Sergio Leone
Sodom and Gomorrah | |
---|---|
Directed by | Robert Aldrich Sergio Leone |
Produced by | Joseph E. Levine Maurizio Lodi-Fe Goffredo Lombardo |
Written by | Giorgio Prosperi Hugo Butler |
Starring | Stewart Granger Anouk Aimée Pier Angeli Stanley Baker Rossana Podestà |
Music by | Miklós Rózsa |
Cinematography | Alfio Contini Silvano Ippoliti Cyril J. Knowles Mario Montuori |
Edited by | Mario Serandrei Peter Tanner |
Production company | |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date | |
Running time | 154 minutes |
Country | Italy France United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $4.5 million[1] |
Box office | $2.5 million (US/ Canada)[2][3] 1,614,441 admissions (France)[4][5] |
Sodom and Gomorrah — known in the United States as The Last Days of Sodom and Gomorrah — is a DeLuxe Color 1962 epic film which is loosely based on the Biblical tale of Sodom and Gomorrah. The film was a Franco-Italian-American co-production made by Pathé, SGC and Titanus. It was directed by Robert Aldrich and produced by Maurizio Lodi-Fe, Goffredo Lombardo and Joseph E. Levine. The screenplay was by Giorgio Prosperi and Hugo Butler, and the music score was composed by Miklós Rózsa.
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The twin cities of Sodom and Gomorrah prosper because of their great deposits of salt, which are mined by an army of slaves. The decadent citizens, who have become wealthy by trading salt, live in luxury and use slaves as servants and for violent games of entertainment.
After a night of revelry, Astorath (Stanley Baker), the Prince of Sodom, tells slave girl Tamar (Scilla Gabel) to carry a message to the king of the Elamites, with whom he plans to overthrow his sister, Bera, Queen of Sodom (Anouk Aimée). Returning from her meeting in the desert with the Elamite leader, Tamar is captured by a Sodomite patrol. Queen Bera demands the name of her co-conspirator. Tamar refuses to speak under interrogation and Bera has her and her two young sisters killed.
Meanwhile, Lot (Stewart Granger) leads his family and a Hebrew tribe through the desert, hoping that he can find a permanent home for his people along the fertile banks of the River Jordan. By contrast with the people of the twin cities, the Hebrews are presented as a pious and austere people with high moral standards. As the Hebrews approach their destination, Lot meets the beautiful Ildith (Pier Angeli), who luxuriates in a litter while a group of slave girls in chains precede her over the rocky terrain. Lot assumes that Ildith owns these women. She tells him that she is also a slave, albeit the chief of the Queen of Sodom's body slaves. Lot tells her that owning slaves is evil. The following dialog ensues:
Ildith: 'Evil? How strange you are. Where I come from, nothing is evil. Everything that gives pleasure is good.'
Lot: 'Where do you come from?'
Ildith: 'There, not far. Just ahead: Sodom and Gomorrah.'
Once Lot and his people reach the Jordan, he negotiates the use of the land on one side of the river with Queen Bera, promising her both grain and defense should Sodom's desert enemies attack. In a surprising turn, she gives Lot Ildith, who does not wish to leave the queen or her life of luxury in Sodom. Astorath is disgusted and baffled by his sister's easy terms with the Hebrews. However, he soon turns his attentions to Lot's flirtatious daughter, Shuah (Rossana Podestà).
Ildith dislikes the rough conditions of the Hebrew camp, but soon befriends Lot's daughters. She and Lot also fall in love and plan to marry. Meanwhile Shuah and Astorath begin a secret affair. Lot's other daughter, Maleb (Claudia Mori) and his headstrong lieutenant, Ishmael (Rik Battaglia) also plan a marriage.
Lot and Ildith's wedding day celebrations are interrupted by an Elamite attack. Although the Hebrew farmers and the Sodomite soldiers fight valiantly, they are nearly defeated by the fierce nomadic warriors. In a last, desperate measure, Lot orders that the dam that the Hebrews have built be broken. His quick thinking saves the twin cities and the Hebrews, but the camp and the crops are destroyed. However, the flood waters reveal that the Hebrew camp is also the site of a vast salt deposit. Lot now believes that the Hebrews can move out of the wilderness and live among the Sodomites ('Separate, but in their full view,' he cautions) by selling salt. (In the original Roadshow prints, this is where the theatrical intermission occurred.)
Some time later, Lot and Ildith now live in luxury in Sodom. Sodomites and Hebrews both revere Lot and seek his judgment. Ishmael however, believes that Lot has succumbed to luxury and instead should liberate Sodom's mine slaves. Lot disagrees and advises Ishmael to wait, believing that the Sodomites will change their ways in time. Ishmael does not heed Lot and unsuccessfully tries to set the slaves free, believing that the Hebrews will harbour them. Instead the slaves shut their doors on the desperate escapees who are soon recaptured and sentenced to death. As the newly appointed minister of justice, Lot must now sentence Ishmael. However Ishmael is only one of Lot's problems, as he is confronted by the jealous Astorath, who tells him that not only has he slept with both of Lot's daughters, but that Ildith had known and kept the affairs secret. An outraged Lot kills Astorath.
