.
Jesus is played strongly and with authority by a young university student from Madrid. The scenes of the temptation in the desert and the Sermon on the Mount demand and reward repeated viewing, as well of course as the Passion, which Gibson could not make more effective with buckets of fake blood. This Passion in Pasolini truly wrenches your heart in ways which Gibson could not.
This film also contains as soundtrack the only remaining recording of the authentic Missa Luba, and also interesting insertions of Delta blues, one Robert Johnson style groans over slide giutar and the other pure Gospel, the great hymn and lamentation "Sometimes I feel like a Motherless Child" sung low and slow and mournfully, but the meaning of whose English lyrics might distract us from the purely musical intent of the director. Also included are snippets of Bach and Mozart, which seem more present in the Italian version.
Sorry for the long discussion of this important film. I encourage you to get both of these versions until Criterion can piece together a disk of their usual high and comprehensive quality wih all the options, and we can finally meditate the Gospel news in Italian without subtitles in a complete and original print. In the meantime we might skip the colorized version, which I have not seen and see no need to.
Keep this movie in your machine in heavy rotation, not just now in Holy Week. Please notice the very affectionate, glowing, warm and familiar dedication to the greatest and penultimate Italian Pope John XXIII, who had recently passed when this movie was made. The director's dedication sincerely homages his Holiness.
Humble Authenticity.......2007-03-19
`The Gospel According to Matthew' is a humble, bare-bones film that accentuates authenticity. Using rugged terrain and an intricate, stone village, famed Italian director Pasolini makes the scenes seem more real than any movie up to 'The Passion of the Christ'. Without any name actors, the scenes envelop a simplicity that is the movie's hallmark. This movie's Jesus is a sterner, more direct rendering than any in movie memory. While I may prefer subtitle's to English overdubs, the movie is at least easier to take in. However, the emotional appeal is lessened by their implementation of this method. Indeed, the emotional range, while deliberate at key times, is often wooden. Many instances people just stare, but then again they may be dumbstruck by Jesus. Also, better judgment could have been used. For instance, during Jesus's trial when there should have been more close ups. Nevertheless, Pasolini does get to the heart of the message. With scripture all but entirely in the script, one can hardly criticize the interpretations. If there is an accent mark, he frequently comes up with children, a nice touch. Unvarnished, 'The Gospel' doesn't have the glory of most modern films, but, even with the technical shortcomings, it is basic like scripture itself.
The Gospel According to St. Matthew.......2007-03-15
The Gospel According to St. Matthew directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini, filmed in 1964, is the best rendition of the life of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, placed on film. I wholeheartedly endorse the comments made in the March 14, 2004 review of the noted film critic, Roger Ebert, recommend this movie to believers and non-believers alike.
Average customer rating:
- 3 *** for Legend's 2007 DVD, 5 ***** for Pasolini's film
- Bible Movie Classic
- THE ONE AND THE ONLY ESSENTIAL EVANGELICAL FILM
- Humble Authenticity
- The Gospel According to St. Matthew
|
The Gospel According to St. Matthew
Starring: Enrique Irazoqui , Margherita Caruso , Susanna Pasolini , Marcello Morante , and Mario Socrate
Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini
Manufacturer: Water Bearer Films, Inc
ProductGroup: DVD
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Similar Items:
- The Gospel of John
- Jesus of Montreal
- The Last Temptation of Christ - Criterion Collection
- The Jesus Film
- The King of Kings - Criterion Collection
ASIN: B00009Y3PP
Release Date: 2003-07-22 |
Amazon.com
Released in 1964, The Gospel According to St. Matthew marks an important shift away from the gritty urban realism of Pasolini's earlier films towards the visionary imagery of his later work. A committed but far from conformist Marxist, Pasolini took a powerful and immediate approach, with no false piety or sentimentality. Employing a cast drawn largely from the peasantry of Southern Italy, where the film was shot, the action has the feel of a mystery play reenacted for the camera. Enrique Irazoqui's Christ is part folk hero, part political agitator, but always pursuing his destiny with unswerving conviction. The disciples make for vivid contrasts in facial expression, while Susanna Pasolini (mother of) is unforgettable as Mary, distraught at the Crucifixion. The recourse to handheld cameras and zoom sequences is well ahead of its time, while the almost jump-cut editing and diverse soundtrack--including Bach, Mozart and the Missa Luba--enhance the sense of action being experienced as it happens. A classic of post-war cinema which has lost none of its urgent humanity. --Richard Whitehouse
Customer Reviews:
3 *** for Legend's 2007 DVD, 5 ***** for Pasolini's film.......2007-05-14
The information Legend provides on the back cover of the DVD is confusing/misleading/mistaken...
