- Source: Testament of Orpheus
Testament of Orpheus (French: Le testament d'Orphée) is a 1960 black-and-white film with a few seconds of color film spliced into it. Directed by and starring Jean Cocteau, who plays himself as an 18th-century poet, the film includes cameo appearances by Pablo Picasso, Jean Marais, Charles Aznavour, Jean-Pierre Leaud, and Yul Brynner. It is considered the final part of The Orphic Trilogy, following The Blood of a Poet (1930) and Orphée (1950).
One critic described it as a "wry, self-conscious re-examination of a lifetime's obsessions" with Cocteau placing himself at the center of the mythological and fictional world he spun throughout his books, films, plays and paintings. The film includes numerous instances of "double takes", including one scene where Cocteau, walking past himself, looks back to see himself in what was described by one scholar as "a retrospective on the Cocteau œuvre".
The New York Times called it "self-serving", noting that the pretension of the film was certainly intended by Cocteau as his last statement made on film: "as much a long-winded self-analysis as an extraordinary succession of visually arresting images".
Picasso had introduced Cocteau to the photographer Lucien Clergue who was brought in to photo-document the film's production. His black-and-white stills were published in 2001 as Jean Cocteau and The Testament of Orpheus.
References
External links
Testament of Orpheus at IMDb
Testament of Orpheus at AllMovie
Testament of Orpheus an essay by Jean Cocteau at the Criterion Collection
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Yul Brynner
- Lucia Bosè
- Claudine Auger
- Daud
- Teori mitos Yesus
- Film Terbaik (BAFTA)
- Orfisme
- Artapanus dari Aleksandria
- Yesus dalam mitologi komparatif
- Turunnya Kristus ke neraka
- Testament of Orpheus
- Orpheus (film)
- Orpheus
- Claudine Auger
- Jean Cocteau
- The Orphic Trilogy
- Luis Miguel Dominguín
- Yul Brynner
- María Casares
- Lucia Bosè