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The Magus

  • 1968
  • R
  • 1h 57m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
2K
YOUR RATING
Michael Caine in The Magus (1968)
DramaFantasyMystery

A teacher on a Greek island becomes involved in bizarre mind games with the island's magus (magician) and a beautiful young woman.A teacher on a Greek island becomes involved in bizarre mind games with the island's magus (magician) and a beautiful young woman.A teacher on a Greek island becomes involved in bizarre mind games with the island's magus (magician) and a beautiful young woman.

  • Director
    • Guy Green
  • Writer
    • John Fowles
  • Stars
    • Anthony Quinn
    • Michael Caine
    • Candice Bergen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Guy Green
    • Writer
      • John Fowles
    • Stars
      • Anthony Quinn
      • Michael Caine
      • Candice Bergen
    • 49User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos59

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Anthony Quinn
    Anthony Quinn
    • Maurice Conchis
    Michael Caine
    Michael Caine
    • Nicholas Urfe
    Candice Bergen
    Candice Bergen
    • Lily
    Anna Karina
    Anna Karina
    • Anne
    Paul Stassino
    Paul Stassino
    • Meli
    Julian Glover
    Julian Glover
    • Anton
    Takis Emmanuel
    Takis Emmanuel
    • Kapetan
    George Pastell
    George Pastell
    • Andreas-Priest
    Danièle Noël
    • Soula
    • (as Danielle Noel)
    Jerome Willis
    Jerome Willis
    • 'False' German Officer
    Ethel Farrugia
    • Maria
    Andreas Malandrinos
    Andreas Malandrinos
    • Goatherd
    • (as Andreas Melandrinos)
    George Kafkaris
    • Second Partisan
    Anthony Newlands
    Anthony Newlands
    • Party Host
    Stack Constantino
    • Third Partisan
    Roger Lloyd Pack
    Roger Lloyd Pack
    • Young Conchis
    Corin Redgrave
    Corin Redgrave
    • Captain Wimmel
    John Fowles
    John Fowles
    • Boat captain
    • Director
      • Guy Green
    • Writer
      • John Fowles
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews49

    5.61.9K
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    Featured reviews

    5Bunuel1976

    THE MAGUS (Guy Green, 1968) **

    Being an arty psychological puzzle - and one which might well be not just incomprehensible but also meaningless - I'd always been interested in checking this film out; the fact that it was a critical and box-office failure made it doubly fascinating. Still, what must have seemed like the turkey of the year when new has, with time, acquired a certain charm all its own! On the surface, the film is certainly good-looking (shot by Billy Williams in numerous European locations, mainly a sunny Greek island) and boasts a fine score by Johnny Dankworth (which, in keeping with the film's theme, seems oddly unsuited to what's going on); the star cast responds competently to the mystifying plot (structured like a Chinese box - where past events are constantly re-enacted, identities exchanged and, of course, nothing is what it seems). Still, while Anthony Quinn may be everybody's idea of a Greek larger-than-life character, here he is saddled with an unbecoming Picasso hairstyle and, underneath it all, Michael Caine may well have been mirroring the bewilderment felt by his character since, in his autobiography, he singles out THE MAGUS as his worst film ever (though I personally would beg to differ and choose THE ISLAND [1980] for that unenviable spot)!

    Actually, it all reminded me of L'INVENZIONE DI MOREL (1974) - another obscure island-set drama where a man intrudes upon a remote community sharing an exclusive fantasy existence: incidentally, that film was partly shot in my native country and also featured Anna Karina (who in THE MAGUS has the rather thankless role of Caine's jilted girlfriend - though her performance is quite good and his callous treatment of Karina has a strong bearing on the main character's ultimate personal growth) as the mystery woman who captivates the hero; with this in mind, as I lay watching the film under review, I wondered at the possibilities had Karina exchanged her role with that of Candice Bergen (who's too young for her role but great to look at nonetheless).

    Then again, the subject matter was far more congenial to a Joseph Losey rather than the journeyman Guy Green...and one can only surmise how different - and more significant - the film would have been in the former's hands! As it stands, there are some undeniably compelling passages but also a lot of shallow modishness (the skin-flick with Bergen and Julian Glover[!] at the climax is plain risible) and lame moralizing (the WWII flashback scenes, featuring a bizarrely but effectively cast Corin Redgrave as the Nazi Commandant, being especially maudlin).

