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Henry Iv (1984)
Released By: Media Home Entertainment   Rating: PG-13   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Media Home Entertainment
Genre: Comedy
MPAA Rating: PG-13
Director: Marco Bellocchio
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Claudia Cardinale, Marcello Mastroianni
Published ID: 1919
UPC: 826039300597,
Plot: This Italian version of {+Henry IV} is based on the Luigi Pirandello play rather than Shakespeare's historical work. Moreover, the Henry depicted herein is not the English king, but the 11th-century Holy Roman emperor. In addition, central character Marcello Mastroianni doesn't play emperor Henry, but instead a contemporary man of wealth who thinks he's Henry. Also, Mastroianni's delusion is not a delusion, but a subterfuge. Well, we told you it was based on a Pirandello play, so enter ye and leave all sanity behind. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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"A towering performance of Pirandello's masterpiece" plus a superb Astor Piazzolla score
Added 1/8/2007

PRODUCT DESCRIPTION:

Based upon the play HENRY VI by Luigi Pirandello
Screenplay by Marco Bellocchio of Tonino Guerra
Music by Astor Piazzolla
Directed by Marco Bellocchio

The work of Luigi Pirandello -- Italy's greatest modern playwright -- has never before been so successfully brought to the screen. Thrown from a horse, a modern aristocrat proclaims he is the 11th century king of the Holy Roman Empire. For twenty years he lives out this delusion in a medieval castle until his former love (Claudia Cardinale) visits with a psychiatrist and an elaborate plan to shock the madman back to reality. But is he really insane? And, who is to say what is real and what is not?

The finest talents of Italian cinema collaborated to create a contemporary interpretation of Pirandello's probing masterpiece of classical tragedy and ironic comedy. Marcello Mastroianni gives a subtle yet commanding portrayal of wily madness that stands alongside his landmark performances in such films as LA DOLCE VITA, 8 1/2, and DIVORCE ITALIAN STYLE.

Color/95 minutes/Italy 1984

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Fine Literature Buff
Added 5/22/2008

Very well acted. Henry IV is brought to life. A very interesting take on the Henry IV character.
1 out of 3 people found this helpful.
Cinematic Justice for a Superb Play.
Added 9/28/2005

Admittedly freely adapted from Pirandello's greatest play, ENRICO IV, this film provides the finest performance of Marcello Mastroianni's distinguished career, while tribute should be made as well to director Marco Bellocchio's "cinema of style" which provides the only possible method for this type of work in this medium to be an artistic success. During a costume pageant, a young man suffers a head injury when thrown from his stumbling horse, ostensibly becoming insane as a result, being then placed in an asylum converted from a medieval castle, occupied only by him and four valets, all paid for by his nephew. His madness takes the form of an apparent delusion that he is Henry IV, ruler of the Holy Roman Empire in the 11th century, with the four valets being his private counselors of the king's chamber, challenged after 20 years when the former inamorata of Henry (Mastroianni), still-desirable Matilda (Claudia Cardinale) visits the castle with a psychiatrist (Leopoldo Trieste) and a convoluted but reasonable scheme to shock her deluded erstwhile love back into the world of the sane. The three characteristics that are present in varying degrees in all humour: incongruity, irony, and surrealism, share a cardinal responsibility for the success of this work, the ironic factor being that all parts cast are portrayed by actors filling roles as actors. Sly Henry, seeming to still seek absolution from Pope Gregory to overturn his excommunication, utters the playwright's salient line that madness occurs only when one wears a mask but does not know it. Bellocchio, who has filmed two of Pirandello's creations from the Theatre of the Absurd, is responsible for the screenplay in this instance, setting about to illuminate the differing manners in which people play their parts in life, and their anguish when their masks are cracked. A psychoanalytic rather than his wonted socio-political motif has captured the creative point of view of the director in HENRY IV, with his aesthetic research bringing about, through his masterful use of colour and camera movement, a panoply of interior realities for us to savour.


8 out of 10 people found this helpful.
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