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'''''Cleopatra''''' is the name of several movies about [[Cleopatra VII of Egypt|the last Egyptian queen of the same name]]. Movies of this title were released in [[1912]], [[1917]], [[1920]], [[1934]], [[1963]], and [[1999]].
'''''Cleopatra''''' is the name of several movies about [[Cleopatra VII of Egypt|the last Egyptian queen of the same name]]. Movies of this title were released in [[1912]], [[1917]], [[1920]], [[1934]], [[1963]], and [[1999]].
*[[Cleopatra (1917 film)|1917 film]]

== [[Cleopatra (1917 film)|1917 film]] ==
*[[Cleopatra (1934 film)|1934 film]]

== [[Cleopatra (1934 film)|1934 film]] ==
The 1934 film was nominated for an [[Academy Award for Best Picture]] and won for cinematography (Victor Milner). It was written by [[Bartlett Cormack]], [[Vincent Lawrence]], and [[Valdemar Young]] and was directed by [[Cecil B. DeMille]]. It starred [[Claudette Colbert]] as [[Cleopatra VII of Egypt|Cleopatra]], [[Warren William]] as [[Julius Caesar]], [[Henry Wilcoxon]] as [[Marc Antony]], [[Joseph Schildkraut]] as King [[Herod Agrippa I|Herod]], and [[Ian Keith]] as [[Augustus Caesar|Octavian]]. This movie was made during the time the Hays code had just taken place so it got away with more then other movies later might have.
The 1934 film was nominated for an [[Academy Award for Best Picture]] and won for cinematography (Victor Milner). It was written by [[Bartlett Cormack]], [[Vincent Lawrence]], and [[Valdemar Young]] and was directed by [[Cecil B. DeMille]]. It starred [[Claudette Colbert]] as [[Cleopatra VII of Egypt|Cleopatra]], [[Warren William]] as [[Julius Caesar]], [[Henry Wilcoxon]] as [[Marc Antony]], [[Joseph Schildkraut]] as King [[Herod Agrippa I|Herod]], and [[Ian Keith]] as [[Augustus Caesar|Octavian]]. This movie was made during the time the Hays code had just taken place so it got away with more then other movies later might have.


== [[Cleopatra (1963 film)|1963 film]] ==
*[[Cleopatra (1963 film)|1963 film]]
[[Image:Image-1963 Cleopatra trailer screenshot (35)2.jpg|thumb|250px|Elizabeth Taylor in "Cleopatra" (1963)]]
[[Image:Image-1963 Cleopatra trailer screenshot (35)2.jpg|thumb|250px|Elizabeth Taylor in "Cleopatra" (1963)]]
Produced by [[Walter Wanger]], the 1963 film won [[Academy Awards]] for cinematography, art direction, costumes, sets, and special effects. It was also nominated in the [[Academy Award for Best Picture|best picture]] category. It was written by [[Sidney Buchman]], [[Ben Hecht]], [[Ranald MacDougall]], and [[Joseph L. Mankiewicz]] from a book by [[Carlo Mario Franzero]] and was directed by Mankiewicz. It starred [[Elizabeth Taylor]] as [[Cleopatra VII of Egypt|Cleopatra]], [[Richard Burton (actor)|Richard Burton]] as [[Marc Antony]], and [[Rex Harrison]] as [[Julius Caesar]] (nominated for [[Academy Award for Best Actor]]). The supporting cast included [[Roddy McDowall]] as the villainous [[Caesar Augustus|Octavian]], [[Martin Landau]] as Antony's aide Rufio, and [[Hume Cronyn]] as Cleopatra's servant Sosigenes. ''Cleopatra'' premiered at the Rivoli Theatre in [[New York City]] on [[June 12]], [[1963]].
Produced by [[Walter Wanger]], the 1963 film won [[Academy Awards]] for cinematography, art direction, costumes, sets, and special effects. It was also nominated in the [[Academy Award for Best Picture|best picture]] category. It was written by [[Sidney Buchman]], [[Ben Hecht]], [[Ranald MacDougall]], and [[Joseph L. Mankiewicz]] from a book by [[Carlo Mario Franzero]] and was directed by Mankiewicz. It starred [[Elizabeth Taylor]] as [[Cleopatra VII of Egypt|Cleopatra]], [[Richard Burton (actor)|Richard Burton]] as [[Marc Antony]], and [[Rex Harrison]] as [[Julius Caesar]] (nominated for [[Academy Award for Best Actor]]). The supporting cast included [[Roddy McDowall]] as the villainous [[Caesar Augustus|Octavian]], [[Martin Landau]] as Antony's aide Rufio, and [[Hume Cronyn]] as Cleopatra's servant Sosigenes. ''Cleopatra'' premiered at the Rivoli Theatre in [[New York City]] on [[June 12]], [[1963]].

