Jason and the Argonauts (1963)
Facts
| Directed by | Don Chaffey |
| Cast | Todd Armstrong, Nancy Kovack, Gary Raymond, Laurence Naismith, Niall MacGinnis, Honor Blackman, John Crawford, Nigel Green, Michael Gwynn and Patrick Troughton |
| Theatrical Release | June 19, 1963 |
| DVD Release | July 14, 1998 |
| Running Time | 104 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | G (General Audience) |
| UPC Code | 043396002593 |
| Buy this item | $9.99 at Amazon.com As of Jan 5 5:48 EST (details) 1 DVD, Sony, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Letterboxed, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), French (Original Language - Unknown), Spanish (Original Language - Unknown), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Dubbed - Unknown) Or 48 new from $7.80, 29 used from $5.49, 1 collectible from $19.99 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Classic action |
Technically, the film was directed by the notable non-notable director, Don Chaffey (most famed for his later One Million Years B.C.- with Raquel Welch, and directing a few episodes of the classic tv show The Prisoner), with a paper-thin screenplay by writers Beverley Cross and Jan Read. But....so what? Films like this utterly lack all pretense to being literate. There is nothing but quick moving plot, plot, plot, with a few tenuous scenes of character development early on. Yes, the film takes liberties with much of the mythos from Classical Greece- such as making Talos, the bronze statue, a Colossus, making Hercules a graying middle-aged man, and making the warriors summoned from the dead teeth of the Hydra, that Jason kills to get the famed Golden Fleece, skeletons, but this only enhances the camp effect. Plus, the breakneck sense of adventuring, plus the smug dalliances of the Olympic Gods from on high, perfectly echo the classical stories in their construction.
And, let's be honest, most of the great myths of yore were not known for realism nor character development, much less the nuances of narrative. Like the Harryhausen monster films- of which Jason And The Argonauts may be the best example (if only because of the complexity of the stop motion animation), the ancient myths were pure thrill rides, where people fell in love at first sight, swore vengeance over the deaths of people they barely knew, and generally were guided by folly and hormones. That a few of their tellers added a bit of sex, heavyhanded psychological development, etc., well....Perfect!.... The film does delve, however shallowly, into some deeper themes. As example, Jason is an Olympian agnostic, until Hermes delivers him to Zeus and Hera on Olympus. Yet, even there, he refuses Zeus's help. He believes that a belief in fellow men is more important. Even Zeus seems resigned to the fate that he and the rest of the Olympians are doomed to fade away once all men adopt Jason's attitudes. This, in turn, seems to be a spur to Zeus to throw extra dilemmas in Jason's path, even as Jason seems to advocate a limited belief in free will.
However, in such films, depth is a cherry on top, and there are, of course, things that make no logical sense; such as how do the sailors rebuild the Argo, after Talos destroys it? Where do their tools come from? Why would the Colchins need to depend upon seven skeletons to battle Jason's men when King Aeëtes has an army of hundreds or thousands? Yet, do such things really matter? Again, how many loose ends appear in myths from around the world? And the film's ending works because, again, it recaps the way the myths frenetically unwind, and then just end, often without morals. After all, now that Jason has gotten the Golden Fleece, his victory over Pelias is assured, and we don't need to really see that. After all, the film's title is Jason And The Argonauts, not The Revenge Of Jason. For, if it was, how the hell would he explain to the Argonauts his sudden fashion fetish for old time hockey masks?
September 13, 2008
| Love the Skeleton Soldiers! |
| A legendary adventure of monsters and mythology...... |
| My search is over! |
Or the ships figurehead opening its eyes when talking to Jason. And now, I finally have this movie for my very own childhood memories! June 21, 2008
| Reggie's Review |
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