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In the 1950s Hollywood began remaking the great silent Bible epics,
possibly as a reaction to the return of popular revivalism. Quo
Vadis is the fifth version of Henry Sienkiewicz's 1985
best-seller, and the first talking version. An expensive MGM
production filmed in Rome's Cinecittá studio, Quo Vadis
was the first monster Bible epic of the post-war era. It covers
roughly the same historic subject matter as Cecil B. DeMille's
scandalous Pre-code movie The Sign of the
Cross. Producer Sam Zimbalist dropped the question mark from
the Latin title, which translates as, Where are you going?
Later filmgoers may recall Marlon Brando in Bertolucci's Last Tango
in Paris using the film's title as a sly pick-up line: "Quo
vadis, baby?
Quo Vadis is certainly a pious picture, celebrating Christian
ideas and symbols. It includes several miraculous visions, as when a
heavenly light tells the Apostle Peter to turn back toward Rome. The
historical facts of the rule of Nero (a young Peter Ustinov making his
first splash in Hollywood) fit nicely into the imagined tale of a
hedonistic Roman general converted to Christianity by the love of a
beautiful maid. Sienkiewicz's story is politically sound: Nero ignores
the Christians until he need a scapegoat for his foolhardy burning of
Rome. Christian sympathizers like old General Plautius (Felix Aylmer)
are sacrificed as well. Even the political expert Petronius (the great
Leo Genn) runs afoul of Nero's spite, simply for not rubber-stamping
his every whim. Petronius (the author of Satyricon, later to be
filmed by Fellini) is smart enough to see Nero's wrath coming.
General Marcus Vinicius (a stern, dry Robert Taylor) stubbornly wastes
two hours trying to win the beautiful hostage Lygia (Deborah Kerr) the
loutish Roman way, by making her his legal property. Prevented from
exercising his owner's rights by Lygia's muscleman bodyguard Ursus
(wrestler Buddy Baer, taking on a kind of Maciste-protector role),
Marcus backs off. He's tempted by Nero's reptilian consort Poppaea
(the stunning Patricia Laffan of Devil-Girl from
Mars). But when Nero sets Rome aflame, Marcus realizes that
both Lygia and her faith present better alternatives. Although Deborah
Kerr does well enough, her Lygia is yet another colorless and
enervated MGM role, after her stunning parts in English pictures like
The Life
and Death of Colonel Blimp and Black
Narcissus. Kerr instead found fame lip-synching to another's
voice in The King and I.
Ancient Rome with its parades and parties is presented with great
solemnity, coming off as a respectful but unexceptional pageant.
Nero's "orgy" stays a discreet distance from the revelers, whose most
extreme behavior is to feed grapes to each other. Mervyn LeRoy's
static direction adds very little, leaving the good actors to carry it
all. Peter Ustinov and Leo Genn are head and shoulders above the other
actors, with Ustinov marvelous as the insufferably infantile,
murderously treacherous Nero.Since Nero has already had his own mother
and wife killed, Genn's Petronius must walk a verbal tightrope.
Petronius treads a diplomatic path around Nero's psychotic whims by
inventing new forms of flattery.
Finlay Currie and Abraham Sofaer do the heavy Biblical lifting, in
fairly lifeless flashbacks to the Jesus story. At prayer meetings
Christians stand in noble poses, enlightenment beaming from their
faces. Combined with Miklos Rozsa's inspirational music score, all the
requirements for the Bible epic are fulfilled. The movie is sincere;
it's certainly less melodramatic and manipulative than some of the 50s
films that would follow.
Also making an impact are Marina Berti as Petronius' adoring Spanish
slave, and Rosalie Crutchley (The Nun's
Story) as Acte, the spurned lover who returns to Nero in his
final moments. In the docu accompanying the film, Sir Christopher
Frayling can't help but be amused that Mervyn LeRoy gives Caesar an
exit line similar to his Little
Caesar of twenty years before. Maybe the filmmakers didn't
take the story all that seriously, all the time.
Filmed in Italy in lavish Technicolor, Quo Vadis is heavily
laden with production values. A few scenes do have the thousands of
extras promised in the outrageous publicity, that claimed that Quo
Vadis will be the most impressive movie you will ever see.
Although MGM's blue screen traveling mattes look terrible in daytime
scenes, the chaos of the burning of Rome (said to employ a young
Sergio Leone as one of many assistant directors) is beautifully
directed and photographed. The climax comes when Nero executes
hundreds of Christians in the arena. The brief scenes of violence,
with many thrown to the lions or burned alive, is probably as strong
as could be depicted in the restrictive climate of 1951. The much more
perverse horrors of DeMille's The Sign of the Cross had all
been censored for a wartime reissue, so there was little in the
public's recent memory to provide an immediate comparison.
Star watchers should keep an eye out: rumor has it that actresses
Sophia Loren and Elizabeth Taylor may be found in crowd scenes during
Nero's party, and among the cowering Christians awaiting their
appointment with hungry lions.
Warner's 2-Disc Special Edition DVD of Quo Vadis is a
fine rendering of the crowd-pleasing epic, said to be remastered from
the original 3-strip elements. It's presented on two discs to afford a
high bit rate and a lengthy new docu. Colors are warm but accurate;
day exteriors are beautiful and night interiors moody. Day interiors
vary in quality. Plautius' house uses a terrible painted backdrop, but
a seaside retreat is created with a matte painting and still looks
real. Although more than one expert in the docu talks about
stereophonic sound, the track provided is a sturdy mono. Miklos
Rozsa's impressive score comes complete with entrance and exit music.
No intermission is present, if the film ever had one.
Film critic F.X. Feeney provides a lengthy audio commentary that
establishes the literary and filmic context for Quo Vadis.
He's joined on New Wave's long docu by many learned and qualified
spokespeople, all of whom seem compelled to overstate the film's merit
-- it's a fine effort that doesn't need hyperbole. Probably owing to
Robert Taylor's stiff acting, Quo Vadis didn't attain the
heights of box office glory promised by MGM's ad campaign. The docu is
overlong but contain a number of interesting chapters, including one
devoted to examples of Peter Ellenshaw's nearly flawless matte
work.
Blur-ray owners take note: it is said that Quo Vadis will be
released on that format this coming Easter.
For more information about Quo Vadis, visit Warner Video. To order Quo
Vadis, go to
TCM Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson
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