    At several points towards the end, it feels like the story is coming to some sort of conclusion but it just goes on and on, peeling off yet another layer to the meandering enigma; to get an inkling of what the film is like, just imagine watching two of the more cerebral episodes of the cult TV series "The Prisoner" (1967-68) back-to-back! In hindsight, the film's epitaph may have been delivered by none other than Woody Allen who once remarked that, if he had to live his life all over again, he would do everything exactly the same...except watch THE MAGUS. As for myself, I wouldn't mind taking another look at it in future: by then I'd be over the initial "shock" and could perhaps appreciate it better...
    6pawlo-3

    Bad score, nice view

    As other commentators I didn't quite know whether to expect the worst movie ever or an undiscovered pearl. Well, it is neither. For lovers of the novel, I feel the film is quite adequate and interesting. Hard to imagine how the film impressions someone who hasn't read the book. In my mind this could have been an excellent film, but for two aspects: the score is awful (especially in the mountain climbing sequence with Anne); the final "trial" is totally botched, filmed as a dream-sequence instead of reality, as it should be, and featuring a ridiculous robot. I wish I could do a re-make.
    3beltezam

    Book was much better

    I loved the gorgeous Greek scenery but the story, which is not something you can follow anyway, was even harder to follow in the movie. I cannot imagine how anyone watching the movie can get any kind of grip on it if they have not read the book, and then, like me, they would probably wonder why Australian Allison turned into French Anne, and many other seemingly pointless changes in the story. The mysteries in the book seemed to be chopped up or left out in the movie. I saw it when it first came out and had the same problems with it then, since I had read the book several times. I recently watched it with my granddaughter (very intelligent at 20 and usually into movies I like) who was mostly amazed at how young Michael Caine and Candace Bergen were in it, but otherwise could not imagine why one would watch it except for the scenery.
    Threedee

    A film that's better than its reputation

    I've read the Fowles novels-- including the original and the "new, improved" versions of The Magus (BTW the "new, improved" version was a bad move John, you should have left the damn book alone with its ambiguities intact), so it ain't like I are illiterate or somethin'...

    Seems to me a lot of people expect a movie to be a book, and it doesn't happen. If you have a deep connection with the print, you have to be able to temporarily wipe the preconceptions from your brain and deal with it as a distinct presentation of material, or you're not going to like it.

    I'm pretty sure this is what happened amongst the literati who were expecting to see the book version of The Magus on screen. So they did a snobbish hatchet job via criticism.

    IMHO, this is one of Anthony Quinn's best screen appearances. I can't think of anyone else who could have filled the role as well. Green's direction keeps the film moving right along. The location settings are wonderful. Got no problems with the script. Michael Caine plays a terrific self-serving exploiter of women and relationships-- but in fairness Anne is a gutless wimp asking to be exploited-- incapable of making her own decisions (at least as rendered in the film). Candice Bergen does a very credible job in the schizo role of Lily.

    This movie deserves restoration into its original aspect ratio and re-releasing on DVD. And maybe, like Eliot said in the bit from Little Gidding used in the flick, you might arrive where you started and know the place for the first time.
    barnabyrudge

    Not very good, but not as bad as critics led us to believe.

    This movie received a critical mauling. Even the celebrities hated it, one of them (possibly Woody Allen) saying that if he had to live his life again he would do everything the same except he wouldn't go to see The Magus! However, I don't think it is that bad. It certainly isn't particularly good, but it carries a certain fascination in the way that it unpeels a multi-layered plot in a gleefully playful way. The main shortcoming is that some plot points are dealt with unclearly, making it a bit tricky to figure out exactly what is going on. The ending in particular seems to be a bit confusing. However, on the plus side, there are some powerful visuals. There are also strong leading performances from Michael Caine and Anthony Quinn, as well as a memorable turn from Anna Karina as one of Caine's ex-lovers. Candice Bergen gives a terrible performance, but perhaps the character she is given to work with was unplayable anyway. Don't listen to the critics. See this one for yourself and judge it on your own terms.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sir Michael Caine lists this, along with The Swarm (1978) and Ashanti (1979), as one of the worst movies he ever made. This is mainly down to the fact that no one, least of all the audience, knew what it was about.
    • Goofs
      In the rented room where the English professor will live while continuing the teaching work of his predecessor in the so-called Greek island, there is a rather conspicuous historical XIX century Spanish painting by José Casado del Alisal which represents the first defeat of Napoleon's armies in Spain, in the city of Bailén, where Marechal Philippe Antoine Dupont de l'Estang surrendered to inexperienced Spanish General Castaños on 19 July 1808. Not quite a Hellenic topic, really.
    • Quotes

      Maurice Conchis: All men feel the need to risk death at least once in their life. War is a very unscientific answer to that need.

    • Connections
      Featured in Denúncia Vazia (1979)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 10, 1968 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El dios fingido
    • Filming locations
      • Spetses Island, Greece
    • Production company
      • Blazer Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 57 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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