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El Cid [1961]

El Cid [1961]

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Director: Anthony Mann
Actors: Charlton Heston, Sophia Loren, Raf Vallone, Geneviève Page, John Fraser
Studio: 4 Front Video
Category: Video

List Price: £5.99
Buy Used: £0.01
You Save: £5.98 (100%)



New (3) Used (15) Collectible (3) from £0.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 12 reviews
Sales Rank: 6429

Format: Classical, Dolby, Pal, Surround Sound
Languages: English (Original Language), Latin (Original Language)
Rating: Universal, suitable for all
Media: VHS Tape
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 172
Discs: 1

UPC: 780063817837
EAN: 5014138034474
ASIN: B00004CITC

Theatrical Release Date: December 14, 1961
Release Date: April 14, 1997
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: The Tape itself is brand new and has never been watched but the inlay and outer box are shop soiled and may be torn in places and a little damaged but otherwise brand new.

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Sumptuous in every way, visually magnificent, with grandiose sets, panoramic Spanish vistas and intricately detailed costumes, possessor of one of cinema's greatest music scores, boasting vast and astonishingly kinetic battles, and breathing heroic virtue in every scene, El Cid is the very epitome of epic. For this reworking of the medieval legend of the Cid (Arabic for "Lord") who united warring factions and saved 11th-century Spain from invasion, producer Samuel Bronston and director Anthony Mann insisted every set had to be created from scratch, every costume specially made for this movie alone; they also shot entirely on location in La Mancha and along the Mediterranean coast of Spain to enhance the film's authenticity. The cinematography is saturated with the burnished hues of the Spanish landscape, as are the palatial sets and rich costumes; Miklos Rozsa's resplendent score is also the result of painstaking research into medieval Spanish sources. The screenplay is imbued with knightly gravitas and more than a little salvation imagery, from the opening scene of the young Rodrigo rescuing a cross from a burning church, to the movie's indelible finale as The Cid rides "out of the gates of history into legend".

Charlton Heston is at his most indomitable as Rodrigo, "The Cid", a natural leader of men and the embodiment of every manly virtue (note that he fathers twins--a sure token of his virility); Sophie Loren is ravishing as Chimene, the woman whose love for Rodrigo conflicts with her filial instincts after he kills her father, the king's champion, over a point of honour. Their scenes together create a humane warmth at the heart of this vast movie: the moment when Chimene finally declares her love (beneath a shrine of three crosses--more symbolism) to the exiled Rodrigo forms a pivotal and very intimate centrepiece. Shortly thereafter he must rise from their rural marriage bed to lead his followers into battle, and the tension between his public and private lives adds a piquancy to the film's stunning battle sequences. The international supporting cast sometimes look like makeweights, especially when chewing on the occasionally stilted dialogue, but any such faults are easily forgiven as the scale and spectacle of El Cid carries the viewer away on a tide of chivalry. --Mark Walker


Customer Reviews:   Read 7 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Ignore the reviews about the "other" DVD -- this is the real deal   February 26, 2008
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

Stupidly, Amazon have linked reviews from the older and rubbish pan & scan DVD releases to this new edition -- thus misleading customers into thinking that this MIRIAM TWO-DISC DELUXE EDITION is in some way as shoddy as earlier releases. It is not.

Here are the tech specs for this release:

Original aspect Ratio 2.35:1
Commentary with William Bronston (Samuel's Son) and biographer Neal Rosendorf
Vintage Radio promo interviews
Text Filmographies and Still Galleries
Disc 2 Featurettes:
Hollywood Conquers Spain: The Making of An Epic (23:56)
Samuel Bronston: The Epic Journey of a Dreamer (52:20)
Behind The Camera: Anthony Mann and El Cid (17:22)
Miklos Rozsa: Maestro of the Movies (30:11)
Preserving Our Legacy: Gerry Byrne on Film Preservation and Restoration (7:38)
Trailer Gallery



