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IMDb > Galileo (1975)
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Overview

User Rating:
6.6/10   132 votes
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Down 10% in popularity this week. See rank & trends on IMDbPro.
Director:
Joseph Losey
Writers:
Barbara Bray (writer)
Bertolt Brecht (play)
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Contact:
View company contact information for Galileo on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
18 June 1981 (Hungary) more
Genre:
Biography | Drama more
Plot:
This bio-pic is about Galileo, the 17th century Italian who laid the foundations of modern science.... more | add synopsis
User Comments:
Galileo, the Alienation Effect & those shrill little choir boys more

Cast

  (Complete credited cast)
Topol ... Galileo Galilei
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
James Aubrey ... Monk-Scholar
Colin Blakely ... Priuli
Robert Bridges ... Fat Prelate
Georgia Brown ... Ballad Singer's Wife
Tom Chatto ... Town Crier
Dermot Colman ... Choirboy
Tom Conti ... Andrea Sarti (man)
Paul Curran ... Mathematician
Mischa De La Motte ... Third Sacristan
Richard Dennis ... Peasant

Vernon Dobtcheff ... First Secretary
Edward Fox ... Cardinal Inquisitor

John Gielgud ... The Old Cardinal
William Gossling ... First Sacristan
Michael Gough ... Sagredo
Andrew Harding ... Choirboy
Brian Hawksley ... Second Sacristan
Basil Henson ... Infuriated Monk
Ian Hoare ... Duke Cosimo di Medici
Harold Innocent ... Second Secretary-Informer
Robert Langdon Lloyd ... Monk-Scholar (as Robert Lloyd)
Mary Larkin ... Virginia
Margaret Leighton ... Elderly Court Lady
Michael Lonsdale ... Cardinal Barberini (later Pope Urban VIII)
Patrick Magee ... Cardinal Bellarmin
John McEnery ... Federzoni
Martin Milman ... Monk-Scholar
John Moffatt ... Philosopher
Richard O'Callaghan ... Fulganzio
Robert Owens ... Choirboy
Judy Parfitt ... Angelica Sarti
Maurice Quick ... Fourth Sacristan
Ronald Radd ... Vanni
Clive Revill ... Ballad Singer
John Savident ... Second Senator
Norman Scace ... First Senator
John Sharp ... Monk Official
Leon Silver ... Monk-Scholar
Madeline Smith ... Young Court Lady
Job Stewart ... Monk-Scholar
Peggy Thorpe-Bates ... Court Lady
Iain Travers ... Andrea Sarti (boy)
Bill Wallis ... Supporting Monk
Charles West ... Rector-Gaffone
William Wild ... Guard
Tim Woodward ... Ludovico Marsili
Henry Woolf ... Father Clavius
Ken Wynne ... Court Official
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Bertolt Brecht's Galileo (Australia) (DVD box title)
Galileo Galilei
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Runtime:
USA:145 min
Country:
UK | USA
Language:
English
Color:
Color (Eastmancolor)
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono
Certification:
Singapore:NC-16 | USA:PG | Australia:PG | UK:A (original rating) | UK:PG (video rating)

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Joseph Losey had also directed the original Broadway production of "Galileo", twenty-eight years previously (in 1947). more
Movie Connections:
Follows Leben des Galilei (1947) more

FAQ

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7 out of 7 people found the following comment useful:-
Galileo, the Alienation Effect & those shrill little choir boys, 8 September 2005
10/10
Author: Phil Holmer (peace54@aol.com) from United States

I wrote a previous comment on the film of Bertolt Brecht's play "Galileo" a few years ago. Since it's posted here I will try not to repeat myself. However, comments from other reviewers need addressing, especially since this film is finally out on DVD and more people may be interested in seeing it. Brecht's intent in this play, which he wrote and rewrote over a period of thirty years, was never intended to be a "biography" of the scientist. Brecht was a Marxist and he saw theatre as a means of propaganda, to jolt viewers out of their complacency, to shake up their way of thinking and their view of the world. How well he succeeded may be open to question, but it is important to understand his intent and point of view. To this end he incorporated what he called the "alienation effect" into his plays. He did not want viewers to get emotionally involved in the characters or experience a catharsis afterward. He wanted to address them directly and tell them that there were important ideas being presented and they should pay attention and think about them. He did not want his audience to be "entertained". If you ever see a production of his "Three-Penny Opera", for instance, the characters come out to the front of the stage and sing little lectures to the audience. The best known tune from this show, "Mack the Knife" is not the swinging jazzy Bobby Darin version, but is supposed to be sung in a grating, irritating voice. This is perhaps the most obvious example of Brecht's alienation effect. In "Galileo" this effect is less apparent, perhaps because this play leans toward the genre of realism more than most of his other plays. It is a rather straightforward, narrative story. In the film the choir boys sing between what would be different scenes in the play. In the play, the lyrics the boys sing are supposed to be on a sign or projected on a screen to bring the tell the audience the year, the place and the general theme of the upcoming scene. Why the producers or director chose to use the choir boys for this purpose, I cannot say and I do think the message get lost in their shrill soprano voices. But for Brecht, this was to be his alienation effect in "Galileo", a break in the action to remind the audience not to get involved in the storyline or the characters, but to pay attention to the ideas he is presenting. I'm pretty sure that the choir boys are in this film to do the same thing, to break up the narrative, to take the focus off the characters in the story, and to communicate the information about the next scene in a way unrelated to the rest of the play. If only they weren't so screechy! One last comment about Brecht & Galileo, the character. I mentioned that Brecht rewrote this play several times, He did this because he was unhappy that actors portrayed Galileo too sympathetically; Brecht wanted him to be a villain, a coward and a betrayer of humanity. Actors, however, were seduced by the slyness and humor of the character. Charles Laughton, who worked with Brecht to translate "Galileo" into English in the late 1940's was among those who couldn't avoid making Galileo likable. Brecht admired Laughton's theatre craftsmanship as they rehearsed the play, but was horrified to find the audience liked the character of Galileo & saw him as a hero instead of a villain. Brecht tried and tried to make Galileo unlikable but never succeeded. Years later, after he have returned to communist East Germany he again tried to make Galileo despicable rather than heroic. But even though he had his own Marxist theatre company in a Marxist country with Marxist actors, his audiences still loved Galileo. It may be the only time a character defeated the author who had created him.

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