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Masada - The Complete Epic Mini-Series

Masada - The Complete Epic Mini-Series

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Director: Boris Sagal
Actors: Peter O'toole, Peter Strauss, Barbara Carrera, Anthony Quayle, David Warner
Studio: Koch Vision
Category: DVD

List Price: $29.98
Buy New: $13.65
You Save: $16.33 (54%)



New (49) Used (11) from $13.65

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 84 reviews
Sales Rank: 1235

Format: Color, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Number Of Items: 2
Running Time: 383
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6

MPN: KOC-DV6482
UPC: 741952648291
EAN: 0741952648291
ASIN: B000S0KYTE

Theatrical Release Date: April 5, 1981
Release Date: September 11, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW AND FACTORY SEALED

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
An epic true story of Jews fleeing Roman destruction of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. Pursued to a mountain stronghold of the Herods they face lives enslaved or suicide. This is the full-length television miniseries.System Requirements:Running Time: 394 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: TELEVISION/SERIES & SEQUELS Rating: NR UPC: 741952648291 Manufacturer No: KOC-DV6482

Amazon.com essential video
This 1981 television miniseries, based on Ernest K. Gann's historical novel The Antagonists, is a dramatization of a documented revolt by nearly a thousand Jerusalem Jews against Roman oppressors in A.D. 72 to 73. Following a city-wide siege by Rome's soldiers, Jewish Zealots move into a fortress in the mountains of Masada, from which they present a defense strong enough to convince the enemy to negotiate. Peter O'Toole, in all his golden dignity, plays Cornelius Flavius Silva, commander of the Roman legions, and Peter Strauss is Zealot leader Eleazar ben Yair. Both are outstanding as representatives from each side trying, in good faith, to find a way out of the deadlocked situation. Unfortunately, neither realizes that Rome has no intention of yielding, resulting in one of the greatest tragedies in Jewish history. A strong cast of character actors--David Warner, Barbara Carrera, Timothy West, and Anthony Quayle--is rewardingly watchable, the action and sets are persuasive without overwhelming the story's human dimension, and direction by Boris Sagal (The Omega Man) is crisp and enthralling. This was a pleasure to watch when it was first broadcast, and it holds up very well today. --Tom Keogh

Amazon.com
"A victory? What have we won?" laments a breathtaking Peter O'Toole as the Roman warrior Flavius Silva. "We've won a rock in the middle of a wasteland, on the shores of a poisoned sea." Thus does Masada, the epic 1981 miniseries about a horrific battle in ancient Palestine, echo the terrible toll of war in general, and of the brutal conflicts in today's Middle East in particular. Masada, from the golden age of miniseries (Roots, Shogun), is a transportive viewing event--shot on location, and apparently no expense spared.

The film retells (with some dramatic license) the true story of an uprising in Palestine of a ragtag band of Jews, in a fortress called Masada, who refuse to surrender to the governing Romans. O'Toole, as Flavius Silva, is the brilliant commander who, over the course of several years of trying, and failing, to breach Masada, comes to regard the leader of his foes, Eleazar ben Yair (the charismatic Peter Strauss), with a certain amount of respect and awe. If left to Flavius, he might have simply leave the holdout fortress and return to the Italy he so longs for; but the Roman emperor demands victory--at any cost.

The performances are uniformly crisp and believable; the direction by Boris Sagal, economical; the screenplay, sharp and incisive. David Warner, who won an Emmy for his performance, plays the brutal Roman henchman Falco with seething determination. The location shooting is nothing short of spectacular. There is sorrow in the story of Masada, but an uplifting message in the ability of true believers to create their own destiny. --A.T. Hurley


Customer Reviews:   Read 79 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars "We have won a rock in the middle of a wasteland on the shore of a poisoned sea."   July 25, 2008
Back in 1981 this epic mini-series about the ill-fated Jewish rebellion against Roman rule pulled in what was then the biggest TV audience of all time, yet it's languished on the shelf forgotten for the past couple of decades. This DVD isn't even released by producers Universal and comes with no extras, though it does include the six-hour-plus series, but not the abridged feature film version released outside the US as The Antagonists, which apparently featured some different scenes (the abridged version was not a success: in the UK it had the dubious honor of being the lowest-grossing film of it's year).

As with most siege epics, the action is limited to the beginning and the end, with much of the interim filled in with intrigue and character development while we wait for the big battle that in this case, famously, never actually happens. Not altogether surprisingly it spends more screen time with the Romans than with the zealots - even if the zealots' strategy was more than simply watching and waiting while sporadically taunting their would-be conquerors, with their penchant for spectacle and infighting, the Romans are always better dramatic value in these sorts of epics. Certainly Peter O'Toole effortlessly dominates the series as the humane Roman commander forced by the political situation back in Rome to fight the rebels rather than negotiate with them only to find himself facing mutiny, senatorial spies and other political animals as well as heat, windstorms and not enough water before his legions can even start to virtually move mountains to reach the clifftop fortress of Masada. By contrast, then-reigning king of the miniseries Peter Strauss has less to work with as his character spends much of the series waiting and trying to raise moral with only a few half-hearted attempts at soul-searching along the way, only really coming into his own in the still powerful final scenes.