The film is infamous for almost bankrupting [[20th Century Fox]]. It was made at an estimated cost ranging from $36 million to $44 million -- an impossibly extravagant figure for that time; in [[2005]] dollars the amounts would be $215 million to $260 million, the most expensive film ever produced (see [[List of most expensive films (inflation)]]), partly due to the fact that the film's elaborate, complicated sets, costumes and props had to be constructed twice, once during a botched shoot in [[London]] and once more when the production relocated to [[Rome]].

''Cleopatra'' was not a box-office flop by any means, in fact the film had the highest gross of the year, returning some $26 million in revenue to the studio, but even those earnings weren't enough to recoup the studio's investment. With such a huge cost and the price of movie tickets at that time, ''Cleopatra'' didn't have a chance of making a profit on its first run. The film could ultimately be said to have made a small profit from television sales and other revenue. The financial strain from the film forced the studio to undertake drastic retrenchments. The suit of golden armor worn in the movie by Elizabeth Taylor was made from real gold, at a cost of about $1 million. It was so heavy that she could only wear it for short periods of time.


== [[Cleopatra (1999 film)|1999 film]] ==
== [[Cleopatra (1999 film)|1999 film]] ==

Revision as of 04:17, 7 August 2006

File:Films named cleopatra.JPG

Cleopatra is the name of several movies about the last Egyptian queen of the same name. Movies of this title were released in 1912, 1917, 1920, 1934, 1963, and 1999.

The 1934 film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture and won for cinematography (Victor Milner). It was written by Bartlett Cormack, Vincent Lawrence, and Valdemar Young and was directed by Cecil B. DeMille. It starred Claudette Colbert as Cleopatra, Warren William as Julius Caesar, Henry Wilcoxon as Marc Antony, Joseph Schildkraut as King Herod, and Ian Keith as Octavian. This movie was made during the time the Hays code had just taken place so it got away with more then other movies later might have.

Elizabeth Taylor in "Cleopatra" (1963)

Produced by Walter Wanger, the 1963 film won Academy Awards for cinematography, art direction, costumes, sets, and special effects. It was also nominated in the best picture category. It was written by Sidney Buchman, Ben Hecht, Ranald MacDougall, and Joseph L. Mankiewicz from a book by Carlo Mario Franzero and was directed by Mankiewicz. It starred Elizabeth Taylor as Cleopatra, Richard Burton as Marc Antony, and Rex Harrison as Julius Caesar (nominated for Academy Award for Best Actor). The supporting cast included Roddy McDowall as the villainous Octavian, Martin Landau as Antony's aide Rufio, and Hume Cronyn as Cleopatra's servant Sosigenes. Cleopatra premiered at the Rivoli Theatre in New York City on June 12, 1963.

The 1999 Cleopatra (produced by Hallmark Entertainment) starred Leonor Varela (Cleopatra), Timothy Dalton (Caesar), Rupert Graves (Octavius) and Billy Zane (Antony). Based on the book Memoirs of Cleopatra by Margaret George and even less faithful to history than the earlier versions, it was shown first on television and then released on videotape and DVD.