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Phaedra (1962)

GENRESDrama
LANGEnglish,Greek
ACTOR
Melina MercouriAnthony PerkinsRaf ValloneElizabeth Ercy
DIRECTOR
Jules Dassin

SYNOPSICS

Phaedra (1962) is a English,Greek movie. Jules Dassin has directed this movie. Melina Mercouri,Anthony Perkins,Raf Vallone,Elizabeth Ercy are the starring of this movie. It was released in 1962. Phaedra (1962) is considered one of the best Drama movie in India and around the world.

The powerful Greek ship-owner and constructor Thanos proposes to marry Phaedra during the baptism of a ship with her name. Phaedra, who is the daughter of Thanos' greatest competitor, is a bored woman. Thanos gives an expensive ring to Phaedra and soon she learns that his estranged son from his first marriage, Alexis, has left the London School of Economics (L.S.E.) in London to dedicate himself to painting. Thanos asks Phaedra to travel to London to bring Alexis to meet him in Greece. When Phaedra meets Alexis, she falls in love with her step-son and seduces him. Their doomed love affair leads the family to a tragedy.

Phaedra (1962) Reviews

  • Here's an Idea . . .

    Holdjerhorses2005-10-13

    "Now that Melina's a star from 'Never on Sunday,' let's update that ancient Greek play by Euripides, already updated by Racine, make them Greek shipping magnate families, and get that 'Psycho' guy -- Perkins -- as her stepson / lover." Hollywood NEVER thought like that. Nobody else did either, except Jules Dassin, to whom filmgoers owe eternal gratitude for "Phaedra." Dassin's story (with Margarita Lymberaki) and script are tight as a drum, so emotionally potent that the roles are perhaps playable by hand puppets. His casting is breathtaking. Melina Mercouri is the obvious choice for Phaedra, coming off her adorable star-making turn (at 40) in "Never on Sunday" two years earlier (and not to mention her growing personal relationship with Dassin, whom she was to marry). Her Phaedra is everything her waterfront hooker is not: rich, controlled, sophisticated, trapped in a marriage of wealth and convenience. Raf Vallone as her powerful husband may also seem obvious casting: his Mediterranean virility is the masculine equivalent of Mercouri's Greek goddess passion and presence. But Anthony Perkins as her stepson, Alexis? Hardly the obvious choice, yet perfect nonetheless. He even looks like he might be Greek. In those days (early '60s) he was a handsomely sensitive and intense "young" man (not to mention a brilliant actor: his playing against type made "Psycho" that much more shocking: try imagining anybody else in that role. Hitchcock knew what he was doing with Perkins too.). Yet his previous filmic forays as a romantic leading man (opposite, say, Jane Fonda in "Tall Story") felt curiously flat and false. Today we know that was because the actor himself was tormented and conflicted by being gay, eventually marrying and having children, yet still dying from AIDS because of his secret life. That secretive, hidden, conflicted sexual intensity worked perfectly in "Psycho" and it does in "Phaedra" where, for the first and only role in Perkins' screen history, his full sexuality gets its chance to explode. The careful script construction builds tensions slowly, on every level. The competition between Greek shipping tycoons seems realistic and involving. So does Raf Vallone's urgency to bring his "art student" son back to Greece from Europe to help run the family empire. He hasn't time to go himself, and sends his wife, Melina Mercouri, to convince her stepson to return. From their initial meeting, the sexual tension between Mercouri (perhaps the most complex portrayer of feminine passion in the history of film, including Anna Magnanni and Sophia Loren) and Anthony Perkins (perhaps the most intensely complex and sexually ambiguous male American star since Montgomery Clift) is electric. They seem to be doing little, if anything, in their initial scenes, in the museum, for instance. She's trying to seduce him into returning home. He's resisting. Two actors have never played subtext better. By the time their repressed passions overcome them, in front of that fireplace, and they begin to undress each other and make love to Mikis Theodorakis' pounding score and Jacques Natteau's lyrical cinematography, Dassin has achieved what many still consider to be the single most erotic scene ever filmed. That he did it with two of the seemingly most improbably-matched actors, and without any real nudity (no pubic hair, no nipples other than Perkins' visible) . . . just with looks and kisses and caresses like none ever captured on film before or since . . . is no small tribute to his director's genius. That scene shocked audiences and left them sexually limp and satiated in the '60s. It no longer shocks. It's simply beautiful and fulfilling and haunting -- as it must be, for the moment seals all the characters' fates. From that passionate consummation, in fact, "Phaedra's" grip tightens and pulls us into darker depths than we ever anticipated. Love -- this love -- is a kind of fatal madness from which there is no escape. Phaedra is not Ilya the hooker from "Never on Sunday." Alexis is not Norman Bates from "Psycho." It is difficult to recall a more vivid demonstration of on screen acting versatility by two stars in two years, ever. Phaedra's and Alexis' descent into tragedy is truly painful. Perkins' playing of his final suicidal "mad" scene is unlike any other scene he ever played. It is tempting, knowing what we know today of Perkins the actor, to believe we're witnessing an eruption of his own internal passions besting him and leading him to his death. That's a false temptation. Perkins had no more knowledge of when and how he would die than any of us do. He was, simply, brilliantly, fully in character and (as an actor) so trusting in his director that he took chances he never had before nor ever would again. That Perkins' "mad" scene occasionally elicits discomfort is testimony to his gifts. It is not, in fact, "over the top." As anyone knows who's ever seen anybody go "mad," it is utterly real. So real, so impassioned, so demented and hopeless (and brilliantly conceived: driving himself to his death in a luxury sports car while singing along with / shouting at Bach???) that some viewers use any defense, including ridicule, to remind themselves that "this is only a movie." Dassin beautifully orchestrates Perkins' arc from neurotic "artist" to passionate, even insane, lover . . . and contrasts it with Mercouri's descent from emotional Greek goddess to almost mutely resigned walking death mask. Both arcs, and both actors, are equally devastating. Over four decades after its production, there has never been a film like "Phaedra." In a hundred years, there still won't be.

