A retelling of the Greek myth of Phaedra. In modern Greece, Alexis's father, an extremely wealthy shipping magnate, marries the younger, fiery Phaedra. When Alexis meets his stepmother, sparks fly and the two begin an affair. What will the Fates bring this family? Alexis's roadster and the music of Bach figure in the conclusion.
Made during Jules Dassin's exile days, the follow-up of NEVER ON SUNDAY (1960), which catapulted his wife Ms. Mercouri into international stardom, PHAEDRA is a modern transposition of Euripides’ HIPPOLYTUS, a stigmatized love affair between a woman and her stepson.
Phaedra (Mercouri) is the second wife of Greek shipping tycoon Thanos (Vallone), her life couldn’t be more perfect, she is born with a silver spoon in her mouth, Thanos is swept off his feet by her and they have a young son, and their family business is in full swing. The film’s opening is a pageantry of baptizing a new vessel named after her, and she is extolled as a woman who can lay claim to whatever she wants, so it is quite surprising to find out that her downward spiral is entirely devoid of extraneous scheming, the green-eyed monster from the outside world has no say-so here, it is her wayward passion, becomes her own unmaking, because in the realm of dramaturgy, the equilibrium of perfection is destined to be violated, trampled and disintegrated to hit that high mark of pathos, which leads her to fall for Alexis (Perkins), Thanos’ adult son from his first marriage, a nail in the coffin of that damned perfect life.
Rotating between a virile Thanos and a swishy Alexis (a casting decision really make Phaedra’s choice a feeble one), Phaedra is defenseless when facing the latter’s childishness and impressionability, a maternal affinity soon shifts into a lust for carnality, Dassin’s visual tack makes sure their liaison is a clash between fire and water in its literal meanings, and after the knee-jerking defense mechanism of staying away from each other, it is Phaedra who throws in the towel to the gnawing temptation and calls Alexis to Greece, apparently at the earnest behest of the unsuspected Thanos, where the drama takes its biblical toll to the ill-fated pair.
The signs of tragedy are everywhere, from their first meeting in the British museum, to the arrival of the “coffin”-shaped present, till the tidings of the shipwreck of Phaedra's namesake, and the central triumvirate does beaver away in the fashion of cothurnus.Mercouri, emblazoned by Dior’s haute couture, turns head with her mature appeal, pronounced confidence, simmering petulance and husky voice, a feisty defiance of the industry's inveterate ageism (a fringe benefit of marrying a named film director), but it is her ardent expressions of jealousy, condemnation and self-destruction (with those oceanic eyes!) lingers longer in retrospect. Perkins, on the other hand, doesn’t strike gold in a role whichshould have been exuding with irresistible charm and sexual prowess, but his final ranting is pretty awesome to watch, when they are both embracing their quietus, the man crashes with blistering velocity and the woman withers in immobility. The Italian matinee star Raf Vallone, who is also in the pink with his affable if sometimes condescending mannerism as the two-timed Thanos, becomes most impressive when he receives his double-whammy in the climax, aggressively violent but also authentically heartbroken, that’s all catnips for drama addicts.
PHAEDRA, heavy on its dark and contentious mythos while light on the rationalism and finesse, is a gorgeous artifact made with ambition and tact, and bears witness to Dassin’s maturing into an adroit dramatist, riding high with a great Ancient Greek tragedy, ironically, the film didn’t fare well upon its initial release in USA, and 55 years later, its artistry beautifully holds sway to bewitch new spectators.
referential points: Dassin’s NEVER ON SUNDAY (1960, 6.9/10), TOPKAPI (1964, 7.2/10);Mihalis Kakogiannis's ZORBA THE GREEK (1964, 6.2/10) and IPHIGENIA (1977, 7.7/10).
达辛版的雷雨!
雅典大学暑期学校课上观看,更加独特
达辛的后期此般婉约也是醉了。
Alexis对Phadera说,“走近点。再近点。再近点。我给你两分钟时间,你跟我走。我要和你做爱。“那一瞬间,我的心也像片中的Phadera一样,被Anthony Perkins捕获了。
额,这个太狗血了表示接受不了……http://goo.gl/NUG57
三星半;安东尼·博金斯真乃神经专业户,俊美邪恶,爱或恨一样冷酷,碰上也只有死路一条,可惜悲剧一早注定,每根皱纹都写满难诉欲望、外冷内热的女人怎舍得放手;没看出这种殉情背后身后的感情,更多是欲望和报复的极端发泄。
我不在乎整个世界都毁掉,我爱你。
第一次看达辛。太优秀了。
费德尔太老,希波吕托斯不帅,一切都没有了说服力,也没有了悲剧的力量。倒是最后的沉船事件,令人沉痛。——我说怎么感觉这片子倒像是白左拍的,导演早期果然是拍过几部马克思主义戏剧的。
热烈的爱欲而不得导向疯狂自毁 热血沸腾
4.5+ 优秀的现代改编,视听保留的古典氛围很迷人。烈焰前蒙着水帘的一场禁忌之爱拍得美极了。Tony is so delicate it hURTS LIKE PHYSICALLY HURTS 我需要使劲儿抑制着才不会哭出来,他每一个镜头都那么好,那么自如,真的惊呆了。【不过这段时期角色同质化还是蛮严重的,不是psycho的阴郁有病型就是goodbye again母子恋小奶狗型, 这部是两类交织,lol
改编得很好,远超出预期。女演员很漂亮,我爱这版本里Phaedra的坦诚,除此外对Alexis之死的处理是点睛之笔。
朱尔斯达辛拍现代版的《费德尔》也好厉害,配乐+意境+表演如此动人心弦。两位主演正好是60和61年的戛纳影后影帝。安东尼博金斯,带着神经质的天真、忧郁和邪魅,堪称影坛第一“恋母”主役,除了现代版的“希波吕托斯”,还有《榆树下的欲望》跟索菲亚罗兰,《何日君再来》跟英格丽褒曼,至于《惊魂记》就更不用说了。全是来源于希腊悲剧的恋母角色,俄狄浦斯王本身一定也很适合他。
三星半。达辛拍情感故事依然保持着影像硬度
like all greek songs about love and death
7.0
We hunt what we should shun
博金斯的很多电影就像他本人一样被低估,以至于还有那么多人没看过费德拉。
朱尔斯·达辛虽然以他拍的黑色电影更为有名,但是他在流亡海外与他老婆玛丽娜·墨蔻莉拍的几部影片也并不差,就我目前看过的几部来说质量都很过硬。这一部则是以希腊神话Phaedra的故事改编的现代版本。
【http://t.cn/RwT4nhS 42yj】继母和继子的乱伦作死。。居然还蛮好看的。。人太美。。这里perkins再次几乎没有令人无法直视的overacting就特别美好。。从豆瓣评论看,女主后来做了希腊的文化部长orz