The Mahabharata (1989 film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mahabharata | |
---|---|
DVD cover |
|
Directed by | Peter Brook |
Written by | Peter Brook Jean-Claude Carrière Marie-Hélène Estienne |
Starring | Robert Langton-Lloyd Antonin Stahly-Vishwanadan Bruce Myers Vittorio Mezzogiorno Andrzej Seweryn Georges Corraface |
Music by | Toshi Tsuchitori Rabindranath Tagore |
Cinematography | William Lubtchansky |
Release date(s) | 1989 |
Running time | 318 / 171 min. |
Country | Belgium / Australia / U.S.A. / Sweden / Portugal / Norway / Netherlands / Japan / Ireland / Iceland / Finland / Denmark / U.K. / France |
Language | English |
Budget | $5 million |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
The Mahabharata is a 1989 film version of the Hindu epic, directed by Peter Brook. Brook's original 1985 stage play was 9 hours long, and toured around the world for four years. In 1989, it was reduced to under 6 hours for television (TV mini series). Later it was also reduced to about 3 hours for theatrical and DVD release. The screeplay was the result of eight years work by Peter Brook, Jean-Claude Carrière and Marie-Hélène Estienne. For the casting an international selection of actors was intentionally chosen, to show that the nature of the Hindu epic is the story of all humanity.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
In general terms, the story involves epic incidents between two warring families, the Pandavas (representing the good side) and the Kauravas (representing the bad side). Both sides, being the offspring of kings and gods, fight for dominion. They have been both advised by the god Krishna to live in harmony and abstain from the bloody lust for power. Yet their fights come to threaten the very order of the Universe. The plot is framed as a narrative between the Brahmin sage Vyasa and the Hindu deity Ganesha, and directed towards an unnamed Indian boy who comes to him inquiring about the story of the human race.
[edit] Cast
- Robert Langton-Lloyd as Vyasa
- Antonin Stahly-Vishwanadan as Boy
- Bruce Myers as Ganesha/Krishna
- Vittorio Mezzogiorno as Arjuna
- Andrzej Seweryn as Yudhishthira
- Georges Corraface as Duryodhana
- Jean-Paul Denizon as Nakula
- Mahmoud Tabrizi-Zadeh as Sahadeva
- Mallika Sarabhai as Draupadi
- Miriam Goldschmidt as Kunti
- Ryszard Cieslak as Dhritarashtra
- Hélène Patarot as Gandhari
- Myriam Tadesse as Gandhari's servant
- Urs Bihler as Dushasana
- Lou Bihler as Young Karna
- Jeffrey Kissoon as Karna
- Maurice Bénichou as Kitchaka
- Yoshi Oida as Drona
- Sotigui Kouyaté as Parashurama / Bhishma
- Tuncel Kurtiz as Shakuni
- Ciarán Hinds as Ashwatthama
- Erika Alexander as Madri / Hidimbi
- Bakary Sangaré as The Sun / Rakshasa / Ghatotkacha
- Tapa Sudana as Pandu/Shiva
- Akram Khan as Ekalavya
- Nolan Hemmings as Abhimanyu
- Hapsari Hardjito as Abhimanyu's wife
- Mas Soegeng as Virata
- Yumi Nara as Virata's wife
- Amba Bihler as Virata's daughter
- Tamsir Niane as Urvasi
- Lutfi Jakfar as Uttara
- Gisèle Hogard as 1st princess
- Julie Romanus as 2nd princess
- Abbi Patricx as Salvi
- Mamadou Dioumé as Bhima
- Ken Higelin as Deathless boy
- Corinne Jaber as Amba / Sikhandin
- Joseph Kurian as Dhristadyumna
- Clement Masdongar as Gazelle
- Leela Mayor as Satyavati
- Velu Vishwananan as The hermit
[edit] Awards
In 1990, the film won the award for Performing Arts of the International Emmy Awards and the Audience Award for Best Feature at the São Paulo International Film Festival.