Michelangelo – Inferno und Ekstase (1965)

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Michelangelo – Inferno und Ekstase: Directed by Carol Reed. With Charlton Heston, Rex Harrison, Diane Cilento, Harry Andrews. The biographical story of Michelangelo’s troubles while painting the Sistine Chapel at the urging of Pope Julius II.

“When you think about it, making a movie about artistry is pretty hard. Painting, writing, sculpting, music, whatever, itu0026#39;s not easy to make the act very interesting–painting is painstaking, it takes a long time. But in this movie, they succeed. Not just making a movie, but making an epic, a massive movie out of an act of creation, is a tough thing to do. But they really do succeed. At the heart of the movie isnu0026#39;t really the act of creation, or the passion for it, or even the ceiling itself–itu0026#39;s the adversarial relationship between Rex Harrison (Pope Julius II) and Charlton Heston (Michaelangelo). u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eItu0026#39;s certainly not that passion and creation are not here, itu0026#39;s just that they enrich the story about two men and their relationship. When Julius comes into the chapel in the middle of the night, and Michaelangelo is invariably there, thereu0026#39;s a bond, even with silent incipient tension. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eHeston is of course the only person for this role, as epics go, heu0026#39;s the best. For some reason he manages not to be overcome by the massive scale of these sorts of movies–something that happens to almost everyone else (look at Sinatra and Cary Grant in u0026quot;the Pride and the Passionu0026quot;, they are totally lost in the grande scale, and theyu0026#39;re the incomparable Grant and the larger than life Sinatra, not much more to be said there). Heston makes a solid tortured artist and Rex Harrison is quite wonderful as the Pope. He communicates the strength and intelligence of a Pope who loves art but must go to battle to preserve all that he holds dear. Thereu0026#39;s a scene when the Pope wants people to see the half completed chapel, since he has grown impatient with the time and when Michaelangelo bitterly objects, Harrison explodes with anger–extremely effective. When Harrison passed, it was truly a loss to movies. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThere are flaws, no question, and itu0026#39;s not Hestonu0026#39;s best work, course, once youu0026#39;ve done Ben Hur and the Ten Commandments, nothing else is going to be your best work. The subplot with the sort of love interest is pretty silly, and it goes on a bit too long. The earnestness of the faith in the church, the sincerity of Heston when he says u0026quot;Holinessu0026quot; to the pope, a man that drives him crazy, is poignant. His faith is deep, almost as if he derives his love of art from a love of God. There are even some nice moments of levity as when a spattered Michaelangelo spits out a gob of paint and it lands near a watching Julius; or when the Pope creates a cardinal out of teen for payment in order to keep up the painting. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWhen it comes to big movies, this definitely lays with a handful of others that will never be surpassed–Titanic tried to be this kind of movie, and proves that even with $200 million and all the nifty gizmos of the modern age, itu0026#39;s very difficult to do; cu0026#39;mon, Rex Harrison and Charlton Heston compared to Leo DeCaprio and Billy Zane–not much of a contest there.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eSee the movie, forgive it its flaws and appreciate the richness and nuance of the relationship between Pope and Artist.”

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