Legend's DVD contains two versions of The Gospel According to St. Matthew ...
Version #1
- Colorized
- Dubbed in English
- No Subtitles
- Approx 90 minutes (not the complete film)
- Anamorphic widescreen
- Playable from the Main Menu
Version #2
- Black and white
- in Italian
- With English subtitles that are always on
- Approx 137 minutes (the complete film)
- Widescreen, but not anamorphic
- Playable from Special Features
- Pasolini's great film speaks for itself
- Thank you Legend for making a watchable, complete version of the film available
Bible Movie Classic.......2007-05-12
A lesser known movie , but ranks up there with the CLASSICS.
THE ONE AND THE ONLY ESSENTIAL EVANGELICAL FILM.......2007-04-02
I now have both the English overdubbed version and the English subtitled version. As far as I can tell there is not available here an Italian only version made from an original master restored with the skill and grace of Criterion, nor a version which lets you choose to cancel the subtitles or change languages, and this is the only gripe about this great cinematic presentation of the first Gospel (first in the Canon, not in the chronology).
I must therefore choose between a version in which scenes seem to have been cut and the speed turned up and English imposed, or a more authentic version seen through the spider's veil of white English letters across the entire bottom half of the screen, blocking the gripping visuals and the profoundly sincere faces of the nonprofessional actors.
Nevertheless, this film remains in every way the one cinematic production of the Gospels we ever need watch, and need watch again. It is hard to believe it is over forty years since my father first brought me to see this movie at a public theatre, and I find it now as fresh and compelling and communicative in a near sacramental way as then. It is a true epiphany and a revelation.
The Virgin Mary is astonishingly authentic and appropriate. The director no doubt heard Saint Bernadette Soubirous's observation that every representation of the Virgin which she saw in painting or in sculpture was far too old.
Here the young Mary appears fifteen or younger, and has a face which speaks volumes with one gaze, or silent squint. This is truly the best Mary ever filmed, and the most memorable, and she actually fuels earnest and true devotion, unlike most any other film or staged photo, especially Zefarelli`s (sp.). All else looks like Monty Python in artificiality after contemplating this pure young Virgin Mary.
For this reason alone may we thank Pasolini. Within this young Mary we see a woman capable of hearing the Annunciation with more understanding, trust and courage than would be possible in any other human soul, a Mary capable of the valiant Visitation, and a Mary capable of that greatest revolutionary prayer, the Magnificat, long chanted in traditional monastic choirs long before the Hail Mary was ever pieced together. She shows great courage despite her uncertainty at the Epiphany. And she conveys this all within this film without a spoken word.
Of course the older Mary at the Crucifixion and the Resurrection was played equally effectively by Pasolini's own mother, sharing with us fully her agony, the sword which pierced her heart, and her ultimate joy and hope at the resurrection.
There is so much which is great about this movie and so far I have mentioned only one character. Watch Peter as he goes out to weep bitterly after the triple denial, or John, the Beloved Apostle. Saint John the Baptist, the only Saint to predecease Jesus, is so excellent in a modern, prophetic, verbal, preaching, intellectual and professional manner that he seems from a different movie, or time, as he was. Clearly he has the intellectual courage to confront Herod and any other earthly power. Saint Joseph is quietly amazing, as he hears the advice of the Angel and does not put Mary aside quietly but trusts in Faith and takes on his great responsibility. The Angel is absolutely amazing, authentic, awe-inspiring, confidence inspiring. Please see this film.
Herod also gets his job done as a corrupt ruler who rots in his own greed and corruption and violence. The scene of deceiving the Magi, his death among his court, and the rest are very well done. The scene of his soldiers slaughtering all the young and baby boys in a desparate attempt to annihilate the Messiah must call to mind the insane and stupid violence against helpless children of our present time, yet these scenes might be easily overlooked in our contemplation of the many uplifting scenes.
Jesus is played strongly and with authority by a young university student from Madrid. The scenes of the temptation in the desert and the Sermon on the Mount demand and reward repeated viewing, as well of course as the Passion, which Gibson could not make more effective with buckets of fake blood. This Passion in Pasolini truly wrenches your heart in ways which Gibson could not.
