NOTE IMDb
5,2/10
150
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe god Dionysus decides to pay a visit to the city of Thebes.The god Dionysus decides to pay a visit to the city of Thebes.The god Dionysus decides to pay a visit to the city of Thebes.
Emilio Cigoli
- Narratore
- (non crédité)
Gianni Di Segni
- Slave carrying Water
- (non crédité)
Enzo Fiermonte
- Policrates
- (non crédité)
Alba Maiolini
- Woman of the People
- (non crédité)
Nino Marchetti
- Theban Citizen
- (non crédité)
Nello Pazzafini
- Theban Courtier
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesApart from one Asian catalog, there is no evidence that this film was ever released as "Bondage Gladiator Sexy". Indeed, the story line contains no bondage and no gladiators. Medallion Pictures released it in the US in 1963 as "The Bacchantes", and while there was no British theatrical release, it did receive a British television premiere on 3 January 1992 (again as "The Bacchantes") as part of Channel 4's Sword and Sandal season.
- GaffesAs with many movies produced during this period that were set in ancient times, all of the women are neatly shaved.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: The Bacchantes (1974)
Commentaire à la une
The god Dionysus comes to Thebes, home of his late mortal mother, Semele. To ward off a terrible drought, young king Pentheus is willing to sacrifice the virgin Manto to Demeter. Dionysus demands to be worshiped instead. Pentheus spurns him, but Dionysus wins over the populace with gifts of magical wine and ecstatic celebration. He also wins the devotion of the beautiful Dirce. Will Pentheus get his comeuppance? Will Dionysus remain in Thebes with Dirce? As the playwright Euripides concluded, "The end anticipated has not been consummated. But god has found a way for what no man expected. So ends the play."
Michel Eloy at his peplums.info site calls it (I translate from the French) "certainly the most astonishing of the mythological peplums of the Sixties, including whole recitations from the sacred tragedy of Euripides along with other myths of the Theban Cycle (the death of Actaeon, Manto the daughter of Tiresias, Athamas and the drought), all integrated into the requisite motifs of the genre: palace intrigue, thwarted young lovers, a popular uprising..."
There is a gorgeous widescreen DVD of this movie (in Spanish only) from the Cine Epico series in Spain. For curiosity value alone, it rates a 7 on my scale; it's both startlingly intellectual and outrageously campy (especially the choreography by Herbert Ross, who went on to direct THE TURNING POINT, FOOTLOOSE, etc.); that this movie was ever made is such a miracle that I'll overlook its obvious limitations. This is, after all, the sword and sandal version of one of the most challenging Greek tragedies, and as such it subverts its original source material even as it celebrates it. (Instead of Euripides' hair-raising finale, we get a sword fight, alas.)
Michel Eloy at his peplums.info site calls it (I translate from the French) "certainly the most astonishing of the mythological peplums of the Sixties, including whole recitations from the sacred tragedy of Euripides along with other myths of the Theban Cycle (the death of Actaeon, Manto the daughter of Tiresias, Athamas and the drought), all integrated into the requisite motifs of the genre: palace intrigue, thwarted young lovers, a popular uprising..."
There is a gorgeous widescreen DVD of this movie (in Spanish only) from the Cine Epico series in Spain. For curiosity value alone, it rates a 7 on my scale; it's both startlingly intellectual and outrageously campy (especially the choreography by Herbert Ross, who went on to direct THE TURNING POINT, FOOTLOOSE, etc.); that this movie was ever made is such a miracle that I'll overlook its obvious limitations. This is, after all, the sword and sandal version of one of the most challenging Greek tragedies, and as such it subverts its original source material even as it celebrates it. (Instead of Euripides' hair-raising finale, we get a sword fight, alas.)
- steven-222
- 3 avr. 2008
- Permalien
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Les prêtresses d'Hercule
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 40 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Les bacchantes (1961) officially released in India in English?
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