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Medea

  • 1969
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
6K
YOUR RATING
Maria Callas in Medea (1969)
Supernatural FantasyTragedyDramaFantasy

After his quest to retrieve the fabled Golden Fleece, Jason returns to Greece with powerful sorceress Medea. However, when the king banishes her, it's only human that Medea plots her furious... Read allAfter his quest to retrieve the fabled Golden Fleece, Jason returns to Greece with powerful sorceress Medea. However, when the king banishes her, it's only human that Medea plots her furious revenge. Can they escape her wrath?After his quest to retrieve the fabled Golden Fleece, Jason returns to Greece with powerful sorceress Medea. However, when the king banishes her, it's only human that Medea plots her furious revenge. Can they escape her wrath?

  • Director
    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
  • Writers
    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Euripides
  • Stars
    • Maria Callas
    • Massimo Girotti
    • Laurent Terzieff
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Writers
      • Pier Paolo Pasolini
      • Euripides
    • Stars
      • Maria Callas
      • Massimo Girotti
      • Laurent Terzieff
    • 34User reviews
    • 33Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Photos49

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Maria Callas
    Maria Callas
    • Medea
    Massimo Girotti
    Massimo Girotti
    • Creonte
    Laurent Terzieff
    Laurent Terzieff
    • Chirone
    Giuseppe Gentile
    • Giasone
    Margareth Clémenti
    • Glauce
    • (as Margareth Clementi)
    Paul Jabara
    Paul Jabara
    • Pelias
    Gerard Weiss
    • Second centaur
    Sergio Tramonti
    • Apsirto, Medea's brother
    Luigi Barbini
    Luigi Barbini
    • Argonaut
    Gian Paolo Durgar
      Luigi Masironi
      • Jason at 5
      Michelangelo Masironi
      • Jason at 13
      Gianni Brandizi
      • Argonaut
      Franco Jacobbi
      • Argonaut
      Annamaria Chio
      • Wet-nurse
      • (as Anna Maria Chio)
      Piera Degli Esposti
      Piera Degli Esposti
      • Woman
      Mirella Pamphili
      Mirella Pamphili
        Graziella Chiarcossi
        Graziella Chiarcossi
        • Glauce's maid
        • Director
          • Pier Paolo Pasolini
        • Writers
          • Pier Paolo Pasolini
          • Euripides
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews34

        6.95.9K
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        Featured reviews

        7gavin6942

        True Myth

        To win the kingdom his uncle took from his father, Jason must steal the golden fleece from the land of barbarians...

        When the film opened up and we had the glimpse of a filthy centaur, I was pretty much sold that this film was going to be good, or at least unforgettable. The remainder may not have had as much magic, but it did not disappoint in originality... and cannibalism.

        Typically when I think of Italian mythology films, I think of the "sword and sandal" films. This is not one of those. Rather than make the story all romantic and flashy, we get a world that is probably much closer to reality. Assuming that the event told in myth are many, many years BCE, it makes sense to show a much more primitive world than we expect. And in that sense, this film does not disappoint.
        KGB-Greece-Patras

        'Hard' Pasolini film for few. Bold visuals & soundtrack, little text

        There are several directors that make "arty" films that are certainly not for everyone. Pasolini has also done films which can be more easily acceptable by wider audiences; yet this is not one of them. This is one of those films that can and will be liked by only a few people. Others will turn their head the other way or simply hate it...

        Well I like weird art & films, I like Pasolini, and I liked Medea in various interesting aspects. I suppose one should at least know the basics of Euripedes story to comprehend the story - Pasolini doesn't focus in the story so much, important facts are assumed by the viewer and the dialogues are scarce within the film. No narration exists.

        I think Pasolini here was more interested in presenting the cultural / ethnological / theological / religious stigma of the era - his usual interest on god and religion is also here, despite text is given few opportunities to breed context in this film. We have also the theme of ancient world VS the new world of logic and the new gods. This is one of the films, like, say, Hertzog's films, that are up to the viewer to comprehend, or a film critics would call a symbolic one. Needless to say one has to like to think while watching this one, not be spoon-fed.

        Last but not least, the soundtrack enhances this strongly visual experience a lot. A set of strange but intense folk/ethnic/avant guard/experimental songs make the viewing a unique experience for those who like 'hard' films....
        8ccmiller1492

