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Jesus Christ Superstar 1973 123movies

Jesus Christ Superstar 1973 123movies

And now, the film…Aug. 15, 1973108 Min.
Your rating: 0
6 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Jesus Christ Superstar 1973 123movies, Full Movie Online – Based on a concept album project written by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, and the subsequent long-running Broadway performance, this film tells the story of the final 6 days in the life of Jesus Christ through the troubled eyes of Judas Iscariot. Too often mis-labeled a musical, this film is a “rock opera.” There are no spoken lines, everything is sung..
Plot: Recounts the last days of Jesus Christ from the perspective of Judas Iscariot, his betrayer. As Jesus’ following increases, Judas begins to worry that Jesus is falling for his own hype, forgetting the principles of his teachings and growing too close to the prostitute Mary Magdalene. After Jesus has an outburst in a temple, Judas turns on him.
Smart Tags: #mary_magdalene_character #apostle_john_character #jesus_christ_character #high_priest_caiaphas_character #pontius_pilate_character #judas_iscariot_character #james_the_greater_character #controversy #no_music_during_end_credits #jesus_in_title #slow_motion_scene #classic_musical #sword_and_sandal_history #epic_history #based_on_broadway_musical #rock_opera #palestinian #palestine #crucifixion_of_jesus #based_on_the_bible #ancient_rome


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Ratings:

7.3/10 Votes: 27,496
52% | RottenTomatoes
64/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 477 Popularity: 15.065 | TMDB

Reviews:

Very good, if not quite a superstar, movie musical
Although I have been aware of this musical, seemingly forever, I just very recently saw the whole movie on dvd. Unfortunately, while I was acquainted with many of the songs before, I had never really seen it in its entirety before, and I’m not sure why. Also, I’ve never seen it as a live stage show, be it on Broadway, in London or down the street at the local high school …

So, then, I can only rate it as a singular movie experience, not comparing it with the Broadway or London stagings. Also, being Jewish and never really studying the life and crucifixion of Jesus, I don’t have any strong or pre-conceived spiritual ties to the story.

For me, then, this is a cleverly written and very well-performed musical, that mixes irreverence, time juxtapositions and genuine emotions of sadness and wistfulness. I’m not sure that the movie enhances the great musical; in other words, now that I’ve seen the movie, I regularly listen to the cd of the musical, and enjoy both about equally. For me, Carl Anderson, as Judas, is the standout, but Ted Neeley does bring an angelic quality to the title character. all of the other supporting roles, including Yvonne Elliman, are done well.

I rate it 8/10 for its excellent music, good staging and for what seems like a faithful film-ization of the original..worth watching for sure!

Review By: wainot
Nails It.
A rockgasmic Judas–eye view of the last days of Christ.

Directed by Norman Jewison and powered by the mountain-leveling throats of Ted Neeley (Jesus) and Carl Anderson (Judas), “Jesus Christ Superstar” is as reverent as it is blasphemous, as bombastic as it is humble, as god as it is zilla.

Staged as a Grand Play in which all the actors arrive on a tour bus at a desert-swept Israel location, the film is opened with an overture which heralds the Players (a disheveled coterie of Haight-Asbury, flower-power dissidents who were most certainly on The Pot and engaging in The Sex), who parcel out props and pseudo period costumes, intriguingly modern, lending the production a sense of insurrect bravado from the get-go.

As the music builds, on the roof of the bus is raised – The Cross. And the soundtrack launches The Riff – a D-minor cataclysm of chest-beating rock solidarity. With this Riff, Andrew Lloyd-Webber found his One Thing. If he never produced anything more in his life, this Riff would remain his legacy to Humanity. If the Old Testament God of Revenge had a riff – this would be it.

As the 60s groove spasms the Players into decidedly more sexual gyrations, the man who would play Jesus is singled out and bedecked in white – as the Superstar Theme blazes forth like the scintillation of suns. Then all falls silent…

…Judas, a lone figure on a mountaintop, opens The Play singing “Heaven On Their Minds,” Anderson oozing such raw gusto and riveting intensity that it almost becomes “Judas Iscariot Superstar” right there.

