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Caligula

Original title: Caligola
  • 1979
  • X
  • 2h 36m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
40K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,291
28
Malcolm McDowell in Caligula (1979)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer1:34
1 Video
99+ Photos
Costume DramaDark ComedyEpicHistorical EpicPeriod DramaDramaHistory

A dramatization of the ascent to Caesar and subsequent reign of Caligula, one of the most notorious leaders of ancient Rome.A dramatization of the ascent to Caesar and subsequent reign of Caligula, one of the most notorious leaders of ancient Rome.A dramatization of the ascent to Caesar and subsequent reign of Caligula, one of the most notorious leaders of ancient Rome.

  • Director
    • Tinto Brass
  • Writers
    • Gore Vidal
    • Masolino D'Amico
    • Malcolm McDowell
  • Stars
    • Malcolm McDowell
    • Peter O'Toole
    • Helen Mirren
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    40K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,291
    28
    • Director
      • Tinto Brass
    • Writers
      • Gore Vidal
      • Masolino D'Amico
      • Malcolm McDowell
    • Stars
      • Malcolm McDowell
      • Peter O'Toole
      • Helen Mirren
    • 362User reviews
    • 108Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:34
    Official Trailer

    Photos220

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    Top cast81

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    Malcolm McDowell
    Malcolm McDowell
    • Caligula
    Peter O'Toole
    Peter O'Toole
    • Tiberius
    Helen Mirren
    Helen Mirren
    • Caesonia
    Teresa Ann Savoy
    Teresa Ann Savoy
    • Drusilla
    Guido Mannari
    Guido Mannari
    • Macro
    John Gielgud
    John Gielgud
    • Nerva
    Giancarlo Badessi
    • Claudius
    Bruno Brive
    • Gemellus
    Adriana Asti
    Adriana Asti
    • Ennia
    Leopoldo Trieste
    Leopoldo Trieste
    • Charicles
    Paolo Bonacelli
    Paolo Bonacelli
    • Chaerea
    John Steiner
    John Steiner
    • Longinus
    Mirella D'Angelo
    Mirella D'Angelo
    • Livia
    • (as Mirella Dangelo)
    Rick Parets
    • Mnester
    • (as Richard Parets)
    Pola Muzyka
    • Subura Singer
    • (as Paula Mitchell)
    Osiride Pevarello
    • Giant
    Donato Placido
    • Proculus
    Joss Ackland
    Joss Ackland
    • Chaerea
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Tinto Brass
    • Writers
      • Gore Vidal
      • Masolino D'Amico
      • Malcolm McDowell
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews362

    5.340.2K
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    Featured reviews

    6Galina_movie_fan

    "A viper for the Roman people and a Phaethon for the world"

    Maybe it helps to be familiar with the history, Art, and literature of the Ancient Rome because "Caligula" is surprisingly truthful adaptation of the chapter about Caligula in "The Lives Of The Twelve Caesars by C. Suetonius Tranquillus, the Roman Historian. If you read the chapter dedicated to Nero, you'll be even more shocked because Nero was always fascinated by his uncle Caligula (he was a son of Caligula's sister Agrippina who later became a wife of Claudius who adopted Nero and made him the heir for the title and the power of Roman Emperor). Anyway, Nero made Caligula his role model and managed to surpass his uncle's' notorious fame.

    The movie is notoriously famous for the plentiful scenes of real sex, including incest, necrophilia, rape, and orgies. The movie also includes quite nasty and gruesome scenes of torture, executions, murders, and humiliations but all of the events have been documented in the historical documents that still exist.

    I don't think of the movie as a masterpiece or even a good movie for all of its 2.5 hours. It actually reminds the life of real Caligula. In his childhood and youth, he was adored by Roman people and especially by the army and he was a promising young man. When he grew up as a heir to the cruel and suspicious Tiberius, he had to hide his feelings and go through many humiliations in order to survive. Shrewd Tiberius said about his adopted grandson that "never humankind knew the better slave and the worse ruler than Caligula" and that he was rearing "a viper for the Roman people and a Phaethon for the world."