This film also contains as soundtrack the only remaining recording of the authentic Missa Luba, and also interesting insertions of Delta blues, one Robert Johnson style groans over slide giutar and the other pure Gospel, the great hymn and lamentation "Sometimes I feel like a Motherless Child" sung low and slow and mournfully, but the meaning of whose English lyrics might distract us from the purely musical intent of the director. Also included are snippets of Bach and Mozart, which seem more present in the Italian version.
Sorry for the long discussion of this important film. I encourage you to get both of these versions until Criterion can piece together a disk of their usual high and comprehensive quality wih all the options, and we can finally meditate the Gospel news in Italian without subtitles in a complete and original print. In the meantime we might skip the colorized version, which I have not seen and see no need to.
Keep this movie in your machine in heavy rotation, not just now in Holy Week. Please notice the very affectionate, glowing, warm and familiar dedication to the greatest and penultimate Italian Pope John XXIII, who had recently passed when this movie was made. The director's dedication sincerely homages his Holiness.
Humble Authenticity.......2007-03-19
`The Gospel According to Matthew' is a humble, bare-bones film that accentuates authenticity. Using rugged terrain and an intricate, stone village, famed Italian director Pasolini makes the scenes seem more real than any movie up to 'The Passion of the Christ'. Without any name actors, the scenes envelop a simplicity that is the movie's hallmark. This movie's Jesus is a sterner, more direct rendering than any in movie memory. While I may prefer subtitle's to English overdubs, the movie is at least easier to take in. However, the emotional appeal is lessened by their implementation of this method. Indeed, the emotional range, while deliberate at key times, is often wooden. Many instances people just stare, but then again they may be dumbstruck by Jesus. Also, better judgment could have been used. For instance, during Jesus's trial when there should have been more close ups. Nevertheless, Pasolini does get to the heart of the message. With scripture all but entirely in the script, one can hardly criticize the interpretations. If there is an accent mark, he frequently comes up with children, a nice touch. Unvarnished, 'The Gospel' doesn't have the glory of most modern films, but, even with the technical shortcomings, it is basic like scripture itself.
The Gospel According to St. Matthew.......2007-03-15
The Gospel According to St. Matthew directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini, filmed in 1964, is the best rendition of the life of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, placed on film. I wholeheartedly endorse the comments made in the March 14, 2004 review of the noted film critic, Roger Ebert, recommend this movie to believers and non-believers alike.
Average customer rating:
|
Canterbury Tales (1972) [Region 2 Import - UK, English Subtitles]
Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini
Manufacturer: BFI
ProductGroup: DVD
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- Salo - Criterion Collection
- Can-Can
- 1900 (Special Collector's Edition)
- Shortbus (Unrated Edition)
- The Conformist (Extended Edition)
ASIN: B000I3PF7W |
Product Description
he second part of Pasolini's Trilogy of Life (beginning with The Decameron and ending with Arabian Nights), is based on the fourteenth century stories of Geoffrey Chaucer. Plunging with gusto into some of the blackest and bawdiest of the tales, Pasolini celebrates almost every conceivable form of sexual act with a rich, earthy humour and weaves a visual magic that draws on the work of artists such as Bruegel and Bosch.
Average customer rating:
- 3 *** for Legend's 2007 DVD, 5 ***** for Pasolini's film
- Bible Movie Classic
- THE ONE AND THE ONLY ESSENTIAL EVANGELICAL FILM
- Humble Authenticity
- The Gospel According to St. Matthew
|
The Gospel According to St. Matthew
Starring: Enrique Irazoqui , Margherita Caruso , Susanna Pasolini , Marcello Morante , and Mario Socrate
Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini
Manufacturer: Image Entertainment
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
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Similar Items:
- The Gospel of John
- Jesus of Montreal
- The Last Temptation of Christ - Criterion Collection
- The Jesus Film
- The King of Kings - Criterion Collection
ASIN: B00000I21Q
Release Date: 1999-02-23 |
Amazon.com
Released in 1964, The Gospel According to St. Matthew marks an important shift away from the gritty urban realism of Pasolini's earlier films towards the visionary imagery of his later work. A committed but far from conformist Marxist, Pasolini took a powerful and immediate approach, with no false piety or sentimentality. Employing a cast drawn largely from the peasantry of Southern Italy, where the film was shot, the action has the feel of a mystery play reenacted for the camera. Enrique Irazoqui's Christ is part folk hero, part political agitator, but always pursuing his destiny with unswerving conviction. The disciples make for vivid contrasts in facial expression, while Susanna Pasolini (mother of) is unforgettable as Mary, distraught at the Crucifixion. The recourse to handheld cameras and zoom sequences is well ahead of its time, while the almost jump-cut editing and diverse soundtrack--including Bach, Mozart and the Missa Luba--enhance the sense of action being experienced as it happens. A classic of post-war cinema which has lost none of its urgent humanity. --Richard Whitehouse
Description
The birth, life, teachings and death on the cross of Jesus Christ presented almost as a cinema-verite documentary. Applying Neo-Realist methods, writer/director Pier Paolo Pasolini takes Christ out of the opulent church and presents him as an outcast Italian peasant in this expressive interpretation of the greatest story ever told.
