Caesar Must Die

Winner
Golden Bear
Berlin International Film Festival
The film gets on screen not only the play's bloody, double-dealing, hungry essence, but the redemptive potential of art.

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Caesar Must Die

Winner of the Golden Bear at the Berlinale, Paolo and Vittorio Taviani's Caesar Must Die deftly melds narrative and documentary in a transcendently powerful drama-within-a-drama. The film was made in Rome's Rebibbia Prison, where the inmates are preparing to stage Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. After a competitive casting process, the roles are eventually allocated, and the prisoners begin exploring the text, finding in its tale of fraternity, power and betrayal parallels to their own lives and stories. Hardened criminals, many with links to organized crime, these actors find great motivation in performing the play. As we witness the rehearsals, beautifully photographed in various nooks and crannies within the prison, we see the inmates also work through their own conflicts, both internal and between each other.

"How can anyone not adore Paolo and Vittorio Taviani’s 'Caesar Must Die?' In a scant hour and a quarter it enlarges your notion of what theater and cinema, what art itself, can do—it dissolves every boundary it meets." (David Edelstein,
New York Magazine)
Not Rated
Genre
Drama
Runtime
76
Language
Italian
Director
Paolo Taviani, Vittorio Taviani
Cast
Cosimo Rega, Salvatore Striano, Giovanni Arcuri
Awards:
Winner, Golden Bear, Berlin International Film Festival
FEATURED REVIEW
Elizabeth Weitzman,New York Daily News

There is a scene in this powerful docudrama that opens on a beautiful ocean vista — which soon reveals itself as a wall-sized poster. How could it be otherwise? The film takes place entirely inside Rome’s Rebibbia penitentiary, and its stars are lifetime residents.

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