Nell'Inghilterra del XII secolo Enrico II nomina arcivescovo di Canterbury il suo grande amico Thomas Becket, già suo cancelliere. L'intento è di unire il clero e la corona. I rapporti tra i... Leggi tuttoNell'Inghilterra del XII secolo Enrico II nomina arcivescovo di Canterbury il suo grande amico Thomas Becket, già suo cancelliere. L'intento è di unire il clero e la corona. I rapporti tra i due si guastano: prima la libertà della Chiesa, poi l'amicizia.Nell'Inghilterra del XII secolo Enrico II nomina arcivescovo di Canterbury il suo grande amico Thomas Becket, già suo cancelliere. L'intento è di unire il clero e la corona. I rapporti tra i due si guastano: prima la libertà della Chiesa, poi l'amicizia.
- Vincitore di 1 Oscar
- 14 vittorie e 23 candidature totali
- Gwendolen
- (as Sian Phillips)
- French prostitute
- (as Veronique Vendell)
Trama
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- QuizRichard Burton initially turned this movie down because he felt the press would have a field day over the idea of him playing a saint. He also said he would be more suited to playing Henry II.
- BlooperThomas Becket was a Norman (Thomas Bequet), not a Saxon. Jean Anouilh based the play's script on Augustin Thierry's 1825 work "The History of the Conquest of England by the Normans", which presumed that Becket was a Saxon. Anouilh admitted he'd learned the truth after completing the play, but decided to leave it as is because it made for a better story.
- Citazioni
Thomas a Becket: Tonight you can do me the honor of christening my forks.
King Henry II: Forks?
Thomas a Becket: Yes, from Florence. New little invention. It's for pronging meat and carrying it to the mouth. It saves you dirtying your fingers.
King Henry II: But then you dirty the fork.
Thomas a Becket: Yes, but it's washable.
King Henry II: So are your fingers. I don't see the point.
- Versioni alternativeTwo different versions of the closing "A Paramount Release" card exist - one print has these words appear inside the standard Paramount logo of the time superimposed in red, while another has these words as plain text with a small version of a completely different Paramount logo (with a full circle of stars), also in red, beneath them.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Precious Images (1986)
- Colonne sonoreDies Irae
(Medieval Latin Hymn)
The 1959 play was tremendous successful throughout Europe, in England, and in the United States. In 1964 it reached the screen with Richard Burton as Becket, Peter O'Toole as Henry II, such notables as John Gielgud as Louis VII of France. The film was extremely well-received and received numerous critical accolades, particularly for Burton and O'Toole. It was not, however, widely available to the home market until this 2007 MPI DVD release.
In a technical sense, BECKET looks better than ever; the transfer is very crisp and the picture likely looks better here than it did on the 1964 big screen. At the same time, however, it is very evident that this is a film that really is best seen on the big screen, where the larger than life characters and their ideological battles have the advantage of a scope to equal their nature. It also has a slightly stagey quality, most often in the script, which doesn't quite manage to shed the theatrical trappings of the original.
Even so, there's a great deal to admire, and the leading actors are most certainly chief among them. Burton and O'Toole wench, brawl, argue, and explode with invective with complete conviction; it would be hard, if not impossible, to say which gives the better performance here. Gielgud is particularly memorable in his brief appearance as Louis VII--and Sian Philips, Pamela Brown, and Martita Hunt make the most of their relatively small roles as well.
The DVD has several notable bonuses. I personally found the interviews with Richard Burton, archival footage from 1967 and 1977, slightly over rated--but the "featurettes" on editor Anne V. Coats and composer Laurence Rosenthal are excellent, and the DVD commentary by O'Toole is consistently fascinating. I personally find the film as a whole a bit dry--Coats, tellingly, makes the comment that if the producers had put just a bit more money into BECKET it would have an undeniable masterpiece--but fans of the film will find this particular package an extremely welcome one.
GFT, Amazon Reviewer
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 3.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 149.327 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 7.912 USD
- 28 gen 2007
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 149.327 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore 28 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1