        "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned" describes Medea

        "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned" describes Medea, whose hubris and amour fou for the bold and beautiful Jason leads to her downfall. Revered as a goddess by her own people, she betrays her own divinity and her race when she aids him to steal the sacred fleece, killing her own god-brother by decapitation during their escape. After bearing two sons to Jason in Greece, Medea is still not accepted and fails to adjust to Greek culture. The affection of acclaimed hero Jason strays and his ambition culminates in a betrothal to King Kreon's daughter. But when Medea learns of this betrayal and negation of her love and sacrifice her fury knows no bounds. She summons up the dark forces within her (she is a barbarian sorceress after all) for vengeance against those who have wronged her by killing Jason's sons, welcoming him with a false semblance of conciliation and acceptance while serving his dead sons to him for dinner. She sends two magnificent marriage cloaks to the king and his daughter who, when they don them, burst into flames. She then departs in rage leaving Jason to live with the results of the infamy he caused her enact through destroying her life. Maria Callas, in her only film, shows the famous range and subtlety she enjoyed as an opera star. Her fierce control and rage are memorable. Although this was a low budget film, it is extremely evocative and leaves lasting impressions. The sequence in the beginning when Jason was being tutored by the centaur Chiron about his destiny was very effective, and marked the innovative trick-photographic technique of melding man to horse to make it look very real and convincing. The primitive settings and human sacrifice of Medea's people helped to establish her dark, powerful and exotic barbarian character. English subtitles helped make up for the unfortunate dubbing. A strange and powerful version which holds it own against other interpretations.
        dbdumonteil

        Revisiting the old myths.

        Pasolini began his revisiting of the old myths with "gospel according to St Matthews" ,perhaps the best rendition of Christ's life on the screen,then tackled the Greek legends ,first "Edipe Re" then "Medea".

        "Edipe Re" was framed by a prologue and an epilogue which took place in this day and age."Medea" displays two worlds colliding:Jason's one,a rational world where science begins to surface,and Medea's one,which is that of superstition,magic, a world that is to disappear.The legendary Golden Fleece is nothing but an old rag.And Pasolini does not show the ending of the legend when Medea flies away on her chariot;it's neither a Hollywoodian film ,nor one of those peplums Italian directors used to make by the dozen ten years before.The centaur -played by earnest thespian Laurent Terzieff- ,the only concession to some kind of show,looks like an ordinary character.Some users pointed out the primitive side of the background.But let's not forget that there are two degrees:Medea's world is primitive to the core;Jason's one is attaining what we call civilization.
        6zetes

        Disappointing.

        I love Pasolini, and Medea is easily the weakest of his works that I've seen. After having made the brilliant adaptation of the Greek tragedy Oedipus Rex, Medea seems rather uninspired. It retains most of Pasolini's beautiful settings, but the script is a poor adaptation of Euripides' play. The film's as slow as they come, and to me it seemed like a way to cover up the lack of ideas. Maria Callas is excellent as Medea, but she really doesn't have that much screen time, if you measure it. Most of the film is made up of people performing weird rituals, and the characters of Jason and Medea don't do all that much. I don't like Pasolini's interpretation of Jason as a chauvanist, egotistical jerk. It's too simplistic, and it's unfair moralizing from a modern vantage point. The character has much more depth in the various myths, even in Euripides' play. Medea's depth is sapped, as well, and her motivation in the film is sketchy at best. And then there are a couple of confusing ellipses, especially an extended fantasy sequence (apparently) where Medea imagines killing Glauce and Creon, followed by the reality. It feels more like there were two versions of this section, and the editor screwed up and left both in. Pasolini's direction is often amazing, as is the cinematography and music. I didn't hate Medea, but I can't muster any enthusiasm for it. 6/10.

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        Supernatural Fantasy
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        Fantasy

        Storyline

        Edit

        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          Final part of Pier Paolo Pasolini's "Mythical Cycle" also including Oedipus Rex (1967), Teorema (1968) and Pigsty (1969).
        • Goofs
          When Jason speaks to the two centaurs, there is a mismatch in their shadows in the middle of the screen, indicating that the image is a composite.
        • Quotes

          Creonte: You frighten me. I'm afraid for my daughter, and I tell you openly. Everyone here knows that as a barbarian who came from a foreign land, you're an expert in evil spirits. You are different from us, so we don't want you among us.

          Medea: My knowledge of these things is very poor. And then, have you ever offended me? Only he is responsible - my husband. I am not hurt by your behavior. In fact, it seems fair. I am not even hurt by your happiness. Go ahead with the wedding. Be happy. I just ask a single favor for myself. Don't banish me. Let me stay here. I'll bow my head before those stronger than myself.

          Creonte: Your words are sweet and human. But it's impossible to see into the depths of one's soul.

        • Connections
          Edited into Catalogue of Ships (2008)

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        Details

        Edit
        • Release date
          • January 28, 1970 (France)
        • Countries of origin
          • Italy
          • France
          • West Germany
        • Language
          • Italian
        • Also known as
          • Медея
        • Filming locations
          • Cappadocia, Turkey
        • Production companies
          • San Marco
          • Les Films Number One
          • Janus Film und Fernsehen
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

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        • Gross worldwide
          • $689
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          • 1h 58m(118 min)
        • Sound mix
          • Mono
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.85 : 1

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