    When the young man finally received an access to the absolute power it had absolutely corrupted him. It is also known that soon after becoming head of Roman Empire, Caligula suffered an illness and as the result of it, he became incredibly nasty, cruel, and suspicious man who had indulged in the worst acts of debauchery, cruelty, and sadism. The movie follows this pattern. I still think that it is an interesting movie with very good actors. Not every day you can see porn with Helen Mirren, Peter O'Toole, Sir John Gielgud, and of course, Mr. Clockwork Orange himself, Malcolm McDowell.
    novaeon

    A masterpiece of costume and actuality

    I watched this movie the first time the night-before last.. and watched it again last night and again tonight.

    This movie is far from pornography... only a few scenes are hardcore, and only a couple of these are even barely erotic. It does not exactly function as an historical epic, either.

    The film quality and lighting would make it appear to date from the 1960s.

    The script is mediocre. More drama could be added, however we do have to bear in mind that the Romans followed the school of Stoicism.

    The acting (including Malcolm McDowell's) is nothing outstanding, with the exception of Peter O'Toole's Tiberius Caesar. He displays tragedy and lunacy, evoking reactions of disgust, sympathy, pity, and compassion. I found myself much more intrigued by his character and wishing the movie was about his decline from wisdom to near-madness, rather than Caligula. It also caused me to desire to learn more and research the actual life of Tiberius.

    The film neither condemns, nor condones. That is probably how it should be.

    Where this film succeeds monumentally is the costuming and unabridged realism. This is the first film I've seen to have a character wearing a toga like the one Caligula's sister (a design many Roman women actually wore) wears in the opening scene. The depiction of slaves and the acts of love and brutality are well-done. It is not erotic, it is not horrifying. With the hardcore scenes excised (the version i saw was the complete version), I believe this movie should be shown in every high school World History class. For centuries, Western culture has censored and toned-down representations of its Pagan past. The filmmakers must be applauded for attempting to make an honest epic.

    I've become very hard to please when it comes to movies. The last movie I actually liked to a strong degree was Amadeus, which I saw two years ago. Despite its flaws, with its sheer amount of action and atmosphere, I believe this movie deserves a 10.
    7Nazi_Fighter_David

    A tasteless and overblown farrago despite the presence of great actor as Gielgud, O'Toole, McDowell, and Helen Mirren

    The film builds around one of the most notoriously decadent of the Roman emperors, Caligula… The movie covers his rise to power, his four-year rule, and his bloody assassination… His vile deeds include crashing a wedding and sexually abusing the bride and groom, playing erotic fantasies with his sister (who is also his lover) and turning the Imperial Palace into an exclusive brothel…

    For a really big-money film, the treatment of the sexual scenes is daringly explicit, but somehow the obsession with it makes the film uneven… It blends very good actors, O'Toole and McDowell, with some simple-minded Penthouse models… The overall effect is disappointing...

    Guccione does deserve a hand for the exquisite sets, costumes, production values, and very fine cinematography
    scorpioscorpion

    must see

    Excuse the title of this review however the bottom line is, it has to be seen to be believed. The purely supreme cast is more than likely the only thing keeping the film from being well and truly buried in a basement. Historical revelations indicate that the content of this film probably does in fact (to a degree) reflect the lunacy rampant at the time and yes that means....meaningless executions, wild paranoia, incest and of course the gratuitous sex which could probably leave some soft porn movies looking very average (provided you get the right version). No its not a true classic but it dabbles with taboo, and dares go where other films draw the line. Its one i'll watch again and one you'd have to see merely to say you saw it. 6/10 scorpio
    4gftbiloxi

    The Ben-Hur of Porn: Gratuitous Sex, Violence, & Weirdness

    Some describe CALIGULIA as "the" most controversial film of its era. While this is debatable, it is certainly one of the most embarrassing: virtually every big name associated with the film made an effort to distance themselves from it. Author Gore Vidal actually sued (with mixed results) to have his name removed from the film, and when the stars saw the film their reactions varied from loudly voiced disgust to strategic silence. What they wanted, of course, was for it to go away.

    For a while it looked like it might. CALIGULA was a major box-office and critical flop (producer Guccione had to rent theatres in order to get it screened at all), and although the film was released on VHS to the home market so many censorship issues were raised that it was re-edited, and the edited version was the only one widely available for more than a decade. But now CALIGULIA is on DVD, available in both edited "R" and original "Unrated" versions. And no doubt John Gielgud is glad he didn't live to see it happen.