The supporting cast is impressive, with a line-up of familiar Brits including David Warner, Anthony Quayle, Timothy West, Dennis Quilley, Anthony Valentine and Nigel Davenport making up the officers, emperors and senators while the likes of Jack Watson, Norman Rossington, Warren Clarke, Michael Elphick and Nick Brimble swell the Roman ranks. The Judeans have to make do with Barbara Carrera, Joseph Wiseman, David Opatoshu and Paul L. Smith. For the most part they're blessed with exceptionally good dialogue with few lapses (though Anthony Valentine's "I'm a tribune, darling" is an unwelcome moment of unintended camp) thanks to Joel Oliansky's surprisingly intelligent and often witty screenplay, which boasts a good understanding of the politics of the day on both sides and an ability to offer memorable character moments for even the bit players - siege engineer's Quayle's briefing on the practicalities how to get the most out of slave labor is a perfect example of how to juggle exposition and background research without it seeming like a history lecture.

Visually it's often impressive too, although at times Boris Sagal's direction is caught between location naturalism and old-school studio work. The destruction of Jerusalem has something of the look of a late De Mille epic to it, with Albert Whitlock's old school columns of fire matte paintings having an almost storybook stylisation that wouldn't look out of place in The Ten Commandments but despite some obvious studio interior-`exteriors' in a few scenes, it's a genuinely spectacular production from a time when the big-screen epic had long fallen from favor. There's also an extraordinarily good score from Jerry Goldsmith (with additional music by Morton Gould based on his themes) at the peak of his powers even if his great elegiac finale cue was never used. Still pretty impressive stuff.



3 out of 5 stars A bit too melodramitic but good.   July 25, 2008
Masada is a good movie. It's not on a scale of others set in the same era. Peter O'toole gives a good performance as do Anthony Quayle and some others, but the action is limited and the staging stiff. As a made-for-tv movie it is average. The length is far to long and the story could have been shortened by an hour. The most irritating aspect is the music which is annoying at best.


4 out of 5 stars the best that TV mini-series can offer   July 24, 2008
This is a very good made-4-tv melodrama based on the historical myth of the Jewish struggle against the Romans. So far as I could see, in telling a complex story with many layers and on an epic scale, it strove for a level of historical accuracy that is rare for TV. This could not be done as well in a 2-hour movie - it merits 6 hours.

At the center of the film is the conflict between two charismatic leaders. O'Toole is the Roman general, who is hard yet reasonable and not cruel. Strauss is the leader of the zealots: hardly a religious fanatic, he wants to preserve the freedom of his people and is willing to risk everything to do so. Both are deeply conflicted: the aristocratic Roman is exhausted, having lost his beloved wife while on campaign and taking solace in drink. Strauss is wracked with personal doubts, yet is a brilliant tactitian and natural leader. After some good-faith negotiations that fail due to Roman politics, the two enter an end-game struggle that will decide both of their fates. The acting is so good that the viewer can believe them completely.

There are also plots within plots, which are very interesting. On the one hand, O'Toole must contend with the poisonous creatures of Roman political intrigues, who interfere with his professional maneuvering in the field. This pits him and his gifted military engineer against a number of his former intimates, perhaps even the emperor himself. His idealism remains intact, if compromised by realities. Another subplot is his taking on a concubine slave, the unbelievably beautiful Carrera in her prime. On the other hand, the Jews are also fighting eachother, debating what course to take in ever murderous risks. The performances are wonderfully subtle and nuanced, if at times melodramatic.

Then there is the setting, which in the real place is absolutely spectacular. They are fighting over a desert, which is of little strategic military value, highlighting the political nature of the conflict. It is splendidly ironic in my viewing and the Roman engineering of a platform and siege vehicle is fascinating.

As a history buff, I was not entirely comfortable with the "take" of the film. It fits into official myths, which are very current in the contemporary Middle East, leaving little space to rival interpretations. That is, there is a great controversy as to the true nature of the zealots: the only written source is Josephous, who transcribed the tale from several alleged survivors and later used by Moshe Dayan as a propagandistic image for military training. Their version does not entirely jibe with the archaeological evidence, which points to a less unified or accepted actions by the zealots. Indeed, there is a blatant plug for Israeli nationalism at the beginning and end of the series, which explains Masada in crude patriotic terms. It is the only thing that mars the series.

Recommended. It will stimulate and fascinate.



5 out of 5 stars el cid & masada   July 20, 2008
both excellent dvds. Cannot wait for 55 days at Peking.What about a special edition King of Kings. Going off the subject slightly. I am anxious to purchase the following dvds in the very near future if they ever become available: Master of the Game by Sidney Sheldon, AD-Anno Domini & Washington Behind Closed Doors. Again excellent value and presentation.


5 out of 5 stars Masada - The Complete Mini-Series   June 10, 2008
As good as I remembered it. It was great to be able to view the whole series at once.



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