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Barry Lyndon
1975 Ryan O'Neal
Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon a film which has won a place on most major critic's "best of 1975" lists, opened on 1975. It stars Ryan O'Neal and Marisa Berenson, and was written for the screen, produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick. Both the film and the director were given the year's top honors by the National Board of Review. Time Magazine describes it as 'an art film spectacle. The most ravishing set of images ever printed on a single strip of celluloid." Barry Lyndon relates the adventures of a scoundrel-gentleman in 18th century society where money is the most important object and "honor" the most misused word. As a soldier, gambler, professional spy, wencher, wife-beater man-about-town and debtor, Barry Lyndon is one of the fullest portraits ever drawn of the romantic anti-hero at large in a society that was generally no better than he. The picture was in production for over three years and was filmed on locations in Eire, Germany and England. It dares to defy most modern motion picture
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techniques, reverting to the scope, the splendor and thoughtfulness of the classics. Vincent Canby of the New York Times says of Barry Lyndon "So glorious to look at, so intelligent in its conception and execution, breathtakingly beautiful, serious, witty.. .elegant.. ." And, of Kubrick himself, one critic observed: "He has made a motion picture extravaganza that combines art, literature and love, raising the movies to a cultural zenith that will be hard to equal." "The Luck of Barry Lyndon' was the first novel of William Makepeace Thackeray, Victorian writer, contemporary of Dickens and author of "Vanity Fair." It was first published in monthly installments in 1844 and is considered by critics as a work of great importance in the pattern of Thackeray's career and as a work of art. It relates the adventures of a favorite kind of Thackeray character, the scoundrel-gentleman, in 18th century society where money is the most important object and 'honor" the most misused word. Thackeray's point, as critic Martinj. Anisman has remarked, is to show how completely Barry's unscrupulousness in achieving worldly success fails to bring him any happiness or contentment. "The level of realism that Thackeray reached in his novel," Anisman says, "is quite possibly unmatched in the rest of his fiction." Thackeray himself was a great traveller and a ha -bitual gambler. Both aspects influenced his book which moves from Ireland to England and the Continent of Europe, following Thackeray's familiar routes, and draws on the novelist's own experiences for its descriptions of the gaming rooms and games of chance. Thackeray 'used such histories ... not as a substitute for thought, but as a means of gaining profound insight into the complexities of the human mind and its emotions." The period covered by the novel is roughly the first half of the 18th century and focuses on Barry's Irish peasant upbringing, marriage into the English aristocracy, and acquisition and loss of great wealth, as well as his military adventures in the armies of England and Frederick the Great of Prussia during the Seven Years' War. As a soldier, gambler, professional spy, wencher, wife-beater, man-about-town and debtor, Barry Lyndon is one of the roundest portraits ever drawn of the romantic anti-hero at large in a society that was generally no better than he and wide open to its exploitation by someone of cunning, daring and luck.
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Cast Barry Lyndon ....................... Ryan Oneal Lady Lyndon ....................... Marisa Berenson The Chevalier ....................... Patrick Magee Captain Potzdorf ....................... Hardy Kruger Lord Ludd ....................... Steven Berkoff Nora ....................... Gay Hamilton Barry'S Mother ....................... Marie Kean German Thrl ....................... Diana Koerner Reverend Runt ....................... Murray Melvin Sir Charles Lyndon ....................... Frank Middlemass Lord Wendover ....................... Andre Moitell Highwayman ....................... Arthur O'Sullivan Captain Grogan ....................... Godfrey Quigley Captain Quin ....................... Leonard Rossiler Graban ....................... Philip Stone Lord Bullingdnn ....................... Leon Vitali Narrator ....................... Michael Hordern With John Bindon , Anthony Dawes , Hans Meyer , George Sewell Roger Booth , Patrick Dawson , Ferdy Mayne , Anthony Sharp Billy Doyle , Bernard Hepton , David Morley , John Sharp Jonathan Cecil , Anthony Herrick , Liam Redmond , Roy Spencer Peter Ceilier , Barry Jackson , Pat Roach , John Sullivan Geoffrey Cuater , Wolf Kahler , Dominic Savage , Harry Towb Patrick Laffan , Frederick Schiller Credits Written for the screen, produced and directed by ..... Stanley Kubrick Based On The Novel By ............... William Makepeace Thackeray Execulive Producer ....................... Jan Harlan Associate Producer ....................... Bernard Williams Production Designer ....................... Ken Adam Costumes Designed By ....................... Ulla-Britt Soderlund, Milena Canonero Photographed By ....................... John Alcott Editor ....................... Tony Lawson Art Director ....................... Roy Walker Hair Styles And Wigs ....................... Leonard Assistant To The Producer ....................... Andros Epaminondas Assistant Director ....................... Brian Cook Irish Traditional Music By ....................... The Chieftains Music Adapted And Conducted By ....................... Leonard Rosenman From works by Johann Sebastian Bach Giovanni Paisiello Frederick The Great Franz Schubert Georg Friedrich Handel Antonio Vivaldi Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Click here for more
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Related Items for Barry Lyndon
Barry Lyndon Stills 8x10
Barry Lyndon 1-Sheet 27x41 folded
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