Customer Reviews:
3 *** for Legend's 2007 DVD, 5 ***** for Pasolini's film.......2007-05-14
The information Legend provides on the back cover of the DVD is confusing/misleading/mistaken...
Legend's DVD contains two versions of The Gospel According to St. Matthew ...
Version #1
- Colorized
- Dubbed in English
- No Subtitles
- Approx 90 minutes (not the complete film)
- Anamorphic widescreen
- Playable from the Main Menu
Version #2
- Black and white
- in Italian
- With English subtitles that are always on
- Approx 137 minutes (the complete film)
- Widescreen, but not anamorphic
- Playable from Special Features
- Pasolini's great film speaks for itself
- Thank you Legend for making a watchable, complete version of the film available
Bible Movie Classic.......2007-05-12
A lesser known movie , but ranks up there with the CLASSICS.
THE ONE AND THE ONLY ESSENTIAL EVANGELICAL FILM.......2007-04-02
I now have both the English overdubbed version and the English subtitled version. As far as I can tell there is not available here an Italian only version made from an original master restored with the skill and grace of Criterion, nor a version which lets you choose to cancel the subtitles or change languages, and this is the only gripe about this great cinematic presentation of the first Gospel (first in the Canon, not in the chronology).
I must therefore choose between a version in which scenes seem to have been cut and the speed turned up and English imposed, or a more authentic version seen through the spider's veil of white English letters across the entire bottom half of the screen, blocking the gripping visuals and the profoundly sincere faces of the nonprofessional actors.
Nevertheless, this film remains in every way the one cinematic production of the Gospels we ever need watch, and need watch again. It is hard to believe it is over forty years since my father first brought me to see this movie at a public theatre, and I find it now as fresh and compelling and communicative in a near sacramental way as then. It is a true epiphany and a revelation.
The Virgin Mary is astonishingly authentic and appropriate. The director no doubt heard Saint Bernadette Soubirous's observation that every representation of the Virgin which she saw in painting or in sculpture was far too old.
Here the young Mary appears fifteen or younger, and has a face which speaks volumes with one gaze, or silent squint. This is truly the best Mary ever filmed, and the most memorable, and she actually fuels earnest and true devotion, unlike most any other film or staged photo, especially Zefarelli`s (sp.). All else looks like Monty Python in artificiality after contemplating this pure young Virgin Mary.
For this reason alone may we thank Pasolini. Within this young Mary we see a woman capable of hearing the Annunciation with more understanding, trust and courage than would be possible in any other human soul, a Mary capable of the valiant Visitation, and a Mary capable of that greatest revolutionary prayer, the Magnificat, long chanted in traditional monastic choirs long before the Hail Mary was ever pieced together. She shows great courage despite her uncertainty at the Epiphany. And she conveys this all within this film without a spoken word.
Of course the older Mary at the Crucifixion and the Resurrection was played equally effectively by Pasolini's own mother, sharing with us fully her agony, the sword which pierced her heart, and her ultimate joy and hope at the resurrection.
There is so much which is great about this movie and so far I have mentioned only one character. Watch Peter as he goes out to weep bitterly after the triple denial, or John, the Beloved Apostle. Saint John the Baptist, the only Saint to predecease Jesus, is so excellent in a modern, prophetic, verbal, preaching, intellectual and professional manner that he seems from a different movie, or time, as he was. Clearly he has the intellectual courage to confront Herod and any other earthly power. Saint Joseph is quietly amazing, as he hears the advice of the Angel and does not put Mary aside quietly but trusts in Faith and takes on his great responsibility. The Angel is absolutely amazing, authentic, awe-inspiring, confidence inspiring. Please see this film.
