Otras versiones en DXC:Vertigen escribió:Socrate (Roberto Rossellini, 1970) DVDRipCast: Jean Sylvère (Socrate), Anne Caprile (Santippe), Giuseppe Mannajuolo (Apolodoro), Ricardo Palacios (Critone), Antonio Medina (Platone), Julio Morales (Antistene).
Directed: Roberto Rossellini
Writing credits: Jean-Dominique de la Rochefoucauld, Marcella Mariani and Roberto Rossellini
Produced: Renzo Rossellini
Original music: Mario Nascimbene
Cinematography: Jorge Herrero Martin.
IMDb
Plot summary: The last five years of the philosopher�s life, from Sparta�s victory over Athens in 404 B.C. to Socrates�s state-mandated suicide. Rossellini recognizes that while society forgives murderers, it persecutes anyone who threatens it by thinking differently about the world.
A comment: Defiantly and majestically cinema � la Rossellini, SOCRATES was a film he had wanted to make since the early Fifties. The movie brilliantly recreates ancient Athens and the last days of the orator and philosopher with whom the director clearly identified. (Massimo Olmi's touching account of the shooting of the film ends with this telling observation: "Patriarch Rossellini, patriarch Socrates, both absorbed in the difficult delivery of Truth," which is echoed in Michael McKegney's review of the film in The Village Voice: "Two great men separated by so many centuries seem to speak with one voice to a race which controls the atom and the atmosphere but seems to have forgotten why: 'Know thyself.'") Rossellini's serene, sometimes shocking account of Socrates' life and philosophy characteristically fastens on fact rather than myth, placing the prodigious figure in a detailed setting of the city with its workers and merchants, and a mundane domestic world of meals, servants, and an impulsive wife. Its irony also restrains any reverence for the great philosopher, emphasizing his foibles as well as his grandeur: when we first meet him, he has spent two days wandering about the city after forgetting that he left home to buy bread. The trial of Socrates for impiety and "corrupting the young" is high drama, and the final sequences, in which his family and followers gather in a cave as he is about to die, have a simple, resounding eloquence. "There is in this fidelity a kind of beauty and poetry that are all but unknown in the work of other contemporary filmmakers" (Vincent Canby, The New York Times).
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AVI File Details ripped by ======================================== Name.........,: Socrate.Rossellini.avi Filesize......: 757 MB (or 775,786 KB or 794,404,864 bytes) Runtime.......: 01:53:44 (170.577 fr) Video Codec... DX50/DivX 5.0.3 Video Bitrate: 729 kb/s XY................. 576x432 (1.333)(4:3) FPS................ 25.000 Audio Codec...: 0x200 (DOLBY AC3) AC3 Audio Bitrate.. 192 kb/s tot, stereo (2/0) Frame Size...: 48000 Hz Language.....: Italian
The e-link
(Filosofia - Divx - Ita) Socrate (R Rossellini, 1970).avi
The english subtitles
http://www.opensubtitles.org/en/subtitl ... socrate-en
The spanish subtitles
http://www.opensubtitles.org/es/subtitl ... socrate-es
Socrates (Roberto Rossellini, 1970) VO.
(Aunque no se indica, creo recordar que era una captura de Tv)
Un saludo.