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Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Thu Oct 14, 2010 8:22 am
by MichaelB
The Digital Fix - a very fair piece that isn't blind to the film's faults, but which absolutely nails its appeal.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 12:18 am
by Bikey
Probably the first time Second Run have been reviewed in Horrorview - Morgiana reviewed by Blackgloves

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 2:16 am
by zedz
What a riot this film was: highly recommended! Looking at those Beaver caps again, they give a good account of the image quality, but it's amazing how they could cherry-pick such a visually extravagant film to make it appear almost normal. I mean, we've got point-of-view fish-eye lens shots galore, sly split-screen work, cat-cam sequences and full-on colour-smearing psychedelic freakouts, all through an art nouveau filter. Bikey, you ought to post some rival money shots to show people what they're really in for.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Wed Nov 03, 2010 11:46 pm
by domino harvey
I've said this before too. DVDBeaver captures hardly ever manage to capture the spirit of the film, and I often wonder how high the percentage is of films "watched" that are merely sampled, captured, and posted with vaguely-phrased praise or indifference tagged on at the end to give the illusion of a review

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Sat Nov 06, 2010 4:51 am
by jbeall
A riot, indeed. I freaking loved this film. I haven't seen Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?, so I can't comment on any comparisons between the two, but Morgiana is a pretty unique film in its own right. (If anything, comparisons to Cinderella and/or David Lynch might be more appropriate.) Although it's superficially apolitical, for at least the first third of the film, surveillance is a major leitmotif, especially when
Spoiler
the mason spies on Viktorie while she's undressing. Speaking of leitmotifs, the film opens with multiple shots of the father's black coffin, and I assumed throughout the film that Klára's death was a foregone conclusion. The ending, then, quite took me by surprise.
Herz and Kučera have a wonderful eye for visual similarities, such as Viktorie's dress in Klára's hallucinations, which look like the reddish substance (poison?) Viki pours into a glass at one point, and the most "oh. my. god." moment for me was
Spoiler
the utterly horrifying resemblance between Morgiana the cat and Klára's nurse; whoa!
An equally disconcerting moment for me was when
Spoiler
Viktorie walked into the sea, and then Herz cut to a bloated doll's face... WTF?!?
Anyway, this was such a wild film, with a major twist at the ~85 min. mark. Herz may say he made this film only in order to keep his skills sharp, but it's such a weird, crazy thrill!

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 10:51 am
by Bikey
Mondo Digital tackle both Morgiana and The Cremator in this wonderful, enthusiatic appreciation.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Sun Nov 14, 2010 5:33 am
by knives
I really don't think that even if the beaver had picked on some of the (amazing) effects shots that they would have been able to grasp the film still. It manages to be so fully cinema rather than the extension of photography a lot of these pretty pictures tend to be. Really it seems like he is trying to shoot an encyclopedia of film techniques. Of course some of this technique makes for obvious or even cliched moments (the black sister V. the white sister), but he toys with this enough that I'm a bit happy with that sort of goofiness. The music too was fascinating. Something seems off about it, but I'll just assume that's the PAL. That odd tingling aside I think it did the very necessary deed of balancing the comedy and drama of the film so it wouldn't fall into self-parody.
Spoiler
Finally, I am completely shocked that the two sisters were played by one woman. I don't think that I would have ever noticed without the interview she inhabits the two roles so completely and so differently. I still don't believe it almost everything from body language to voice seemed dramatically different.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Fri Nov 26, 2010 1:15 pm
by Bikey
DVD Outsider's enthusiastic recommendation of Morgiana.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2011 3:30 pm
by admira

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2011 4:00 pm
by MichaelB
That link was posted in this very thread, several months ago.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Tue Mar 29, 2011 5:03 pm
by Bikey
Screening at this year's Belfast Film Festival on April 5th at 8pm as part of their 'Altered States' strand.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Sat Sep 10, 2011 3:27 am
by domino harvey
I feel like that person who politely declines to indulge in the positive accolades post-screening and merely chimes in with, "Well, that was interesting." This struck me as being more concerned with its stylistic conceits than I ever was watching it. But regardless of that complaint, whatever underlying gothic fun hiding beneath the affectations was swiftly undone the constant and inescapable histrionic tone. Too bad, so sad, etc