Herod also gets his job done as a corrupt ruler who rots in his own greed and corruption and violence. The scene of deceiving the Magi, his death among his court, and the rest are very well done. The scene of his soldiers slaughtering all the young and baby boys in a desparate attempt to annihilate the Messiah must call to mind the insane and stupid violence against helpless children of our present time, yet these scenes might be easily overlooked in our contemplation of the many uplifting scenes.
Jesus is played strongly and with authority by a young university student from Madrid. The scenes of the temptation in the desert and the Sermon on the Mount demand and reward repeated viewing, as well of course as the Passion, which Gibson could not make more effective with buckets of fake blood. This Passion in Pasolini truly wrenches your heart in ways which Gibson could not.
This film also contains as soundtrack the only remaining recording of the authentic Missa Luba, and also interesting insertions of Delta blues, one Robert Johnson style groans over slide giutar and the other pure Gospel, the great hymn and lamentation "Sometimes I feel like a Motherless Child" sung low and slow and mournfully, but the meaning of whose English lyrics might distract us from the purely musical intent of the director. Also included are snippets of Bach and Mozart, which seem more present in the Italian version.
Sorry for the long discussion of this important film. I encourage you to get both of these versions until Criterion can piece together a disk of their usual high and comprehensive quality wih all the options, and we can finally meditate the Gospel news in Italian without subtitles in a complete and original print. In the meantime we might skip the colorized version, which I have not seen and see no need to.
Keep this movie in your machine in heavy rotation, not just now in Holy Week. Please notice the very affectionate, glowing, warm and familiar dedication to the greatest and penultimate Italian Pope John XXIII, who had recently passed when this movie was made. The director's dedication sincerely homages his Holiness.
Humble Authenticity.......2007-03-19
`The Gospel According to Matthew' is a humble, bare-bones film that accentuates authenticity. Using rugged terrain and an intricate, stone village, famed Italian director Pasolini makes the scenes seem more real than any movie up to 'The Passion of the Christ'. Without any name actors, the scenes envelop a simplicity that is the movie's hallmark. This movie's Jesus is a sterner, more direct rendering than any in movie memory. While I may prefer subtitle's to English overdubs, the movie is at least easier to take in. However, the emotional appeal is lessened by their implementation of this method. Indeed, the emotional range, while deliberate at key times, is often wooden. Many instances people just stare, but then again they may be dumbstruck by Jesus. Also, better judgment could have been used. For instance, during Jesus's trial when there should have been more close ups. Nevertheless, Pasolini does get to the heart of the message. With scripture all but entirely in the script, one can hardly criticize the interpretations. If there is an accent mark, he frequently comes up with children, a nice touch. Unvarnished, 'The Gospel' doesn't have the glory of most modern films, but, even with the technical shortcomings, it is basic like scripture itself.
The Gospel According to St. Matthew.......2007-03-15
The Gospel According to St. Matthew directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini, filmed in 1964, is the best rendition of the life of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, placed on film. I wholeheartedly endorse the comments made in the March 14, 2004 review of the noted film critic, Roger Ebert, recommend this movie to believers and non-believers alike.
Average customer rating:
- 3 *** for Legend's 2007 DVD, 5 ***** for Pasolini's film
- Bible Movie Classic
- THE ONE AND THE ONLY ESSENTIAL EVANGELICAL FILM
- Humble Authenticity
- The Gospel According to St. Matthew
|
The Gospel According to St. Matthew
Starring: Enrique Irazoqui , Margherita Caruso , Susanna Pasolini , Marcello Morante , and Mario Socrate
Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini
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ASIN: B00006G9XK |
Amazon.com
Released in 1964, The Gospel According to St. Matthew marks an important shift away from the gritty urban realism of Pasolini's earlier films towards the visionary imagery of his later work. A committed but far from conformist Marxist, Pasolini took a powerful and immediate approach, with no false piety or sentimentality. Employing a cast drawn largely from the peasantry of Southern Italy, where the film was shot, the action has the feel of a mystery play reenacted for the camera. Enrique Irazoqui's Christ is part folk hero, part political agitator, but always pursuing his destiny with unswerving conviction. The disciples make for vivid contrasts in facial expression, while Susanna Pasolini (mother of) is unforgettable as Mary, distraught at the Crucifixion. The recourse to handheld cameras and zoom sequences is well ahead of its time, while the almost jump-cut editing and diverse soundtrack--including Bach, Mozart and the Missa Luba--enhance the sense of action being experienced as it happens. A classic of post-war cinema which has lost none of its urgent humanity. --Richard Whitehouse
Customer Reviews:
3 *** for Legend's 2007 DVD, 5 ***** for Pasolini's film.......2007-05-14
The information Legend provides on the back cover of the DVD is confusing/misleading/mistaken...
