The Magic Flute (2006 film)
The Magic Flute | |
---|---|
Directed by | Kenneth Branagh |
Written by | Emanuel Schikaneder (Libretto) Kenneth Branagh (Adapted for the screen by) Stephen Fry (English libretto and dialogue) Kenneth Branagh & Stephen Fry (screenplay) |
Produced by | Pierre-Olivier Bardet Simon Moseley |
Starring | Joseph Kaiser Amy Carson René Pape Lyubov Petrova Benjamin Jay Davis Silvia Moi Tom Randle Ben Uttley Teuta Koço Louise Callinan Kim-Marie Woodhouse Rodney Clarke Charne Rochford |
Cinematography | Roger Lanser |
Edited by | Michael Parker |
Music by | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (conducted by James Conlon) |
Distributed by | Revolver Entertainment Les Films du Losange |
Release date | September 2006 (Toronto International Film Festival) |
Running time | 133 Mins |
Language | English |
Budget | US$27,000,000[1] |
The Magic Flute is Kenneth Branagh's English-language film version of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's singspiel Die Zauberflöte. The film is a co-production between France & the UK, produced by Idéale Audience and in association with UK's The Peter Moores Foundation.
In November 2005, it was announced that, as part of the 250th anniversary celebration of Mozart's birthday, a new film version of The Magic Flute, set during World War I, was to be made, directed by Kenneth Branagh, with a translation by Stephen Fry.[1] The film was presented at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 7, 2006, at the Venice Film Festival on September 8 of that year, and released in Switzerland on 5 April 2007. It has played in many European countries.
The film is the first motion picture version of the opera specifically intended for movie theatres. Ingmar Bergman's 1975 film version was made for Swedish television and only later released to theatres. Branagh's version was shot in Super 35 and released in anamorphic widescreen, while Bergman's was filmed in Academy ratio for television sets of the 1970's.
A DVD of the film was released in France in August 2007 with a bonus soundtrack CD (lasting around 79 minutes) and a "Making of" featurette (50 minutes).[2] The film has also been released on DVD in the Netherlands (in a three-disc set), Finland, Argentina, and Japan.[3]
Interpretation
The story, which has been updated to a World War I setting, follows the structure of the original opera libretto very closely while stripping away all the Freemasonry references, and all of Mozart's music for the opera is retained in the film. Tamino is still sent by the Queen of the Night to rescue her daughter Pamina after Sarastro has apparently kidnapped her, as in the original. His sidekick is still the comical Papageno, a birdcatcher in the original opera, but a man who uses underground pigeons to check for poison gas in the Branagh film. As in the original work, spoken dialogue is interspersed with the arias, duets, and choruses. There are some other updates to the plot mirroring the WW I setting, though, as well as some changes. Tamino is menaced at the beginning, not by a dragon, but by poison gas; the Three Ladies who serve as attendants to the Queen of the Night are turned into hospital nurses, and the Queen herself is made more tragic and less purely evil (Upon climbing the wall of Sarastro's dwelling and seeing through the window that Tamino and Pamina have already been married, she commits suicide by deliberately letting herself fall after accidentally losing her footing). Sarastro in this version is a man in charge of a field hospital, not a high priest, and his ultimate wish is world peace, not simply the triumph of good over evil. (He is also Pamina's father, as in the 1975 Ingmar Bergman film version of the opera, and the Queen of the Night is apparently his estranged ex-wife, although this is never directly stated.) Sarastro desperately tries to save the Queen's life before she falls, unlike the character in the original opera. And, just as in the Bergman film, Monostatos commits suicide at the end. Papageno does not wear a feather filled costume as in the original stage work, nor does his sweetheart Papagena, though the pair are frequently accompanied by birds - especially chickens - and their lines are filled with clever bird references. The "water trial" that Tamino must endure occurs when the trench that he and Pamina are in becomes flooded, and the trial of fire is a walk through a battlefield in which bombs are constantly exploding.
The comedy in The Magic Flute is retained faithfully in the film. As in the opera, the beautiful young Papagena pretends to be an old woman as part of one of the tests that Papageno must undergo before winning her, and, again as in the original work, the film audience sees her only as an old woman until near the end (except in a two-paged spread that Papageno reads). However, because this is possible on film, the old Papagena is played by a genuine elderly woman (Liz Smith in a non-singing role), not by soprano Silvia Moi, who plays the young Papagena, while in stage versions of the opera, both characters are always played by the same singer, who, as the old woman, either covers her face and speaks with a cackle, or dons an "old woman" mask which she conveniently throws off when she turns into the young version of herself.
The film completely removes all the sexist references from the original opera libretto and plays down the so-called "racist" aspects. The black Monostatos is still a villain and would-be rapist, but nowhere in the film is it implied that this has anything to do with his race. In one aria, Monostatos broods that Pamina may not want him for a lover because of his race, much as Othello does in Shakespeare's play when he broods over whether or not Desdemona has been unfaithful.
