Showing posts with label angelina jolie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label angelina jolie. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2014

Angelina Jolie's Cleopatra.... To Be More Realistic.

Cleopatra: the ultimate mysterious woman, femme fatale, intellectual and political woman drowning in an ocean of Roman testosterone, negative "race" relations, disrespect and fear of female/mother powers._NS

http://www.albawaba.com/entertainment/angelina-jolie-585269

Angelina Jolie's Cleopatra won't be the sex-symbol Elizabeth Taylor's was!

Published June 22nd, 2014 - 16:39 GMT via SyndiGate.info

Angelina Jolie's Cleopatra will be more realistic than Elizabeth Taylor's.
Angelina Jolie's Cleopatra will be more realistic than Elizabeth Taylor's.

Vivien Leigh’s Cleopatra was coquettish. Elizabeth Taylor’s, sophisticated and cool. Angelina Jolie, who recently confirmed that she will be the next Hollywood starlet to don the Egyptian queen’s headdress, is aiming for more historically accurate.

“Her life story was written wrongly,” she said. “We are trying to uncover the truth about her as a leader and not just a sex symbol – which she really wasn’t. She didn’t have many lovers, maybe only two, and they’re men she had children with.”

Hollywood has been fascinated with Cleopatra since one of the fathers of cinema, Georges Melies, featured her in a short silent film in 1899. The queen, described by Sony Pictures entertainment co-chair Amy Pascal as “the greatest female heroine to ever live”, has since inspired more than 50 movies.

But for all the art, plays, and films the Western world has produced about Cleopatra’s life, “we know surprisingly little about her,” said Maria Wyke, author of book “The Roman Mistress”, which explores the pharaoh’s appearances in cinema.

Almost everything historians know about Cleopatra’s life was written by her enemies, Wyke said.

The story of how Cleopatra seduced Roman ruler Julius Caesar by smuggling herself into his palace rolled up in a carpet – perhaps the most oft repeated narrative from her life – came from a record of the Battle of Actium recorded by her opponent, the Roman general Octavian, Wkye said. 

Octavian, Caesar’s heir, identified Cleopatra as a threat after the powerful Roman general Mark Antony abandoned his wife, Octavian’s sister, to pursue a long-term romance with Cleopatra, becoming a de-facto step father to the Egyptian queen’s son with Caesar. 

The historical record frames the battle, which took place on the Ionian Sea, as a “primal struggle between the West and the East, liberty and slavery, republican government and monarchy, and man and woman”.

“To Octavian and his regime, Cleopatra is doubly bad; she is the enemy and she is a female,” Wyke said. “They saw Cleopatra as trying to challenge Rome. They saw her doing it through her sexuality, trying first to seduce Julius Ceasar and then Mark Antony.”

In their records, the Romans offer little context about how the queen worked to promote the safety and security of her people, she said.

“We don’t have a much of a sense of Cleopatra from Cleopatra herself,” she said.
Over the years, film adaptations of Cleopatra’s stories have changed as social attitudes have evolved, Wyke said. 

In films aired in the early 20th century, for example, the queen was portrayed as a “dangerous man killer” because it wasn’t considered appropriate for women to have a public political role. 

In the 1930s, after American women were allowed to vote, Cleopatra was given more opportunity to be a ruler who cared about her country, but in the end, she fell on her knees before Mark Antony and confessed that her love for him was greater than her love for her country.

“She says, ‘I’m no longer a queen. I am a woman,’” Wkye said. “There’s a sense that you can’t be both. When she says that, it restores her to the right priorities that she should have as a woman.”

Because the story touches upon fundamental social issues, such as race, gender and power, filmmakers tend to “map contemporary concerns onto the image of Cleopatra,” said Trevor Fear, a professor at Open University who studies the impact of Cleopatra on audiences.

“Cleopatra and our response to her very much becomes a barometer by which we measure ourselves,” he said. “It also inevitably means that responses to her vary and change depending on a society’s attitudes – she can be seen negatively as disrupting ideological norms, or positively for the very same reasons.”

The latest film is an adaptation of Pulitzer-Prize-winner Stacy Schiff’s nonfiction book, “Cleopatra: A Life,” which paints a more nuanced version of Cleopatra than has historically lit up the silver screen.

Jolie said she had always envisioned Cleopatra as “very glamorous”. Ancient sources say the queen dressed up as the goddess of love, sailed in a perfumed boat, and served drinks made from pearls.

“Then I read her story and found a different side to her – that she was a mother, leader, and an intellect who spoke five languages,” she said. “All of that is more interesting than what she is summed up to be.”

By Elizabeth Stuart

More >
Rome,

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Casting gender-bender: Why shouldn't male roles be rewritten for femme stars? by TATIANA SIEGEL

Posted: Sat., May 15, 2010, 4:00am PT

Casting gender-bender
Why shouldn't male roles be rewritten for femme stars?

By TATIANA SIEGEL

• Helen Mirren joins Russell Brand in 'Arthur' Remake

Hollywood may be running low on good roles for women [not even trying--NS], but that hasn't stopped female thesps from landing a few good parts anyway.

Helen Mirren is the latest leading lady to have a role intended for a man be rewritten for a woman. She recently inked a deal to play the butler opposite Russell Brand's troubled millionaire in Warner Bros.' remake of "Arthur." This is no thankless sidekick role -- John Gielgud's performance in the 1981 comedy earned him an supporting Oscar.

Universal is toying with the idea of taking its Jason Bourne franchise in a new direction. Who says Zoe Saldana couldn't relaunch the action-loaded series as, say, Jessica Bourne?

Though Alexandre Dumas envisioned his Three Musketeers as young men, why not retool with Kristen Stewart, Miley Cyrus and Dakota Fanning as the trio taking on the evil Cardinal Richelieu? (Warner Bros. and Summit might want to consider as a way to differentiate their competing projects).

And while Columbia waits for Will Smith to decide if he's making a new "Men in Black," the studio could summon a quick rewrite for a female agent Jay as a back-up plan. Sandra Bullock would pack them in, and she's probably available ... thanks to the dearth of worthy roles for women.

For Mirren, it was the second time in as many years that the actress signed up for man's work. She also took on the role of Prospero (er Prospera) for Julie Taymor's bigscreen adaptation of Shakespeare's "The Tempest."

Similarly, fellow Oscar-winner Angelina Jolie did some gender bending by nabbing the lead in Columbia Pictures' spy actioner "Salt" (Tom Cruise was originally poised to topline).

Can other actresses leverage their clout to demand a sex change for Hollywood's plum roles?

Contact Tatiana Siegel at tatiana.siegel@variety.com.