IMDb > The Tragedy of Othello: The Moor of Venice (1952)
The Tragedy of Othello: The Moor of Venice
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The Tragedy of Othello: The Moor of Venice (1952) More at IMDbPro »


Overview

User Rating:
7.7/10   2,259 votes
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Director:

Orson Welles

Writer:

William Shakespeare (play)
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Contact:

View company contact information for Othello on IMDbPro.

Release Date:

June 1955 (USA) more

Genre:

Drama more

Tagline:

Powerful drama of uncontrolled human emotion! more

Plot:

Durante il periodo delle Repubbliche Marinare, in Italia, Otello, detto "il moro di Venezia", viene... more | add synopsis

Awards:

1 win & 1 nomination more

User Comments:

Welles' indomitable spirit in the face of penury shines in yet another Wellesian Masterpiece more (24 total)


Cast

  (Complete credited cast)

Additional Details

Also Known As:

Othello (Australia) (France) (USA)
Otello (Italy)
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Runtime:

90 min | USA:93 min (TCM print)

Language:

English

Aspect Ratio:

1.37 : 1 more

Sound Mix:

Dolby (re-release) | Mono (RCA Sound System)

Certification:

Italy:T | Australia:G | Finland:K-12 (1967) | Finland:S (1967) | UK:U

Filming Locations:

Castle, El Jadida, Morocco more


Fun Stuff

Trivia:

Orson Welles provides the voice for much of Roderigo's dialogue. more

Quotes:

[first lines]
Narrator: There was once in Venice a moor, Othello, who for his merits is the affairs of war was held in great esteem. It happened that he fell in love with a young and noble lady called Desdemona, who drawn by his virtue became equally enamoured of Othello...
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Movie Connections:

Featured in Edge of Outside (2006) more


FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
13 out of 14 people found the following comment useful.
Welles' indomitable spirit in the face of penury shines in yet another Wellesian Masterpiece, 10 January 2004
Author: Abhijoy Gandhi from Philadelphia, USA

THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO: THE MOOR OF VENICE/ US/France/Italy/Morocco 1952 (3.5 STARS)

The recent restoration of Othello brings to cinematic space the magic of another masterpiece from Orson Welles. To think that a whole master negative of this film (which won the Best film at Cannes in 1952) was lying abandoned in a New Jersey warehouse, was discovered by accident and is the reason for this print that we now have access to, is enough to send shivers down the spine of any Welles-phile. . Mise-en-scene: Like with many of his other works involving especially Shakespeare, be prepared for Welles' licenses and personal interpretation of subject matter pertaining to Othello. Yet at the end, we are left with a feeling of deep tragedy and loss for Othello, played by Welles himself, and though we feel that Othello was quite an idiot, we at least feel that he was a very unfortunate idiot at that! . The problem may have been that the critical scene where Iago poisons Othello's mind and fuels his suspicion is scrappy and left unexplored. This may well have had little to do with Welles' artistic choices, and more with his monetary situation at the time. Welles' penury through his European sojourn is widely known and the passion with which he would invest into his films, every penny earned through moonlighting his booming voice and above-average acting skills is legendary, and should put this in context.

. The figure behavior of Micheál MacLiammóir is utterly convincing as the detestable Iago who is consumed by jealousy and rage at being overlooked as the second-in-command. But the person to steal our hearts is Suzanne Cloutier who portrays the fair-dame Desdemona. She is every bit as dainty as we would have imagined her to be. . The stripped down set design works wonderfully for the film and even though budgets may have been the driving force, Othello's barren palace is preceded only by the barrenness of his blinding jealousy and irrational actions. . Cinematography: As we have come to expect, Orson Welles has a unique cinematic language, through which he creates a Wellesian world of skin-burning close ups, dutched crazy world-frames and low angle shots to create a tense atmosphere of foreboding. But there is no better example of exploring and using frame depth than in Othello. Time and again Welles plays with foreground element to reveal psychologically subjective and meta-diagetic moods while cleverly using the depth in the frame to forward the narrative and plot the next progression. The title shots of the film are harrowing in their effect, with the interplay of high-contrast earth and sky contours that at once establish the mood for an intense cinematic experience. . Sound & Editing: The restored version has a brand-new soundtrack mentored by Welles' daughter, and while it enhances the experience to telling effect, it is irony to note that just the new soundtrack cost much more than what Welles assembled the whole film for. The fact that parts of the film were shot MOS and other parts used ADR is distracting due to the obvious lack of lip-sync, but in the final analysis, we watch Welles with reverence almost as if on a visit to Sunday Mass, paying homage, never once forgetting that were are witness to a filmmaker stripped of resources, devoid of many essential tools, but one with indomitable spirit who refused to be cowed-down. Othello is magical in its story telling and another worthy showcase of the genius of Orson Welles.

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Why is this DVD out of print in the US? wmshax
If a remake... shu-fen
Iago's motivation? mangoloid
'Filming 'Othello' Documentary jeffkb4
Jo Cotten/Joan Fontaine - where are they? the-extra-girl
Not a fully realized Othello SurrenderToto
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