Casting
Almost the entire cast is made up of classically trained singer-actors with operatic voices. Branagh consulted with conductor James Conlon over casting choices, but it was Branagh who had the final say, preferring to cast singers who "looked the part" even if they were relatively unknown, rather than choosing well-known operatic stars who were physically unsuitable. (René Pape, who has sung and acted the role of Sarastro in several productions of the opera onstage, is the best-known singer in the entire film.) Branagh also expressed a wish not to cast non-singing actors and have their voices dubbed by opera singers, probably because he felt that seemed too artificial.[4]
- Joseph Kaiser as Tamino
- Benjamin Jay Davis as Papageno
- Amy Carson as Pamina
- René Pape as Sarastro
- Lyubov Petrova as Queen of the Night
- Tom Randle as Monostatos
- Silvia Moi as Papagena
- Liz Smith as Old Papagena
- Teuta Koco, Louise Callinan, Kim-Marie Woodhouse as The Three Ladies
- William Dutton, Luke Lampard and Jamie Manton as The Three Boys
Release
Box office
The film, made on an estimated budget of $27,000,000, has so far grossed a total of $1,954,337.[5]
Critical reception
The film has mostly received unusually good reviews in Europe for a Branagh film - his films generally receive better reviews in the U.S.[6](Branagh's 2006 film version of Shakepeare's "As You Like It" received extremely harsh reviews in England [7] but very favorable reviews in the U.S ,[8] where it premiered on HBO rather than in movie theatres.) However, Branagh's Magic Flute has, as of January 2011, never been released in the U.S. nor shown on U.S. television, despite the fact that such elaborately made operatic films as Franco Zeffirelli's La Traviata and Otello, as well as Francesco Rosi's Carmen, were released in the U.S. to theatres in the 1980's, received acclaim, and were later shown on U.S. cable TV. All three of these previous films were made in the opera's respective original languages, not in English as the Branagh Magic Flute was; nevertheless, they were given major theatrical releases in the U.S. much like the standard Hollywood film. The soundtrack album from the 2006 Magic Flute has also never been made available in the U.S. . Music critic Mark Swed, of the Los Angeles Times, who has seen the Dutch DVD of the film, blamed distributors for not being willing to release the film in the United States, and for not issuing either a Region 1 DVD or a region-free DVD release, thus making it impossible for most United States DVD player owners to see the film.[9]
Variety's Derek Elley, who saw the film at the Venice Film Festival, gave it a mixed review, but sacrificed much of his credibility by confusing the characters Sarastro (the wise and kindly enemy of the Queen of the Night) and Monostatos (his lecherous henchman, who tries to rape Pamina and eventually defects to the Queen's side).[10]
Total Film mistakenly blamed Mozart for the "silliness of the story",[11] apparently forgetting that Mozart wrote only the music, not the libretto (the libretto is by Emanuel Schikaneder).
Ronald Bergan, in his online blog for the British newspaper The Guardian criticized Elley and others for apparently not informing themselves more about the original opera before they began to write their reviews of the Branagh film.[12]
Awards
in 2009, three years after the release of the film, Roger Lanser, who has photographed several other Kenneth Branagh-directed films, received a Cinematographer of the Year Award from the Australian Cinematographers Society for his work on The Magic Flute.[13] Because the film has not played in Los Angeles yet, it still has not qualified for any Academy Awards.
References
- ^ a b "Branagh to make Mozart opera film". BBC News. 2005-11-01. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
- ^ Review of European DVD in LA Times
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0475331/
- ^ "Branagh's magical, mistreated 'Flute'". Los Angeles Times. August 24, 2008.
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0475331/business
- ^ http://mobile.salon.com/ent/movies/feature/2000/06/09/branagh/index1.html
- ^ http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1183512-as_you_like_it/
- ^ http://www.metacritic.com/tv/shows/asyoulikeit?q=As%20You%20Like%20It
- ^ http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/arts/la-ca-flute24-2008aug24,0,2963032.story Review of European DVD in LA Times
- ^ Elley, Derek (2006-09-07). "The Magic Flute Movie Review". Variety.
- ^ http://www.totalfilm.com/reviews/cinema/the-magic-flute
- ^ Bergan, Ronald (2007-12-10). "Why were film critics stumped by The Magic Flute?". The Guardian. London.
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0475331/awards
External links
- The Magic Flute at IMDb
- Official site for The Magic Flute
- Official site for Ben Davis (Papageno)
- Official site for Silvia Moi (Papagena)
- Official site for Amy Carson (Pamina)
- Official site for René Pape (Sarastro)
- Official site for Joseph Kaiser (Tamino)
- Official site for James Conlon (Conductor of the music in the film)