Julius Caesar
- Synopsis
- Mankiewicz’s version of the tragedy that ‘some Americans regard as their own has stood the test of time’ (The Guardian 2019). With an impressive cast, including Louis Calhern as Caesar, Marlon Brando as Mark Antony, Deborah Kerr, James Mason and John Gielgud.
- Language
- English
- Country
- United States
- Medium
- Film; Video
- Technical information
- Black-and-white / Sound
- Year of release
- 1953
- Duration
- 120 mins; 10,821 feet
Credits
- Director
- Joseph L Mankiewicz
- Producer
- John Houseman
- Cinematographer
- Joseph Ruttenberg
- Writer
- William Shakespeare
- Music
- Miklos Rozsa
- Art Direction
- Cedric Gibbons; Edward Carfagno
- Cast
Additional Details
- Production type
- Fiction Films
- Historical period
- Ancient Rome
- Plays
- Julius Caesar
- Subjects
- Drama
- Keywords
- Shakespeare, William (1564-1616)
- Related items
- Film Night Special: Caesar’s the Name of the Game
Notes
- Notes
- Budget $1.7m.
The Folger Shakespeare Library holds a shooting script dated 7 July 1952 with changes through to 16 July 1952. The Birmingham Shakespeare Library holds a dialogue cutting continuity script. - General
- According to producer John Houseman, he and Mankiewicz decided against making the film in colour or CinemaScope as the tragedy called for ‘intensity and intimacy rather than grandeur; for direct violent confrontations that do not benefit from a lush, polychrome background’ (AFI Catalog). A colourised version was made by Turner Entertainments Co, in 1993.
- Awards
- Academy Awards 1954 - Best Art Direction - Set Decoration, black and white. The film secured nominations for ‘Best Picture’ and ‘Best Actor’ (for Brando) but both lost out to FROM HERE TO ETERNITY and William Holden in STALAG 17.
BAFTA Film Award 1954 - Best British Actor (Gielgud) and Best Foreign Actor (Brando). - Reviews
- Peter Morris’ survey ‘Shakespeare On Film’ Films in Review 24:3 (1973), pp. 132-163 observes ‘Although lacking the polish of Olivier’s films and the visual imagination of Welles’, Mankiewicz’s version has an austerity, a dynamic inner force and an absence of externals that finally produce a more effective and dramatically satisfying presentation than does Bradley’s version of the same film’.
Production Company
Archive
- Name
BoB
- bob@learningonscreen.ac.uk
- Web
- https://learningonscreen.ac.uk/ondemand External site opens in new window
- Phone
- 020 3743 2345
- Address
- Learning on Screen - the British Universities and Colleges Film and Video Council
330 Holborn Gate
1st Floor, Suite 120
London
WC1V 7QH - Notes
- Formerly a service from BUFVC, British Universities Film & Video Council
Distributor (Sale)
- Name
Retail outlets
How to cite this record
Shakespeare, "Julius Caesar". https://learningonscreen.ac.uk/shakespeare/search/index.php/title/11651 (Accessed 26 Nov 2024)