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Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies

Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies

A Distinguished Company Breathes Life Into Shakespeare’s Lusty Age of FALSTAFFMar. 16, 1965115 Min.
Your rating: 0
9 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Campanadas a medianoche 1965 123movies, Full Movie Online – Sir John Falstaff (Orson Welles) is the hero in this compilation of extracts from Shakespeare’s “Henry IV” and other plays, made into a connected story of Falstaff’s career as young Prince Hal’s (Keith Baxter’s) drinking companion. The massive Knight roisters with and without the Prince, philosophizes comically, goes to war (in his own fashion), and meets his final disappointment, set in a real-looking late medieval England..
Plot: The culmination of Orson Welles’s lifelong obsession with Shakespeare’s robustly funny and ultimately tragic antihero, Sir John Falstaff; the often soused friend of King Henry IV’s wayward son Prince Hal. Integrating elements from both Henry IV plays as well as Richard II, Henry V, and The Merry Wives of Windsor.
Smart Tags: #shakespeare’s_henry_iv_part_two #shakespeare’s_henry_v #shakespeare’s_the_merry_wives_of_windsor #shakespeare’s_henry_iv_part_one #betrayal_by_a_friend #male_female_relationship #tavern_keeper #male_bonding #men_in_tights #1400s #prince #knight #king #flail #horseback_riding #tragic_event #voice_over_narration #end_of_friendship #faltering_friendship #little_boy #boy


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Ratings:

7.7/10 Votes: 9,221
96% | RottenTomatoes
94/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 159 Popularity: 9.479 | TMDB

Reviews:

Orson Welles brings a lot of depth to Shakespeare’s characters.
Shakespeare Scholars are always complaining how this film used and abused Shakespeare’s plays but I think what was done in this film was pretty clever: Take the character of Falstaff from several plays and piece them together to get a complete picture of the man.

Of the two Orson Welles Shakespeare films I’ve seen, this one and “Othello” (1954), both had the ability to make me want to read Shakespeare’s plays and any film that makes you want to read what the author wrote is a very positive thing to say about a film. So there Shakespeare Scholars!

I did go out and buy the books with the plays used in this film, much like trying to solve a puzzle to see how the pieces really fit. And Orson did twist and bend things a little to make it come out his way.

I also read in Videohound’s “World Cinema” (1999) by Elliot Wilhelm that this film may be getting a restoration. If it’s as good a restoration as “Othello”, I’m looking forward to it!

Welles as Falstaff really shines in this film and Falstaff’s later rejection by Henry V is one of the most sobering in cinema. And Welles still has some very creative power left in him by 1965, look at the Battle of Shrewsbury scenes. When it comes to battle scenes they’ve been done probably only 10 different ways by 1000 directors in a 1000 movies over the years, but this one is probably the most memorable. It’s also strange to have in the heat of battle Falstaff looking like a big metal beach ball running around back and forth trying to avoid any conflict.

This film is also a good example of good music and how to use it in a film and it’s another one of my favorite movies about Merrie ol’ England.

Review By: z_crito2001
technically imperfect, unwieldy, hard to follow… and yet, it’s still balls-to-the-wall great
Orson Welles appears in this film larger than ever (ironically, according to the IMDb trivia, he had to slim down to play the role – perhaps there was extra padding, one can only assume). He has the build of a boulder, and the face of the character Hagrid from Harry Potter aged in his 70’s. Welles was in his late 40’s, turning 50, by the time he took on the role of Sir John “Jack” Falstaff, the man who held his own court and council during the years of Henry the IV, but was sort of an outsider. He was a fool, a liar, a sweet guy who could get the attention of men and woman far and wide – from stutterers to the likes of women played by Jeanne Moreau – and yet he was never really ‘apart’ of the kingdom, that stuffy place where Henry (as played by a platitudinal John Gielgud) is in ill-health from the beginning of this story – even as he, along with his son the Prince Hal (later Henry the Fifth) – controlled the kingdom from outside invading influences.