The film’s hook is set: this will be Judas’ story. Thus also is the film’s controversy set – for not only does “Superstar” grant way too much credence to someone whom Good Christians regard as one of the killers of Christ, it also acts as apologist for Pontius Pilate (who condemns Jesus only very reluctantly – his “hand-washing” scene a startler); portrays Jesus not only as a screaming rock star, but as almost too human to command worship (with his chronic doubts and no depiction of miracles); and allows Mary Magdalene (Yvonne Elliman) to blatantly consider loving Jesus in the – shall we say – “biblical” sense. Another bone of contention was the movie wrapping with Jesus left for dead on the cross, bookended by the Players boarding the tour bus (*sans* their crucified pal) and driving into the sunset – unlike all other Jesus movies (“King Of Kings,” “Greatest Story Ever Told”) which glorified their zombie epilogues. (Well, what else would you call a person raised from the dead?)

Truly a product of its time, when the hippie contingent had reached a zenith in cultural impact (the fashions and attitudes were then “modern” – all that long hair and bellbottomry was *real*), thereby making it economically viable to produce a musical of this ilk, “Superstar” began as a rock concept album in 1970, with none other than Deep Purple’s banshee vocalist Ian Gillan as Jesus and Murray Head as Judas. As heretic as it may be, Neeley and Anderson actually outshine Gillan and Head, probably because having to also “perform” the Play lent wings to their production, reportedly singing at full strength on screen to retain the legitimacy of their neck-popping passion, for all the world looking like they are being recorded as they vocalize, the synch being that good, even taking into account they rarely sing “on the beat.”

Estimably supported by Elliman (whose “I Don’t Know How To Love Him” was a chart-topper), Barry Dennen (as a perfectly petulant Pontius Pilate), Larry Marshall (as Simon), Bob Bingham and Larry Yaghjian (as the imposing basso, priest Caiaphas, and the heel-yapping tenor Annas, respectively).

Except for occasional one-liners, Jesus’ apostles are no more than wisps of raggedy, big-haired dayplayers – it is enough they keep their lip-synch in line. With grand vistas of Israel as backdrop, Jewison populates his film with hot 60s chicks and guys who look like rock musicians and 70s porn stars. (Speaking of which, apostle Peter – billed as Philip Toubus – became porn legend Paul Thomas soon after “Superstar.”)

The remarkable gelling of Tim Rice’s insightful lyrics with Andrew Lloyd-Webber’s rock score (reminiscent of every late 60s group, from Purple to Uriah Heep and Zeppelin, with orchestral backing to jog it into “stage musical” territory) is the genius behind this morbid tale of a dead ex-Jew our grandparents prayed to.

Ted Neeley’s “Gethsemane” still raises the neck hairs, and by the 5/8 climactic orchestral interlude, I am almost praising a god I long ago realized was a figment – for the sheer ground-shuddering talent of those who brought this deified figure’s political odyssey to musical fruition.

From hearing it at every school play, to all your older friends owning the soundtrack, the final bountiful “Superstar” theme, all 70s glam and 60s groove, has become so ingrained in our culture that it cannot but conjure memories of a more carefree time. With Anderson’s dam busting vocals burning down one side and his haughty sirens in angelic-white bikini-leotards slinking vocal support, the movie’s title track is a bombastic fanfare of youth and joy and searing sexuality, yet daring those pertinent questions that every Christian should – but never bothers to – ask: Who are you? What have you sacrificed? Did you mean to die like that? What makes you better than Buddha, Mohammed, other religions? Every time I look at you I don’t understand why you let the things you did get so out of hand…

Leaning on the universal language of music, rather than religiosity, “Jesus Christ Superstar” continues embedding itself into the culture with each passing year; each passing decade furthering its status as awe-inspiring “classic,” defiantly standing as THE “Jesus film” that will never lose its potency.

(Movie Maniacs, visit: www.poffysmoviemania.com)

Review By: dunmore_ego

Other Information:

Original Title Jesus Christ Superstar
Release Date 1973-08-15
Release Year 1973

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 46 min (106 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 13200000
Status Released
Rated G
Genre Drama, History, Musical
Director Norman Jewison
Writer Melvyn Bragg, Norman Jewison, Tim Rice
Actors Ted Neeley, Carl Anderson, Yvonne Elliman
Country United States
Awards Nominated for 1 Oscar. 3 wins & 13 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix 70 mm 6-Track (Westrex Recording System) (70 mm prints), Mono (35 mm optical prints), 4-Track Stereo (35 mm magnetic prints)
Aspect Ratio 2.20 : 1 (70 mm prints), 2.35 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory Technicolor, Hollywood (CA), USA (color)
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process Todd-AO 35 (anamorphic)
Printed Film Format 16 mm, 35 mm, 70 mm (blow-up)

Jesus Christ Superstar 1973 123movies
Jesus Christ Superstar 1973 123movies
Original title Jesus Christ Superstar
TMDb Rating 7.065 477 votes

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