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Sun Sep 11, 2011 1:42 am
by jbeall
domino harvey wrote:But regardless of that complaint, whatever underlying gothic fun hiding beneath the affectations was swiftly undone the constant and inescapable histrionic tone. Too bad, so sad, etc
Hmmm... I rather thought the gothic fun and the histrionic tone went hand-in-hand. Or at least from my perspective, the gothic was half the fun, the histrionic tone (and the formal means used to present it) the other half. I guess we'll just disagree on this one.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Sun Sep 11, 2011 3:46 am
by tarpilot
Yeah, I'm a rather big fan as well. The only other Herz I've seen is The Cremator, but Morgiana almost felt like a lost Zulawski in the very best way.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Wed Oct 16, 2013 9:51 am
by mwuet
In what I've read about this film I haven't seen any mention of where it was filmed. Not in the Czech Republic or Slovakia obviously. I'm guessing Croatia but does anyone know for sure?

As for the film, like others here I loved the excess. It would've been interesting to see a version adhering to Herz's original vision, though, at least to see which would've been more twisted. Plot-wise a schizophrenia theme would've been more complex to pull off, but the family ties theme makes it darker.

(Note: First post in the forum after following for a while).

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2014 9:58 am
by Bikey
Screening as part of BFI's ongoing 'Gothic' Season - Herz's glorious MORGIANA plays at BFI Southbank on Wednesday 15th Jan at 6.20pm (introduced by Michael Brooke) and Friday 17th Jan at 8.40pm.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2014 10:22 am
by MichaelB
Oh yeah, that's tomorrow, isn't it? I knew I had something scheduled for this week.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2014 1:59 pm
by JamesF
Any idea of format? The 35mm print of Valerie that screened last week was beautiful.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Wed Jan 15, 2014 10:56 am
by AidanKing
MichaelB wrote:Oh yeah, that's tomorrow, isn't it? I knew I had something scheduled for this week.
I hope your trains are running properly, what with all the floods and everything.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Wed Jan 15, 2014 11:23 pm
by MichaelB
JamesF wrote:Any idea of format? The 35mm print of Valerie that screened last week was beautiful.
Also 35mm. There's one more screening.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2023 2:49 pm
by yoloswegmaster
Blu-ray coming in May

BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION CONTENTS:
Morgiana (1972) presented from a new HD transfer from the best existing original materials created by the Czech National Film Archive.
An exclusive filmed interview with director Juraj Herz (2010).
A Projection Booth audio commentary with Mike White, Kat Ellinger and Ben Buckingham.
Booklet featuring essay by Daniel Bird and Dr Ian Conrich.
New and improved English subtitle translation.
UK premiere on Blu-ray.
Region Free (A/B/C) Blu-ray.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2023 3:34 pm
by Finch
A most welcome upgrade, did a double take on the DVD being from 2010! Time flies.

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2023 4:29 pm
by Calvin
I notice that it's not advertised as a 'restoration' like the one Severin Films announced for the US a few days ago. It'll be interesting to see if we have another Valerie and Her Week of Wonders situation on our hands.

Regardless, I'm glad to see SR releasing more Herz on Blu-Ray and I hope they tackle The Night Overtakes Me soon

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2023 4:53 pm
by ryannichols7
was Morgiana not restored by the Czech NFA? I swore it was on their list. definitely curious if we had a questionable restoration job on our hands, will be interesting to see what this looks like going forward

first upgrade for Second Run of 2023, good title to pick. hope Szindbad, Fruit of Paradise, and Three Cheers for Cinderella come soon. let alone anything Polish

Re: 50 Morgiana

Posted: Thu Apr 27, 2023 11:20 am
by Bikey
Fulll details now at our website