I saw the film with someone who didn’t really get what many of the characters want or any dimensions to them (outside of Falstaff, who is a force of nature). I can understand it. It’s hard to get a handle at times on this story or even some of these characters; some of that, frankly, we can put on the Shakespeare dialog, which is beautiful and beguiling and deep and existential and poetic and, in 21st century times, slippery almost. But for me, the emotional component was always there, and Welles was a Mega-Master of Shakespeare even back in the 1930’s (re his productions of Macbeth, Julius Caesar, even the rough draft of this film, Five Kings). So by the time he got to this, rough-hewed as it is, Chimes at Midnight is like his Final Dissertation as a master filmmaker.

Can I just take a moment out to talk how great Welles is here? He commands every second on screen. It can be said he hams it up. Can you blame him really, if it falls into that? I read more depth though in nearly every scene; even in those where Jack Falstaff hears people mock him, he takes it in stride, and can give it as good, or better, than he takes. His tongue is so sharp, and his reactions so BIG, that it’s easy to read this as campy. But it’s a deeply felt performance, with Welles swallowing this character into his solar plexus. He never plays Falstaff as being as regal as, say, Henry IV, or as Hotspur Percy, who is like many a Game of Thrones character (to put it in modern parlance) who just wants that friggin crown and wants it all his own.

I think the characters know what they want, or are trying to figure it out far as it goes. If there can be a legitimate criticism it’s that Baxter, as Hal/young Henry V, is kind of the weak link among the cast. Albeit this is a cast with Welles, Moreau, Gielgud, Fernando Rey in a small but commanding role as another warrior. But he takes up a lot of screen time, and is best when having to do fierce reaction or passive poise – enjoying the company of Falstaff he’s fine but but totally convincing. No matter – when someone like Welles or someone like Gielgud or Rodway as Percy or Rutherford as the Mistress mining the place Falstaff calls his court… it makes the journey much more entertaining. When you have a Shakespeare adaptation, especially one as ambitious and wild as this one, you got to have a cast that can pull out the emotional connections. They’re here.

And if Welles really pulls out all the stops with his acting – it may even be his dare I say most towering, monolithic work as an actor, with the range going from bawdy comedy and sweet kindness to shattered tragic tones and bewilderment and shock, everything is there – the filmmaking reaches up to it. There is a battle sequence midway through the film as Henry’s troops fight oncoming invaders. My God. Just… if you can get a copy of the film, if nothing else that sequence holds up as one of the two or three essential battles on film. There’s chaos, there’s fast cutting (yet, even with Welles, you always can see what’s going on, far as it goes), and yet there’s a story going on as Falstaff, who is on the sidelines of the action, tries not to get involved and even plays dead, and Welles is really crafty in cutting back to this. He apparently only had 100 men at a time to work with. He makes it look like triple that – and all the mud and blood that goes with the dirtiness of an epic battle.

It’s a filmmaker who loves Shakespeare so deeply, yet he connects it with his own life as an artist and doesn’t lose that. It may not matter to some, but I liked that this could be a metaphor for not just Welles but anyone on the margins looking in, unable to break through (especially at the end, as Henry V finally reaches the throne). The energy and force of the direction, the acting, the writing, it triumphs over technical flaws – the syncing of dialog in parts, the fact that parts just connect enough, as it did with Othello in the filmmaking – and in a couple of the performances in spurts. It ranks with the major Welles films, and I do hope it gets to DVD soon (I lucked out with a Welles retrospective that kind of had to play it to be complete) so I can revisit it; I have a feeling, with time, it’ll deepen like Kane with appreciation for the craft and ideas on display.

Review By: Quinoa1984

Other Information:

Original Title Campanadas a medianoche
Release Date 1965-03-16
Release Year 1965

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 59 min (119 min), 1 hr 53 min (113 min) (Spain), 1 hr 59 min (119 min) (Switzerland), 1 hr 55 min (115 min) (USA), 1 hr 57 min (117 min) (Argentina)
Budget 800000
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Not Rated
Genre Comedy, Drama, History
Director Orson Welles
Writer William Shakespeare, Raphael Holinshed, Orson Welles
Actors Orson Welles, Jeanne Moreau, Margaret Rutherford
Country Switzerland, Spain
Awards Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award3 wins & 2 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Mono
Aspect Ratio 1.66 : 1
Camera Arriflex Cameras
Laboratory foto film madrid s.a.
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm

Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies
Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies
Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies
Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies
Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies
Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies
Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies
Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies
Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies
Chimes at Midnight 1965 123movies
Original title Campanadas a medianoche
TMDb Rating 7.264 159 votes

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