    The only way to describe CALIGULIA is to say it is something like DEEP THROAT meets David Lynch's DUNE by way of Fellini having an off day. Vidal's script fell into the hands of Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione, who used Vidal's reputation to bankroll the project and lure the big name stars--and then threw out most of Vidal's script and brought in soft-porn director Tinto Brass. Then, when Guccione felt Brass' work wasn't explicit enough, he and Giancarlo Lui photographed hardcore material on the sly.

    Viewers watching the edited version may wonder what all the fuss is about, but those viewing the original cut will quickly realize that it leaves absolutely nothing to the imagination. There is a tremendous amount of nudity, and that remains in the edited version, but the original comes complete with XXX scenes: there is very explicit gay, lesbian, and straight sex, kinky sex, and a grand orgy complete with dancing Roman guards thrown in for good measure. The film is also incredibly violent and bloody, with rape, torture, and mutilation the order of the day. In one particularly disturbing scene, a man is slowly stabbed to death, a woman urinates on his corpse, and his genitals are cut off and thrown to the dogs.

    In a documentary that accompanies the DVD release, Guccione states he wanted the film to reflect the reality of pagan Rome. If so, he missed the mark. We know very little about Caligula--and what little we know is questionable at best. That aside, orgies and casual sex were not a commonplace of Roman society, where adultery was an offense punishable by death. And certainly ancient Rome NEVER looked like the strange, slightly Oriental, oddly space-age sets and costumes offered by the designers.

    On the plus side, those sets and costumes are often fantastically beautiful, and although the cinematography is commonplace it at least does them justice; the score is also very, very good. The most successful member of the cast is Helen Mirren, who manages to engage our interests and sympathies as the Empress Caesonia; Gielgud and O'Toole also escape in reasonably good form. The same cannot be said for McDowell, but in justice to him he doesn't have much to work with.

    The movie does possess a dark fascination, but ultimately it is an oddity, more interesting for its design and flat-out weirdness than for content. Some of the bodies on display (including McDowell's and Mirren's) are extremely beautiful, and some of the sex scenes work very well as pornography... but then again, some of them are so distasteful they might drive you to abstinence, and the bloody and grotesque nature of the film undercuts its eroticism. If you're up to it, it is worth seeing once, but once is likely to be enough.

    Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Dame Helen Mirren described this movie as "an irresistible mix of art and genitals". Although many actors would regret their involvement with the film, Mirren has remained proud of her role as "the most promiscuous woman in all of Rome", as she believed European Cinema was reaching a benchmark in sex positivity and "it was the time to do nudity". She was, however, taken aback with the film's hardcore footage.
    • Goofs
      Caligula squeezes a lemon over a captured slave. Lemons did not reach Europe until the 2nd century, at least 100 years after Caligula's death.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Caligula: I have existed from the morning of the world and I shall exist until the last star falls from the night. Although I have taken the form of Gaius Caligula, I am all men as I am no man and therefore I am a God.

    • Crazy credits
      Due to numerous pending lawsuits and settlements at the time of the film's release, no one is technically fully credited for writing and directing the finished film.
    • Alternate versions
      The censored version of this film has been released of a few occasions in Australia. In March 1981, a censored, R rated release to cinemas was made by Roadshow. Roadshow Home Video subsequently released the same film version to video in September 1984. This version ran for 146 minutes (PAL). It was again re-released by a 'no name' video label in the late 1990's. The censored DVD version appeared in December 2004, released by Warner Vision. The uncut version has been released in Australia, this was the fully uncut, X rated 156 minute PAL version. It was released in January 1985 by 'Palace X Video' - a version that is now an extremely rare collector's item. The uncut version has since been rated R18+ by the Australian classification board in 2021.
    • Connections
      Edited into Video Macumba (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      Spartacus
      (uncredited)

      Written by Aram Khachaturyan

      Conducted by Bruno Nicolai

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    FAQ27

    • How long is Caligula?Powered by Alexa
    • Does the edited R-rated version contain shots of the male anatomy or not? If so, wouldn't showing the male anatomy automatically guarantee an NC-17 or X rating?
    • Is Bob Guccione the director?
    • Did Gore Vidal disown the film because Bob Guccione and Tinto Brass added explicit sex and gore to the film?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 15, 1980 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site (Germany)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Calígula
    • Filming locations
      • Dear Studios, Rome, Lazio, Italy(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Penthouse Films International
      • Felix Cinematografica
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $17,500,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 36 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono(original release)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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