Please consider subscribing to our channel - th-cam.com/users/ShakespeareNetwork New Film adaptation - MISANTHROPOS - www.misanthropos.net - Timon of Athens - Shakespeare on Film! Adapted by Maximianno Cobra, from Shakespeare's "Timon of Athens", the film exposes the timeless challenge of social hypocrisy, disillusion and annihilation against the poetics of friendship, love, and beauty.
Thanks so much. I've been looking forward to this. I know it's not the historical order, but I am starting here and proceeding in the order in which they were written. Sometimes artistic growth is more interesting than historical progression. Very grateful indeed for this.
It's not a play, it's three plays totaling about nine hours without cuts, not counting intermission. It really works well as a mini-series though. Look under "The Wars of the Roses" for a famous TV version that presents more of it than this version.
1:42:00 I do not understand the creative license taken to change the sword fight to the death between the master and servant in this play, that was in this TV production changed to some sort of pillow fight with the pillows tied to the end of sticks. That is not at all what was in the play and I found it to be insulting to the audience and to The Author. I wonder if the person responsible for this decision was the director of the play, or some P.O.S. TV executive. Besides that I think it was a great production.
Does anybody know where the conjuration in I, iv is taken (or derived). It sounds like a typical latin spell, but i cant find the source. Its not in A.E. Waite and its not in my other texts on magick in the ancient world. But if i find out, I'll let yall know.
Please consider subscribing to our channel - th-cam.com/users/ShakespeareNetwork
New Film adaptation - MISANTHROPOS - www.misanthropos.net - Timon of Athens - Shakespeare on Film!
Adapted by Maximianno Cobra, from Shakespeare's "Timon of Athens", the film exposes the timeless challenge of social hypocrisy, disillusion and annihilation against the poetics of friendship, love, and beauty.
Thanks so much. I've been looking forward to this. I know it's not the historical order, but I am starting here and proceeding in the order in which they were written. Sometimes artistic growth is more interesting than historical progression. Very grateful indeed for this.
This play should be presented more often!
It's not a play, it's three plays totaling about nine hours without cuts, not counting intermission. It really works well as a mini-series though. Look under "The Wars of the Roses" for a famous TV version that presents more of it than this version.
I recently finished reading this play. So glad you uploaded this so I can now watch it. Great performances.
WOW! This is EXCELLENT! 😮
Compare Terry Sculley with the portrait of Henry VI in the National Portrait Gallery, London. Quite a remarkable resemblance!
Awesome
Eileen Atkins is incredible as Joan Of Arc!
The lady playing Joan friggen gets it
So far, it’s good
1:42:00 I do not understand the creative license taken to change the sword fight to the death between the master and servant in this play, that was in this TV production changed to some sort of pillow fight with the pillows tied to the end of sticks. That is not at all what was in the play and I found it to be insulting to the audience and to The Author.
I wonder if the person responsible for this decision was the director of the play, or some P.O.S. TV executive.
Besides that I think it was a great production.
Does anybody know where the conjuration in I, iv is taken (or derived). It sounds like a typical latin spell, but i cant find the source. Its not in A.E. Waite and its not in my other texts on magick in the ancient world. But if i find out, I'll let yall know.