The Odyssey (miniseries)
The Odyssey | |
---|---|
Promotional poster | |
Based on |
Odyssey by Homer |
Written by | Andrei Konchalovsky |
Directed by | Andrei Konchalovsky |
Starring |
Armand Assante Greta Scacchi Isabella Rossellini Vanessa L. Williams Bernadette Peters Alan Stenson |
Theme music composer | Eduard Artemyev |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
Nicholas Meyer Francis Ford Coppola Dyson Lovell |
Editor(s) | Michael Ellis |
Cinematography | Sergei Kozlov |
Running time | 176 minutes (2 parts) |
Production company(s) |
Hallmark American Zoetrope |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release |
May 18, 1997 - May 19, 1997 |
The Odyssey is a 1997 Emmy Award-winning and Golden Globe-nominated British-American fantasy–adventure television miniseries based on the ancient Greek epic poem by Homer, The Odyssey. Directed by Andrei Konchalovsky, the miniseries aired in two-parts beginning on May 18, 1997 on NBC. The series won the award for "Outstanding Directing for a Miniseries or a Special". It was filmed in Malta, Turkey, parts of England, and many other places around the Mediterranean, where the story takes place. The international all-star cast includes Armand Assante, Greta Scacchi, Irene Papas, Isabella Rossellini, Bernadette Peters, Christopher Lee, and Vanessa L. Williams.
Plot
Part 1
Ulysses (Armand Assante), the king of the ancient Greek kingdom of Ithaca, is called to service in the Trojan War after the birth of his son Telemachus, much to the dismay of his wife Queen Penelope (Greta Scacchi). Ulysses is worried that he may not return, and tells Penelope that she should remarry by the time Telemachus is a man if he does not return. The war lasts ten years, during which Greece's best soldier, Achilles (Richard Trewett), is killed and the Greeks avenge him by using a giant horse to sneak inside and destroy the city of Troy. Laocoön (Heathcote Williams) tries to warn the Trojans of a vision of this, but is suddenly devoured by a sea monster. On the way back, Ulysses' ego gets the best of him and he tells the gods that he did it himself, which angers Poseidon (voiced by Miles Anderson) so much that he promises to make Ulysses' journey home to Penelope nearly impossible, mentioning that it was he who sent the sea monster to devour Laocoön.
Ulysses and his men initially stop on an island dominated by one-eyed giants, the Cyclopes. A Cyclops named Polyphemus (Reid Asato) traps them in his cave intending to eat them, but Ulysses gets him drunk on wine, causing him to pass out. Then, he sharpens a tree branch into a stake and blinds the Cyclops, allowing them to escape by hiding under sheep skins when he removes the heavy stone door. Polyphemus screams for help, but Ulysses had tricked him into stating that his name was "Nobody", so the Cyclops is shouting that nobody has tricked him, arousing no suspicion. Ulysses and his men escape, but Ulysses taunts the Cyclops who asks his father Poseidon to avenge him. This makes Ulysses' journey home harder.
Ulysses travels to an island where Aeolus (Michael J. Pollard) provides him with a bag of wind to help him home, instructing him to open it when he gets close to Ithaca. One of his men opens it prematurely blowing them off course. Next, they stop at the island of Circe (Bernadette Peters), a beautiful witch, who turns his men into animals and blackmails him into sleeping with her. Ulysses is told of Circe's magic by Hermes (Freddy Douglas), who helps him avoid being transformed as well. Circe tells him to go to the Underworld next, and only then does Ulysses realize that he has actually been tricked by Circe, who put a spell on him so he stayed on the island for five years instead of five days. Ulysses digs his ship out of the sand and tide and sails to the Underworld.
Part 2
Arriving at the Underworld, Tiresias (Christopher Lee) torments Ulysses, recognizing his courage and wit, but criticizes his ego and foolishness. After Ulysses sacrifices a goat into the River Styx, Tiresias tells him that the only way home will take him past a treacherous isle where the monsters Scylla and Charybdis live. As he is running in terror from the underworld, he meets his mother Anticlea (Irene Papas), who committed suicide due to the pain of losing her son. She informs him that back on Ithaca there are multiple suitors, including Eurymachus (Eric Roberts), vying with each other to marry Penelope for her money and power.