  • unforgettable story of obsession

    manxman-12002-10-18

    One more voice to be added to the many! Where, oh where is this movie and why isn't it on video or DVD??? When each of the stars, Mercouri and Perkins, passed away one hoped that at very least it might make it to TV in some kind of tribute. No such luck. Brilliant acting, extremely well directed by Dassin (who made the classic RIFIFI) this movie deserves a greater appreciation than it has received. Terrific performances by Mercouri as the love-obsessed stepmother and Perkins as the stepson who allows himself to be seduced by her. The critics were hostile and cynical when the movie first came out, possibly because of the very public antics of Onassis and Callas, but the movie itself deserved a much better reception. (One movie which this viewer has never been able to forget!) Classically elegant, this is a well made movie that Dassin's talents translated from ancient themes into modern with a true director's skill. This movie deserves to be seen again! Where is it?????

  • Rare Moments of Greatness

    kinolieber2003-06-20

    Finally got to see this one at Film Forum in New York City. My familiarity with the soundtrack music by Mikis Theodorakis had always made me curious about the film. If you can accept the kind of over-the-top acting style of Melina Mercouri and Anthony Perkins, there is much that impresses. The one truly great scene involves their first sexual encounter and it alone makes the film worth seeing. The absolutely stunning musical accompaniment combined with some amazing photography and editing results in a truly breathtaking sequence. The finale with Perkins raving out loud to himself in his car has to be seen to be believed. This is one of those projects that nobody these days would try, and even though it doesn't entirely succeed, it makes one long for a time when artists took such risks.

  • A ture lost "classic"

    clive-131999-11-08

    There are few films that one remembers like the nostalgia of a lost love. Phaedra has this effect on me. I saw it at a "foreign" film festival at Metropolitan State College in Denver Colorado when I was 20 years old in l965. Perkins will always bring to mind the "angst" ridden, melancholy young man, a role he truly "lives" in this brilliantly updated Greek tradegy. Melina M was never more alluring and exotic. When you combine the chemistry of these two unusual actors with the ancient fear of incest and deceit that Phaedra represents you get stunning performances from the two leads. I also was mesmerized by the haunting and seductive soundtrack from this film. The best description for it is "greek jazz",although that certainly doesn't describe it well. I bought the vinyl 33 in a used record shop in 1989 and copied it to tape. It travels with me in my car and is played quite frequently. Is there any hope of this film ever becoming available to vhs? Who knows. All I know is that the "fireplace" seduction scene has few equals in any other contemporary film for raw sensualism and erotic power.

  • An excellent underestimated film of the 60's

    marantosvassilis2001-12-15

    The truth is that the film has nothing to do with the classic tragedy of Eurypides, but it is own of the most romantic and tragic films of the 60's. It has own of the most erotic love scenes I ever seen, and one of the best musical score that I ever heard. Melina is more beautiful than ever, Anthony Perkins is excellent as the fragile stepson who is seduced by his father's wife(M.Mercouri.)Valone is superb as the Greek Tycoon. Someone must release again the VHS and the DVD and the CD, because it is a good movie, and it did not deserve the bad criticisms that it received when it was first released.

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