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The Gospel According to St. Matthew [VHS]
  

The Gospel According to St. Matthew [VHS] (1965)

Starring: Enrique Irazoqui, Margherita Caruso Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini Rating: NR (Not Rated) Format: VHS Tape
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (56 customer reviews)


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Product Details


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Released in 1964, The Gospel According to St. Matthew marks an important shift away from the gritty urban realism of Pasolini's earlier films towards the visionary imagery of his later work. A committed but far from conformist Marxist, Pasolini took a powerful and immediate approach, with no false piety or sentimentality. Employing a cast drawn largely from the peasantry of Southern Italy, where the film was shot, the action has the feel of a mystery play reenacted for the camera. Enrique Irazoqui's Christ is part folk hero, part political agitator, but always pursuing his destiny with unswerving conviction. The disciples make for vivid contrasts in facial expression, while Susanna Pasolini (mother of) is unforgettable as Mary, distraught at the Crucifixion. The recourse to handheld cameras and zoom sequences is well ahead of its time, while the almost jump-cut editing and diverse soundtrack--including Bach, Mozart and the Missa Luba--enhance the sense of action being experienced as it happens. A classic of post-war cinema which has lost none of its urgent humanity. --Richard Whitehouse

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Customer Reviews

56 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (56 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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86 of 89 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pasolini's first masterpiece, November 29, 2003
By J. Clark (metro New York City) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
This is one of the most astonishing films I have seen: probing, complex, lyrical, and at times emotionally overwhelming. NOTE: Do not blame WaterBearer for the poor-quality DVD; the Pasolini Foundation, which controls the film, provided the print and also vetoed chapters to encourage viewers to watch it only in its entirety. The overly edge-enhanced image is improved by turning your TV's sharpness setting to its 'blurriest.'

Can you imagine a less likely candidate to make what, after 40 years, may still be the greatest and most moving film about Jesus Christ? Pasolini was not only a gay Marxist but a devout atheist. His fascination with Jesus may have connected with his most personal theme, that of the outsider (with his artistic, political and sexual nature, he saw himself as the consummate outsider). Although one of Italy's leading intellectuals, he also moved among the laborers, indigents, and hustlers (some of whom were his lovers, not to mention the inspiration for his early poetry and novels), whose counterparts two millennia earlier had walked with Jesus.

Jesus's story also let Pasolini explore the complexities of real-world politics even while recreating an ancient culture with astonishing immediacy. He also relished the opportunity to play with a vast, and eclectic, artistic tradition, from Jean-Luc Godard's striking documentary style in "the two trials of Christ.... to painting... Piero della Francesca (in the Pharisees' clothes), Byzantine art, Christ's face like a Rouault, etc."

We also see El Greco not only in some compositions but in the intriguing casting of Enrique Irazoqui, a Catalan economics student, as Jesus. Pasolini had also considered such young, subversive literary lions as Jack Kerouac and Yevgeny Yevtushenko. With Pasolini's encyclopedic knowledge of all the arts, you could go on indefinitely trying to unravel the cultural allusions which make up just one strand of the film's rich texture.

The result, as they say, is history. It is like no biblical picture seen before; a quantum leap beyond the artificiality of, say, King of Kings, both De Milles's silent version and Nicholas Ray's 1961 remake, and later pictures like Scorsese's Last Temptation of Christ are inconceivable without Pasolini's model.

Pasolini had the uncanny gift for using the simplest, most economical means to bring his vision to life. Some of the locations are breathtaking, from an enormous city which seems to grow out of a mountainside to the surreal wasteland where Satan tempts Jesus (filmed on Mount Etna). By imaginatively selecting these locales - and not having to build sets - Pasolini powerfully recreated the feel of the ancient Middle East at a tiny fraction of the cost of a Hollywood production.

He also took enormous pains to cast exactly the right faces. Radically, he chose real farmers and workers to enact their historical counterparts (instead of John Wayne playing a Roman centurion as in The Greatest Story Ever Told). Perhaps the film's most intriguing aspect is that all the characters seem drained of an inner emotional life (which elsewhere Pasolini explores rigorously). This is sacred material presented in the style of legend. This visual and performance approach matches Matthew's prose to perfection. But there could also be more provocative reasons for it.

Take the Sermon on the Mount montage, consisting entirely of close-ups of Jesus preaching with immense force - the background reflecting each changing verse. (The footage came from the abandoned sacred-style approach; Pasolini ingeniously integrated it by using sharp editorial rhythms.) Here as throughout the film, Pasolini's Jesus is both earthly and otherworldly, harsh and tender. And although his inner life remains completely opaque, he emerges - perhaps in part because he has been 'de-psychologized' - as a figure of power but also complexity and ambiguity. Pasolini was forever picking apart the discrepancies not only in society - including religion and politics (as seen in Accattone and Hawks and the Sparrows) - but in himself. Here we see the "tough" Jesus, who "comes not to bring peace," smites a fig tree, violently hurls moneychangers out of the Temple, and warns people that they are either "with me or against me." But we also see the Jesus of love and compassion, who heals the sick, treats children with affection, and performs miracles (most are breathtaking, reproduced with the simplest means, as when he walks on water).