At this point, Queen Bera's plot becomes clear: she used the Hebrews to destroy the Elamite threat and also used Lot to rid her of her scheming brother. Lot becomes deeply remorseful that he has not only killed but he led his family and people into sin. Bera has him taken to prison.
While Lot asks God for forgiveness and guidance, two angels appear to tell him that God is displeased with the twin cities and will destroy them. Lot pleads with the angels to spare the city if he can find just ten Sodomite citizens who will repent and leave the cities with him. The angels agree and free both Lot and Ishmael from prison after warning Lot that anyone leaving Sodom who looksback will be struck down as well.
Meanwhile, many recaptured slaves are tortured to death on the wheel. Queen Bera exclaims 'But wait, the games have just begun,' as Lot appears seeking ten righteous Sodomites. Although he has God's consent, Lot finds it impossible to persuade any Sodomite citizens to follow him, only the slaves are willing to accompany him. Even his own daughters, who believe Lot a hypocrite, at first refuse. Ildith, however, convinces them to leave, hoping that they will someday understand their father and his greatness as a leader. Shuah goes only grudgingly, telling Lot that she hopes to see him suffering, as she does now that Astorath is dead.
Immediately after the Hebrews and Sodomite slaves leave, God assails Sodom with earthquakes and lightning. Queen Bera retreats with her slave Orphea to her palace, where they are killed under the collapsing pillars. Everybody flees into the streets and are crushed by collapsing towers.
Meanwhile, Ildith now wishes she were back in Sodom. Despite her love for Lot, she cannot accept his God, choosing to believe in Lot rather than in a Divine plan. Despite Lot's warnings, Ildith looks back at Sodom. God turns her into a pillar of salt just as He destroys the city with a final fiery explosion. Lot collapses in grief. Maleb and Shuah rush to comfort him. He staggers off with the Hebrews, who wander the desert once more.
Henry Koster was originally announced as director and Stephen Boyd as star.[6] Then Robert Aldrich became attached as director.[7]
Joseph E. Levine was enticed into a co production with the Italian company Titanus. Levine:
All I saw was a bad script. They wanted a million dollars. I said 'let's get a good script and spend two million. I'll put up 60% of two million. The cost went up to $6 million. But not out of my pocket. I pay only 60% of two million.[8]
Filming started 11 January 1961.[9]
Sergio Leone was hired to shoot some second unit photography but he left during the shoot - either quitting or being fired. Location shooting took place near Marrakesh and the budget grew from $2 million to $5 million.[10]
The film is notable for featuring the last of Miklos Rozsa's epic film scores. Rozsa, who replaced Dimitri Tiomkin, thought the film was tacky and inferior. In January, 2007, Digitmovies AE released a nearly complete version of the score on a two-CD set, which is taken from the Legend LP recording. Previously, other selections from the score were available on two CDs: one from Cambria Records and Publishing, which is taken from the composer's mono recordings and one from BMG, which is taken from the original LP.
Maurice Binder designed the title sequence that featured an orgy. He took three days to direct the sequence that was originally supposed to take one day.[11]
Sodom and Gomorrah was one of the 12 most popular films at the British box office in 1963.[12]
Critics, however, were not as kind. Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote, 'It is an obvious but feeble imitation of 'The Ten Commandments' of Cecil B. de Mille, and it is much more concerned with salt-mining than it is with debauchery or lust.'[13] Contemporary critics have viewed the film just as negatively; a 2008 Time Out review states that the film was a 'low point' in Aldrich's career and that the film represented a 1960s tackiness thankfully not seen anymore.[14]
Aldrich later said 'I think we did a goddam respectable job with' the film. 'I don't think you could do any more with that. If you had a guy you believed was Lot I think the picture would have worked. Also, half an hour was cut out. Everybody should do a biblical picture - once.'[15]
Stewart Granger stars as Lot, the biblical sage who leads the Hebrews to the valley of Jordan. Once there, they become entangled with the Helamites, who are reveling in the sin, sex, scandal, and depravity of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. When some of his followers succumb to the decadent pleasures of the Helamites--and God threatens to wreak havoc on the entire valley--Lot tries to find a way to deliver his wife, Ildith (Pier Angeli), and his people to salvation. Director Robert Aldrich does a masterful job of re-creating the scriptural story of the original sin cities. Featuring massive sets and awesome special effects that produce a breathtakingly numinous atmosphere of piety and reverence for divine powers, SODOM AND GOMORRAH is an ambitious and satisfyingly gargantuan biblical epic.
DVD9 PAL 4:3 02:22:59 7.56 Gb + 3% rec
Language: English, Deutsch
Subtitles: none
Genre: Adventure, Drama, History
Director: Robert Aldrich
Cast: Stewart Granger, Pier Angeli, Stanley Baker
Country: USA, Italy, France
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