Titus (2000) Italy
Titus Image Cover
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Director:Julie Taymor
Studio:20th Century Fox
Producer:Adam Leipzig, Brad Moseley, Conchita Airoldi, Ellen Dinerman Little, Jody Allen
Writer:William Shakespeare, Julie Taymor
Rating:4
Rated:R
Date Added:2006-03-28
ASIN:6305962987
UPC:0024543005407
Price:$24.98
Awards:Nominated for Oscar. Another 2 wins & 10 nominations
Genre:Period Piece
Release:2006-04-17
IMDb:0120866
Duration:162
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35:1
Sound:Dolby
Languages:English, Latin
Subtitles:English, Spanish
Features:Anamorphic
Julie Taymor  ...  (Director)
William Shakespeare, Julie Taymor  ...  (Writer)
 
Osheen Jones  ...  Young Lucius
Dario D'Ambrosi  ...  Clown
Anthony Hopkins  ...  Titus Andronicus
Jessica Lange  ...  Tamora
Raz Degan  ...  Alarbus
Jonathan Rhys Meyers  ...  Chiron
Matthew Rhys  ...  Demetrius
Harry J. Lennix  ...  Aaron (as Harry Lennix)
Angus Macfadyen  ...  Lucius
Kenny Doughty  ...  Quintus
Blake Ritson  ...  Mutius
Colin Wells  ...  Martius
Ettore Geri  ...  Priest
Alan Cumming  ...  Saturninus
Constantine Gregory  ...  Aemelius
Harry Lennix  ...  Aaron
Comments: If you think you know Shakespeare....Think again.

Summary: Considered by many to be Shakespeare's worst play, Titus Andronicus is a bloodthirsty tragedy full of villainous heroes and bottomless revenge--hardly the stuff of big-screen directorial debuts, it would seem. Yet Julie Taymor dives headfirst into moviemaking with Titus, a spectacular adaptation that manages to find beauty and humor in the piles of carnage.
The story begins simply enough by Shakespearean standards: celebrated Roman warrior Titus Andronicus (Anthony Hopkins) returns from a hard-won victory to bury his slain sons and avenge their deaths by killing the eldest son of his enemy, Tamora, queen of the Goths (Jessica Lange). Tamora responds by seducing the impressionable new emperor and setting all of Rome into a downward spiral of revenge, madness, and death.
Taymor, who won a Tony for her Broadway production of The Lion King, throws all her theatrical sensibilities at the story--armies are exquisitely choreographed, blood is shed so beautifully that it hardly seems real, and characters are costumed in symbolic combinations of ancient Roman and 20th-century garb. She plays up the dark comedy at every opportunity, lending a carnival flavor to the story's most gruesome moments. Excellent performances from Hopkins (whose deranged Titus is more than a little reminiscent of Hannibal Lecter), Lange, and the supporting cast help make the endless treachery credible. --Claire Campbell