Legend's DVD contains two versions of The Gospel According to St. Matthew ...
Version #1
- Colorized
- Dubbed in English
- No Subtitles
- Approx 90 minutes (not the complete film)
- Anamorphic widescreen
- Playable from the Main Menu
Version #2
- Black and white
- in Italian
- With English subtitles that are always on
- Approx 137 minutes (the complete film)
- Widescreen, but not anamorphic
- Playable from Special Features
- Pasolini's great film speaks for itself
- Thank you Legend for making a watchable, complete version of the film available
Bible Movie Classic.......2007-05-12
A lesser known movie , but ranks up there with the CLASSICS.
THE ONE AND THE ONLY ESSENTIAL EVANGELICAL FILM.......2007-04-02
I now have both the English overdubbed version and the English subtitled version. As far as I can tell there is not available here an Italian only version made from an original master restored with the skill and grace of Criterion, nor a version which lets you choose to cancel the subtitles or change languages, and this is the only gripe about this great cinematic presentation of the first Gospel (first in the Canon, not in the chronology).
I must therefore choose between a version in which scenes seem to have been cut and the speed turned up and English imposed, or a more authentic version seen through the spider's veil of white English letters across the entire bottom half of the screen, blocking the gripping visuals and the profoundly sincere faces of the nonprofessional actors.
Nevertheless, this film remains in every way the one cinematic production of the Gospels we ever need watch, and need watch again. It is hard to believe it is over forty years since my father first brought me to see this movie at a public theatre, and I find it now as fresh and compelling and communicative in a near sacramental way as then. It is a true epiphany and a revelation.
The Virgin Mary is astonishingly authentic and appropriate. The director no doubt heard Saint Bernadette Soubirous's observation that every representation of the Virgin which she saw in painting or in sculpture was far too old.
Here the young Mary appears fifteen or younger, and has a face which speaks volumes with one gaze, or silent squint. This is truly the best Mary ever filmed, and the most memorable, and she actually fuels earnest and true devotion, unlike most any other film or staged photo, especially Zefarelli`s (sp.). All else looks like Monty Python in artificiality after contemplating this pure young Virgin Mary.
For this reason alone may we thank Pasolini. Within this young Mary we see a woman capable of hearing the Annunciation with more understanding, trust and courage than would be possible in any other human soul, a Mary capable of the valiant Visitation, and a Mary capable of that greatest revolutionary prayer, the Magnificat, long chanted in traditional monastic choirs long before the Hail Mary was ever pieced together. She shows great courage despite her uncertainty at the Epiphany. And she conveys this all within this film without a spoken word.
Of course the older Mary at the Crucifixion and the Resurrection was played equally effectively by Pasolini's own mother, sharing with us fully her agony, the sword which pierced her heart, and her ultimate joy and hope at the resurrection.
There is so much which is great about this movie and so far I have mentioned only one character. Watch Peter as he goes out to weep bitterly after the triple denial, or John, the Beloved Apostle. Saint John the Baptist, the only Saint to predecease Jesus, is so excellent in a modern, prophetic, verbal, preaching, intellectual and professional manner that he seems from a different movie, or time, as he was. Clearly he has the intellectual courage to confront Herod and any other earthly power. Saint Joseph is quietly amazing, as he hears the advice of the Angel and does not put Mary aside quietly but trusts in Faith and takes on his great responsibility. The Angel is absolutely amazing, authentic, awe-inspiring, confidence inspiring. Please see this film.
Herod also gets his job done as a corrupt ruler who rots in his own greed and corruption and violence. The scene of deceiving the Magi, his death among his court, and the rest are very well done. The scene of his soldiers slaughtering all the young and baby boys in a desparate attempt to annihilate the Messiah must call to mind the insane and stupid violence against helpless children of our present time, yet these scenes might be easily overlooked in our contemplation of the many uplifting scenes.