The only aspect of this magnificent film which does not work for me is the self-consciously eclectic (and Oscar-nominated!) use of music, which extends from Bach to Prokofiev to folk music. Pasolini wants this polyglot score to create subtle, and shifting, tensions between the world of ancient Judea and our own, but its incongruity and repetitiveness are sometimes distracting. By contrast, the use of silence is stunning. He communicates so much in the wordless opening scene between the pregnant Mary and her baffled husband, just by their faces and postures. These are people truly, yet to them confusingly, touched by the divine. He also captures the tactile reality of their world (you can feel the stones), even as his simple but striking compositions connect his own vision with such Renaissance masters as Giotto. This is filmmaking at its most subtle, resonant, and - while acknowledging the long tradition of Christian motifs in art - original. Pasolini brings together history, art and his own probing genius to depict Jesus in all of his humanity and divinity.

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75 of 79 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too good to be true, October 23, 2004
By Timothy Hulsey (Charlottesville, VA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
A budget release of Pasolini's _Gospel According to St. Matthew_ would seem too good to be true. Alas, this particular DVD proves neither good nor true.

The only soundtrack here is the English-dubbed version. The original Italian-language soundtrack is not available, and the sound mix is seriously compromised whenever the dubbing is inserted. Ironically, this budget version boasts a slightly better transfer than the thirty-dollar deluxe edition. But even so, the picture is barely watchable, and even shows a few lines here and there that make the film look as if it had been copied off an old VCR.

Despite the fact that this DVD is seven minutes shorter than the film's official running time, it doesn't seem to lack any footage. But the film does run at a faster speed than it ought, which throws the editing off kilter and makes the dubbing feel a little rushed. There are no extras, of course.

_Gospel According to St. Matthew_ is one of a few truly great religious films, but it has yet to receive even an adequate presentation on DVD.
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23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Great film, poor DVD, August 4, 2003
By A Customer
Pasolini's "The Gospel According to St. Matthew" is one of the great Italian director's most accessable films. It is also one of the few films about the life of Christ that looks and feels as if it was filmed during the time that Christ lived - this is no Hollywood production - this feels like the real thing (the one star is not for this 5 star film.)

However I want to warn potential purchasers that this Water Bearer version is a high priced non-anamorphic, poor quality print (although it claims to be digitally remastered), it has burned in subtitles with no chapter stops. I had thought DVD production and quality had improved greatly in the last couple of years, this is an unfortunate (1 star) exception. If you want to see another great Pasolini film with a great anamorphic almost pristine transfer I would direct you to MGM's version of his "The Decameron".

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Rendition of the Gospel, EVER
This is the best rendition of the Gospel that I know of, having seen many others including as far back as the "King of Kings" of De Mille and Griffith's rendition in... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Alberto M. Barral

5.0 out of 5 stars I don't know about this dvd but the film is wonderful
There are two things I love about this film, no three.

One, the Jesus to me is the most authentic looking Jesus, to my minds eye, that I have ever seen on film or in... Read more
Published 3 months ago by M. Minkler

1.0 out of 5 stars Gospel of Matthew
I was very disappointed in the product as I thought it was like the video the Gospel of John which was excellent. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Ivan R. Pearson

5.0 out of 5 stars A Paradoxical Masterpiece.
I don't hesitate for an instant in giving this film a five-star rating. It is a rare, poetic, honest and faithful portrayal of the story of Christ as related in the gospel of... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Ted Byrd

5.0 out of 5 stars This is the version to see
The Gospel According to St. Matthew by Passolini is not only the best and most faithful film on the life, death and resurrection of Jesus, it is one of the greatest films ever... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Charles Haddox

3.0 out of 5 stars Almost Ruining A Masterpiece With Poor Dubbing
THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO SAINT MATTHEW is Pasolini's most nearly perfect film. It is beautifully conceived, its cast is perfectly chosen as are the locations for outdoor shooting... Read more
Published 8 months ago by James S. Eisenberg

2.0 out of 5 stars The Gospel According to St. Matthew

I purchased this film as recommended by a devotional I was reading in December.

After about 30 minutes my family: a teen, a college student, a forty... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Simply Said

4.0 out of 5 stars Well worth the purchase
For the Christian and anyone who is seeking Truth, clearly this film is a wonderful tool to help keep one's focus on the real meaning of Christmas, Easter, life. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Sue W. Arnold

3.0 out of 5 stars The colorized version is terrible
Don't watch the colorized version! Not only have they colorized a film that could have been made in color had the director wanted, but they have edited out 45 minutes of the... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Adam D. Parchen Rasmussen

5.0 out of 5 stars Bravissimo
The Gospel According to St. Matthew (otherwise known by its native title of "Il Vangelo secondo Matteo") is considered by many to be the magnum opus of famed and controversial... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Teresa Anson

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