5 out of 5 stars El Cid, the Lord   July 5, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This film is based on the life of a legendary Spanish hero, and set during the troubled times of the 11th century. Spain was then a jig-saw puzzle of Christian and Moorish kingdoms, fighting each other, and unaware of the threat of the invasion being planned by the Almoravids of Africa. Then, as this became imminent, a man rose and called upon the different peoples to fight the enemy together - not as Christian or Moors, but as Spanish. And this one man led the Spanish to union and to victory.
Thus, it is a story wrought of high-minded politics and deadly battles; but also of striving for peace, and of undying loyalty to one's country and king. And as a golden thread, runs through it a noble love, that neither time, nor distance, nor death itself will ever end.
The adjective "epic" has been applied to too many films, and there is no point in using it here; it would not convey the right meaning. I will rather say that this film is heroic. For it is about a hero: a man who has dignity without pride; who is magnanimous and pious (which we see almost nowhere nowadays), and who has "vision to be just, and courage to be merciful".
Obviously, a good story and main character are not enough to secure the film itself will be good; but "El Cid" is technically considered a masterful production. The performances of the actors are all excellent; the music is very good; the costumes are perfect; and the locations and scenery, though made without all the special effects modern films have, are imposing and verisimilar.
Of all the films made about the Middle Ages, "El Cid" is by far the best. I will go even further; I will say it is one of the best films ever made. I know this may sound exaggerated, but it is the truth, for few other films have such depth and beauty. Even "Ivanhoe" (1954), which may be considered the second best Middle Ages film, lacks "El Cid's" piety and nobility.
As for more modern films, there is nothing to be said. When you decide to watch "El Cid", all thought of films like "Kingdom of Heaven" is put aside; all prejudice against old movies is forgotten. And when the sound of the trumpets stirs your blood, and the melody of the violin sounds within your heart, you know deep inside that this film is timeless, because it is a story of things that never come to an end. It is a story of nobility and strenght: the strenght of God, of truth and of man.



5 out of 5 stars El Cid, the Lord   July 5, 2007
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

This film is based on the life of a legendary Spanish hero, and set during the troubled times of the 11th century. Spain was then a jig-saw puzzle of Christian and Moorish kingdoms, fighting each other, and unaware of the threat of the invasion being planned by the Almoravids of Africa. Then, as this became imminent, a man rose and called upon the different peoples to fight the enemy together - not as Christian or Moors, but as Spanish. And this one man led the Spanish to union and to victory.
Thus, it is a story wrought of high-minded politics and deadly battles; but also of striving for peace, and of undying loyalty to one's country and king. And as a golden thread, runs through it a noble love, that neither time, nor distance, nor death itself will ever end.
The adjective "epic" has been applied to too many films, and there is no point in using it here; it would not convey the right meaning. I will rather say that this film is heroic. For it is about a hero: a man who has dignity without pride; who is magnanimous and pious (which we see almost nowhere nowadays), and who has "vision to be just, and courage to be merciful".
Obviously, a good story and main character are not enough to secure the film itself will be good; but "El Cid" is technically considered a masterful production. The performances of the actors are all excellent; the music is very good; the costumes are perfect; and the locations and scenery, though made without all the special effects modern films have, are imposing and verisimilar.
Of all the films made about the Middle Ages, "El Cid" is by far the best. I will go even further; I will say it is one of the best films ever made. I know this may sound exaggerated, but it is the truth, for few other films have such depth and beauty. Even "Ivanhoe" (1954), which may be considered the second best Middle Ages film, lacks "El Cid's" piety and nobility.
As for more modern films, there is nothing to be said. When you decide to watch "El Cid", all thought of films like "Kingdom of Heaven" is put aside; all prejudice against old movies is forgotten. And when the sound of the trumpets stirs your blood, and the melody of the violin sounds within your heart, you know deep inside that this film is timeless, because it is a story of things that never come to an end. It is a story of nobility and strenght: the strenght of God, of truth and of man.



5 out of 5 stars El Cid: A great epic, unfortunately not a great DVD.   April 1, 2005
 6 out of 7 found this review helpful

It's a pity that this film wasn't released on DVD in it's full widescreen glory with full stereo or surround sound. I hope this will be re-released in the near future with a much improved DVD as it is one of the classics.


5 out of 5 stars One of the Greatest Hollywood Films Ever   August 15, 2004
This film has it all, pretty much: chivalry, honour, history (true in essence at least), spectacle, a cast of thousands and Sophia Loren at her best, perhaps.

Rodrigo Diaz de Bivar releases Moors on their parole, but is falsely accused of treason to the Crown of Castile, Leon and Asturias. Fighting off all enemies and "christened" (if such be the bon mot) "El Cid" ("the Lord"...in modern Arabic "Said"), the Cid effectively creates the basis of Spain as a unified state. He also is credited with having introduced bullfighting (not in the film) as a means to gradually lessening the inherent cruelty of the Visigothic/Moorish population as a whole.

At the end of the film, the deceased Cid is placed on a horse and "leads" the Spanish army out to victory over the Moors of North Africa (arguably, topical...) The narrator end with "and so the Cid rode out of History into Legend". Beautiful and moving. The fanatical Muslim Moors flee in defeated chaos as the Spanish King prays on the beach of Valencia for "the soul of he who died the noblest knight of all." A film that can be seen time after time. Recommended.


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