Jesus is played strongly and with authority by a young university student from Madrid. The scenes of the temptation in the desert and the Sermon on the Mount demand and reward repeated viewing, as well of course as the Passion, which Gibson could not make more effective with buckets of fake blood. This Passion in Pasolini truly wrenches your heart in ways which Gibson could not.
This film also contains as soundtrack the only remaining recording of the authentic Missa Luba, and also interesting insertions of Delta blues, one Robert Johnson style groans over slide giutar and the other pure Gospel, the great hymn and lamentation "Sometimes I feel like a Motherless Child" sung low and slow and mournfully, but the meaning of whose English lyrics might distract us from the purely musical intent of the director. Also included are snippets of Bach and Mozart, which seem more present in the Italian version.
Sorry for the long discussion of this important film. I encourage you to get both of these versions until Criterion can piece together a disk of their usual high and comprehensive quality wih all the options, and we can finally meditate the Gospel news in Italian without subtitles in a complete and original print. In the meantime we might skip the colorized version, which I have not seen and see no need to.
Keep this movie in your machine in heavy rotation, not just now in Holy Week. Please notice the very affectionate, glowing, warm and familiar dedication to the greatest and penultimate Italian Pope John XXIII, who had recently passed when this movie was made. The director's dedication sincerely homages his Holiness.
Humble Authenticity.......2007-03-19
`The Gospel According to Matthew' is a humble, bare-bones film that accentuates authenticity. Using rugged terrain and an intricate, stone village, famed Italian director Pasolini makes the scenes seem more real than any movie up to 'The Passion of the Christ'. Without any name actors, the scenes envelop a simplicity that is the movie's hallmark. This movie's Jesus is a sterner, more direct rendering than any in movie memory. While I may prefer subtitle's to English overdubs, the movie is at least easier to take in. However, the emotional appeal is lessened by their implementation of this method. Indeed, the emotional range, while deliberate at key times, is often wooden. Many instances people just stare, but then again they may be dumbstruck by Jesus. Also, better judgment could have been used. For instance, during Jesus's trial when there should have been more close ups. Nevertheless, Pasolini does get to the heart of the message. With scripture all but entirely in the script, one can hardly criticize the interpretations. If there is an accent mark, he frequently comes up with children, a nice touch. Unvarnished, 'The Gospel' doesn't have the glory of most modern films, but, even with the technical shortcomings, it is basic like scripture itself.
The Gospel According to St. Matthew.......2007-03-15
The Gospel According to St. Matthew directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini, filmed in 1964, is the best rendition of the life of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, placed on film. I wholeheartedly endorse the comments made in the March 14, 2004 review of the noted film critic, Roger Ebert, recommend this movie to believers and non-believers alike.
Average customer rating:
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Bernadette of Lourdes & The Gospel According to St. Matthew
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ASIN: B000BD1APA |
Product Description
2 Christian classics; Bernatte of Lourdes whose 18 documented visions of Mary caused her at the age of 14 to dig exposing the healing waters. Then there is the Gospel According to St Matthew (1964 Widescreen B+W 137 minute transfer in Itallian with english subtitles). There is no better film about Jesus Christ, most movies about him are fundamentally wrong. In a religion which has totally turned its back on the line "it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to get into the kingdom of Heaven"; be sure that this film retains it and has it come right out of the mouth of Jesus. Movies about Jesus are often overproduced messes, even Martin Scorsese's version of the story, The Last Temptation of Christ, suffers from this although, despite its flaws, it has a lot more power than most films about these same events. Pier Paolo Pasolini has turned out a great masterpiece. No one has ever attempted to set the story in its proper setting. The characters here are semitic and Middle Eastern, unlike the entirely Anglo-Saxon casts of every other Jesus film. The cast, made up of unprofessional actors including Pasolini's own mother as the elder Mary, has not one beautiful face amongst it, except for maybe the actress who plays the younger Mary; she is quite beautiful. These faces and bodies are real: unattractive, harsh and worn. Teeth are not straight and white, but crooked and discolored as they certainly would have been before dentists were around. Clothing is not beautifully colored, but plain and tattered. Only the richest people could afford dye for clothing. What results is an account as straighforward as can possibly exist. Christians should be moved to tears by the greatness of the actors, especially the man who plays Christ, and the beautiful simplicity of Pasolini's direction, sort of a perfect mix between Italian Neorealism and French New Wave.
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