Mazeppa (1993) Poster

(1993)

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7/10
"Very French" -- obscure, intense, sensual, gorgeous images and music. Loved it.
hellenga14 January 2001
Mazeppa tells the story of a painter (Gericault) who is brought into the sensuous and strange world of a traveling "circus" -- not like Ringling Bros., but more of a demonstration of horse training and acrobatic feats on horseback. The story is of Gericault's immersion in the sensual pleasures of the circus -- gorgeous horses, gorgeous music by Ukrainian singers, gorgeous women -- and his transformation by that experience. The main strength of the movie is in the lush visuals, particularly in the portrayal of the sensuality of the horses' bodies and movement. There isn't a lot of dialogue, which allows the viewer to concentrate on everything else, but also leads to some confusion about what is happening and why. It was my sense that this was partly intentional, paralleling Gericault's experience. The film has the visual richness of The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover, but is not as disturbing (though there are some disturbing scenes at beginning and end). I loved this movie but gave it only a seven out of 10 because even after having seen it three or four times, I can't really say what it's about -- I love the music and the imagery so much I'm willing to overlook that, but it's hard to get anyone else to watch the movie with me.
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7/10
Exquisite fever dream, even if it runs down a bit towards the end
runamokprods28 February 2012
For about an hour, this fever dream fantasized vision of the brief life of the great horse painter Theodore Gericault really held me in it's thrall.

A fictional story with real characters, the film imagines that Gericault ran away to join the circus, but a circus run by Franconi, a great horseman, whose horses and riders in the film perform truly breathtaking feats. Franconi himself is portrayed as a leather mask wearing, frightening presence. But this sounds far more grounded in reality than this surreal film is to experience.

While the story didn't really even try tie together, the images of horses and humans were worthy of the best of Greenaway, as was the exquisite air of mystery.

But somehow the last 45 minutes felt more literal, more forced, and the film lost some of it's power. It felt like the film slowly evolves from a mysterious dream, to a story that needs to be neatly, if surreally tied up, By growing more literal, it lost some power and magic. But it's still a strong film, filled with some truly unforgettable images of horses and humans in various combinations.
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10/10
Best movie every made about horses
glazier-131 May 2005
Warning: Spoilers
As a stable owner and horse trainer I can watch Mazeppa again and again. The things Bartabas does with horses are almost unbelievable and he captures perfectly the extreme and twisted sexual relations between man and horse. The viewer may be uncomfortable with the truths Bartabas reveals, but anyone who has worked with horses, in the end, must acknowledge their truth. The movie begins with the most shocking of scenes, the butchering of horses, and includes defecation and a lurid scene of children assisting a stallion in covering a mare and Bartabas certainly makes clear his own interest in bestiality and sadomasochism. But the most memorable scenes are those of the horses in action, in particular the snail's pace gallop of the gambling scene, which is breathtakingly beautiful. A knowledge of Gericault helps--his drawings and etchings of horses are even finer than his paintings, and he is clearly the greatest French renderer of horses. More specifically, while Gericault's drawings are superficially innocent, an attentive viewer will find that they show the same sort of sexual passion that Bartabas reveals in Mazeppa. Thus Mazeppa is a key both to horsemanship and to the great artistry of Gericault.
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