Daily Info, Oxford on Twitter Daily Information, Oxford on Facebook
Place your Ad   List your Event   Site Map   Frequently Asked Questions  My Daily Info
 
Ads Events Reviews Venues Site
Send to a Friend

Titus [18]

Blood, gore, flesh, death


Send to a friend
That Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus is a gorefest, somewhat bereft of poetry, and dubious in its authorship, no one can dispute. It is not in hopes of encountering subtlety that we look forward to a film version with something akin to glee, for even the silver screen treatment seems unlikely to transform the leaden-versed, over-plotted play into a miracle of depth and complexity. What we've come for is not taste, but spectacle, our appetites whetted already by Gladiator's feast of Roman blood, guts and vengeance; we look to director Julie Taymor's much-lauded originality to splash even more searing images across the screen, to hyperstimulate our imagination, along with our adrenal glands.

The opening conceit is promising: a young boy, playing wantonly with his toy soldiers, sends them to sticky deaths in plates full of food, before he is suddenly abducted and transferred into the world of the drama, a world where violence is not play, except of the most perverse kind. The boy, acting as Titus' youngest child, becomes the observer, watching as characters lurch across the stage like puppets, poor malformed prototypes in bloody display-- a perverted Shylock, a mangled Ophelia, a demented Lear. We expect Taymor to overlay a skein of imagery over the original text which would allow visual, if not verbal, significance and complexity to emerge, despite the two-dimensionality of its characters, the strictly-for-thrills plot.

Unfortunately, the film mirrors the faults of its dialogue, forever cranked up to a fever pitch with shrilling music and stomach-turning scenes whose nauseating effect is made still worse by wild, jumbled interjections of MTVesque surrealism. There are moments of stillness and sheer, striking imagery that achieve the poetry of tragedy-- Lavinia poised in the barren marshland, twigs tied to her stumps, mute, iconic, a female crucifixion, or Anthony Hopkins' fine Titus, face-down in the middle of a crossroads, imploring the fates, despairing of justice. However, despite striking costumes and haunting sets, the film lacks coherence; anachronisms jostle and jangle with cluttered, inchoate ideas, thematic patterns fail to form, the sense of spectacle is strangled.

When the final bloody feast arrives, Taymor treats it like a farce, and understandably so, for by this point, any tears shed or gasps groaned for mutilated Lavinia and beleaguered Titus have long since been replaced by a grim forbearance. As Titus says, there is little else to do but laugh, once sorrow has been exhausted. Everything's absurd, if dazzling, and we end, like the little boy, made hostage to a nerve-shattering thrill-ride of violence that yields neither mythology nor meaning.

Sharae Deckard (Unverified), 07/10/00


Send to a friend
Adore this film, Elliot Goldenthal's score is outstanding too.

Terrasidius (Unverified), 14/02/08


Latest Cinema reviews

Man On A Ledge [12A]: A very silly film which fails to make you care about the main character. Spent most...read more

Carnage [15]: It's watchable but somehow unsatisfactory. I kept thinking of Who's Afraid of Virginia...read more

The Descendants [15]: Oh dear! If you can stay awake, there are a few interesting takes on how a "family"...read more

The Artist [PG]: For my part, it was a waste of an evening. The protagonists whilst very good looking,...read more

Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy [15]: Serpentine and silvery-grey, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is a snake of a movie. Cold,...read more

Review of the Day

Man On A Ledge [12A]: A very silly film which fails to make you care about the main character. Spent most...read more


Ads by Daily Info:

Properties to let with Rentaflat

Browse ads by tag:

change (39) easter (6) iphone (15) mail (5) wireless (6)

Advertise here...

Please fill in the boxes and then click "Send Review" to submit your review for Titus [18].

Type or paste the text of your review (10 - 300 words) in here:

If you want to link your review to your user account then log in (don't worry, your review text will still be here when you come back).

Don't have a Daily Info account? Get one here! (save your review text first!)

If you don't want a Daily Info account, we'll need the following details:

Your nickname (which you would like others to see under your review):

Contact Details
These are for Daily Info staff use only - we might want to contact you if, for example, we want to add you to our official reviewer's list (free tickets! Click here for more info).
Your name
and email
and/or phone number


Reload Image

Please enter the characters from the above image
(so we know you are human).

Case does not matter:

Terms and Conditions. Go on, do read them, it'll be nice.