Ulysses' boat nears the isle of Scylla and Charybdis. Scylla's six snake heads wreak havoc on the crew, killing many. Everyone but Ulysses is killed when Charybdis creates a whirlpool and destroys his ship. Ulysses arrives on the island where Calypso (Vanessa L. Williams) lives and becomes her prisoner. Meanwhile, Ulysses' now 15-year-old son Telemachus (Alan Stenson) tries to find his father and is told by Athena (Isabella Rossellini) to travel to Sparta and seek out one of his former comrades that fought with him. When Telemachus finds Menelaus (Nicholas Clay), one of Ulysses' comrades, he learns that he doesn't know what happened to Odysseus but believes him to be dead.
Two years later, Hermes arrives, telling Calypso to release Ulysses, and she provides him with a raft to get to Ithaca. Another storm causes problems for Ulysses as he shouts taunts at Poseidon. Poseidon reminds Ulysses about what he said the day he left Troy, and to remember his place as a mere mortal. The next morning, Ulysses washes ashore and is found by some Phaeacians girls. With help from Phaeacian King Alcinous (Jeroen Krabbé), they help Ulysses back to Ithaca. They deliver him at night while he is fast asleep, to a hidden harbor on Ithaca. Upon awakening the next morning, he finds himself on Ithaca where is reunited with Telemachus. Using a peasant disguise provided by Athena, Odysseus meets up with Penelope where she decides to hold a contest to find the person who can string Odysseus' bow. After Ulysses wins the contest, Athena lifts his disguise and Ulysses is assisted by Telemachus in slaying Eurymachus and the suitors. Once the suitors are dead, Ulysses reunites with Penelope.
Cast
- Armand Assante as Ulysses
- Greta Scacchi as Penelope
- Isabella Rossellini as Athena
- Bernadette Peters as Circe
- Eric Roberts as Eurymachus
- Irene Papas as Anticlea
- Jeroen Krabbé as Alcinous
- Geraldine Chaplin as Eurycleia
- Christopher Lee as Tiresias
- Vanessa L. Williams as Calypso
- Nicholas Clay as Menelaus
- Adoni Anastassopoulos as Perimides
- Paloma Baeza as Melanthe
- Ron Cook as Eurybates
- Reid Asato as Polyphemus
- David Barclay as Polyphemus (face operator)
- Mark Hill as Orsilochus
- Pat Kelman as Elatus
- Vincenzo Nicoli as Antinous
- Sally Plumb as Arete (Queen Alcinous)
- Roger Ashton-Griffiths as Polites
- Katie Carr as Nausicaa
- Marius Combo as Agelaus
- Alan Cox as Elpenor
- Will Houston as Anticlus
- Oded Levy as Leocrites
- Peter Page as Philotus
- Michael J. Pollard as Aeolus
- Alan Stenson as Telemachus
- Stuart Thomspon as Antiphus
- Tony Vogel as Eumaeus
- Heathcote Williams as Laocoön
- Michael Tezcan as Eurylochus
- Richard Trewett as Achilles
- Yorgo Voyagis as King Agamemnon
- Peter Woodthorpe as Mentor
- Derek Lea as Hektor
- Freddy Douglas as Hermes
- Miles Anderson as Poseidon (voice)
- Alan Smithie as King Priam
- Vernon Dobtcheff as Aegyptus
- Josh Maguire (actor) as Young Telemachus
- Kresimir Novakovic as Phoenician Sailor (uncredited)
- Max Oddball as Greek Juggler (uncredited)
- Shawna Wenger as Servant (uncredited)
Filming
Special effects
The creature effects for this miniseries were provided by Jim Henson's Creature Shop where they used a talking animatronic pig roasting on a spit, a CGI for Scylla, a rod puppet sea slug-like sea monster that devours Laocoön, and the full-bodied version of Polyphemus.
The boat used in the series was reused a few years later for the Jason and the Argonauts miniseries.
Rating
MPAA rated this film PG-13 for violent sequences and some sensuality.[1]
See also
References
- ↑ "The Odyssey's Rating". Retrieved July 21, 2012.
External links
- The Odyssey at the Internet Movie Database
- The Odyssey at Rotten Tomatoes
- Hallmark Entertainment: The Odyssey
- The Odyssey at Muppet Wiki
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