The Agony and the Ecstasy

The Agony and the Ecstasy

By Carol Reed

  • Genre: Drama
  • Release Date: 1965-10-07
  • Advisory Rating: Unrated
  • Runtime: 2h 16min
  • Director: Carol Reed
  • Production Company: Dino de Laurentiis Cinematografica
  • Production Country: Italy, United States of America
  • iTunes Price: USD 9.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
7/10
7
From 127 Ratings

Description

Charlton Heston and Rex Harrison portray two of the Renaissance's most colorful figures in this historical drama based on Irving Stone's best-seller set in the early 16th century. When Pope Julius ll (Rex Harrison) commissions Michelangelo (Charlton Heston) to paint the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, the artist initially refuses. Virtually forced to do the job by Julius, Michelangelo later destroys his own work and flees to Rome. Eventually resumed, the project becomes a battle of wills fueled by artistic and temperamental differences that form the core of this movie. The Agony and the Ecstasy was nominated for an Oscar for Cinematography, and named one of the best films of 1965 by the National Board of Review.

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Reviews

  • Awesome

    5
    By wwwwwwwwwwjaklfjal
    If you follow Heston's acting career you will instantly fall in love. The facts aren't all right, but it is a great movie! I love it!!!
  • Ignore the blah, blah, blah from would-be experts!

    5
    By 3rdChildDivorce
    This film is what typifies a classic. The fact is that we cannot expect Hollywood of the 40's to be that of the 50's, anymore than we cannot expect the 60's Hollywood to be as intellectual as the Hollywood of today. Given the time period in which the movie was shot I like to think that it's a grand example of yesterdays story-telling abilities! Heston & Harrison did a brilliant job showing what it might have been like for a person of power to argue with the likes of someone with the talent & convivtion of Michelangelo. Ironically they were both dependant upon each other. The fact is that without Michelangelo the Pope would have had just a plain plaster ceiling. By the same token without the Pope, Michelangelo would almost have certainly had to abandon his passions in order to survive. This story could have been told from 20 different perspectives! Each yielding criticisms & praise. Shoes come in different sizes for a reason. We would do well to accept the same in the movie business! If you truly love movies, you'll enjoy this perspective immensly. See it yourself, it's the wise choice.
  • A flawed classic, decent film nevertheless

    4
    By cwroundabout7
    True to its 60s lineage, this effort ignores the personal eccentricities that defined Michaelangelo's life and glosses over Florentine politics, focusing instead on the ceiling itself. The process of developing the final design, almost syncretic, comes alive in typical Heston fashion - that is to say there's a bit of divine intervention involved. If you enjoyed Ben-Hur and other Heston efforts in this genre, odds are you'll enjoy this film.

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