IMDb RATING
5.5/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
A teacher on a Greek island becomes involved in bizarre mind games with the island's magus (magician) and a beautiful young woman.A teacher on a Greek island becomes involved in bizarre mind games with the island's magus (magician) and a beautiful young woman.A teacher on a Greek island becomes involved in bizarre mind games with the island's magus (magician) and a beautiful young woman.
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 nomination total
Danièle Noël
- Soula
- (as Danielle Noel)
Andreas Malandrinos
- Goatherd
- (as Andreas Melandrinos)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSir Michael Caine lists this, along with The Swarm (1978) and Ashanti (1979), as one of the worst movies he ever made. This is mainly down to the fact that no one, least of all the audience, knew what it was about.
- GoofsIn the rented room where the English professor will live while continuing the teaching work of his predecessor in the so-called Greek island, there is a rather conspicuous historical XIX century Spanish painting by José Casado del Alisal which represents the first defeat of Napoleon's armies in Spain, in the city of Bailén, where Marechal Philippe Antoine Dupont de l'Estang surrendered to inexperienced Spanish General Castaños on 19 July 1808. Not quite a Hellenic topic, really.
- Quotes
Maurice Conchis: [to Nicholas] Now, I will show you something. The ultimate reality. Not the hammer and sickle, not the stars and stripes, not lysergic acid, not the sun, not gold, not yin and yang. But
[reveals smile statue]
Maurice Conchis: The Smile.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Denúncia Vazia (1979)
Featured review
Fowles' first novel became the darling of the emerging counterculture of the 60s. It fit a handy niche of layered narratives, connected in ways that emulated the emergence of "secret" cosmologies. By itself, it created a little stir because of the way it was folded by a certain kabbalistic technique while including reference to that technique.
The history of this makes it essential viewing. Its Fowles' first novel, partially autobiographical, taking over a decade to write. Its grand, risky, sloppy. It is perfect in its way, being as confusing in how it is written as the narrator within is. Its a happy accident that its deficiencies increase the effect.
The screenplay is quite a bit more incompetent and at the same time leaving out most of the ambiguities in the story. So the film is a disaster. Fowles would later straighten up the narrative in the novel and issue what in the film world would be a "director's cut" which tries to keep the ambiguities in the story but reduce them in the narration. Its far less effective than the original.
So why should you see this? Because it is a historical document that changed things significantly. Its based on two sources: one was a then little-known set of Kabbalistic lessons on Tarot ambiguities. The other is a piece of literary theory from the thirties: "Seven Types of Ambiguity." (Don't search it out: it is far less interesting than the title implies.)
Fowles simply conflated his own life (and remorse over handling a romance) into these two notions, deliberately trying to capture the seven types which incidentally inform my study of narrative folding.
In September of 1966 while in Spain for the filming of "How I Won the War," John Lennon, who hardly read anything, read this (twice, once heavily rugged) and it changed his life, the direction of The Beatles and hence enfranchised a new form of narrative. (He called and later visited Fowles while this script was in development. There is no artifact of that in the script.)
Its not Joyce, but it is the child of what he envisioned, dumbed down, but still raising the bar for narrative structure and affecting I assert nearly everything.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
The history of this makes it essential viewing. Its Fowles' first novel, partially autobiographical, taking over a decade to write. Its grand, risky, sloppy. It is perfect in its way, being as confusing in how it is written as the narrator within is. Its a happy accident that its deficiencies increase the effect.
The screenplay is quite a bit more incompetent and at the same time leaving out most of the ambiguities in the story. So the film is a disaster. Fowles would later straighten up the narrative in the novel and issue what in the film world would be a "director's cut" which tries to keep the ambiguities in the story but reduce them in the narration. Its far less effective than the original.
So why should you see this? Because it is a historical document that changed things significantly. Its based on two sources: one was a then little-known set of Kabbalistic lessons on Tarot ambiguities. The other is a piece of literary theory from the thirties: "Seven Types of Ambiguity." (Don't search it out: it is far less interesting than the title implies.)
Fowles simply conflated his own life (and remorse over handling a romance) into these two notions, deliberately trying to capture the seven types which incidentally inform my study of narrative folding.
In September of 1966 while in Spain for the filming of "How I Won the War," John Lennon, who hardly read anything, read this (twice, once heavily rugged) and it changed his life, the direction of The Beatles and hence enfranchised a new form of narrative. (He called and later visited Fowles while this script was in development. There is no artifact of that in the script.)
Its not Joyce, but it is the child of what he envisioned, dumbed down, but still raising the bar for narrative structure and affecting I assert nearly everything.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
- How long is The Magus?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 57 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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