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| Director: Roger Christian Actors: Tcheky Karyo, F. Murray Abraham, Rutger Hauer, Amanda Plummer, Julia Ormond Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
List Price: $14.95 Buy Used: $8.29 You Save: $6.66 (45%)
New (2) Used (9) Collectible (2) from $8.29
Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 18408
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Original Recording Reissued, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Media: VHS Tape Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 119 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 0792847040 UPC: 027616853790 EAN: 9780792847045 ASIN: B00004WIBB
Theatrical Release Date: September 16, 1994 Release Date: October 3, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Showing reviews 6-10 of 10
Nostradamus: Honest Attempt at Interest Falls Flat August 26, 2002 Martin Asiner (jersey city, nj United States) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
The prophecies of the 16th century seer Nostradamus have tantalized his supporters for centuries. Those who believe in him tout his accurate predictions. Those who doubt him point to the vagueness of those predictions that can be interpreted in more than one way. Director Roger Christian is unclear whether he wanted to present a documentary of the life of Nostradamus or a traditional film with plot, theme, and characterization. What the viewer gets in NOSTRADAMUS is some unsatisfactory hybrid that bounces from scene to scene with little to tie them together. Tcheky Karyo plays the lead as one who is only too well aware of the mystical nature of a prophet who sees visions of far flung events. Every five minutes or so, Nostradamus looks into a small pot of water that mysteriously bubbles and forms visions that look suspiciously like film clips of nuclear blasts, the Kennedy assassination, Nazis marching, and a wickedly smiling Saddam Hussein. Now I have no problem with the film's premise that one man could have preternatural powers of divination, but if I see a vision that I know is historical fact, then I expect the director to do more with that vision than merely use it to drum up charges by the Holy Inquisition about heresy. Unfortunately, with each passing vision, there is no accompanying reverberation and the film stops dead in its tracks. After three or four visions, I wanted to grab Nostradamus and shout: 'Do something with this vision!' F. Murray Abraham at least adds some emotional pop with his warnings to Nostradamus not to publicize his visions. The other supporting characters have little to do but react predictably to these visions. By the end, all I could take away was the limited knowledge that some guy in history saw weird things but did not use this weirdness in any meaningful way. A movie is supposed to do more than that.
Worth watching,slightly sensational. October 26, 2002 D. Klevorn (San Antonio, TX) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Not a bad movie , especially for those who find the history channel too dry. It weaves the base truth of his life and loves into a palatable mix of history and dramatization.
Shows a very human man with great prophetic powers November 12, 2002 Jeannie (junction alabama United States) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is one of the best movies I have seen on him. It was highly enjoyable and I recommend it to anyone wanting to add to their Nostradamus collection. This is one not to pass up.
Excellent Historical Dramatization July 14, 2006 H. J. Reinoehl 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The movie is excellent; however, many of the previously written reviews are disappointing. The writer of the script and director of the movie did a wonderful job of giving us not only a historical context for this enigma of a man but also an idea of what his personal life must have been like. I don't know what some critcs expect, considering all information on the personal life of Nostradamus is sketchy at best, but bringing him to life in this movie was extremely entertaining and informative if one knows how to "read between the lines" in a historical drama. Furthermore, as to the expectation of Nostradamus "doing something" with his visions, I would recommend a rigorous study of European history during the centuries of the Holy Inquisition. Anyone "seeing things" most certainly needed to keep his mouth shut! Nostradamus demonstrated great courage writing about his visions at all, hence, the complicated structure. I would very much like to see this movie on DVD; I would buy it immediately!
A flesh and blood depiction of the renowned prognosticator September 15, 2006 Cinephiliac (Los Angeles, CA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Working from the sketchy historical details that are known about him, and taking a certain amount of dramatic license, the film "Nostradamus" chronicles the life of Michel de Nostredame (Tcheky Karyo), who came to be known more for his prophecies than for his work as a physician and an apothecary toiling against the ravages of plague-decimated 16th Century Europe. Nostradamus was born into a Jewish family that converted to Christianity in order to escape the religious persecution of the Inquisition. Even as a small child, he was tormented by visions of events surrounding the fate of loved ones and of doomed cities in the future being torn asunder. As a young adult in medical school, he railed against the primitive practices which incorporated 'bleeding' into any treatment course. More than 30 years before the first rudimentary microscopes built by Zacharias Jansenn and Anton van Leeuwenhoek and the discovery of bacteria, Nostradamus had the foresight to burn infected clothing and to wash his hands before and after patient contact. He argued for better hygiene and nutrition as a deterrent to illness, as well as discovering a "rose pill" which aided in the treatment of early-stage plague victims. For these activities, he was brought before the Grand Inquisitor on more than one occasion for practicing the black arts. With the assistance of his mentor, Dr. Scalinger (F. Murray Abraham), Nostradamus struggled to decipher his overpowering visions with the use of astrology and books on mysticism outlawed by the Catholic Church. Nostradamus would later serve as an advisor to Catherine de' Medici after predicting the death of her husband, King Henry II of France. In his declining years, saddled with gout, Nostradamus would sit, night after night, sleep deprived and driven to feverishly write down his prophetic quatrains. He foresaw events far into the future--one of which many would come to interpret as the rise of Hitler and World War II. Michel Nostradamus is represented in the film as a fallible man--driven as much by base passion as loftier emotions. Often in biopics the person is represented as too saintly or too villainous. Here, Nostradamus is just a decent man struggling with the everyday problems and issues of his time. The superb supporting cast includes Rutger Hauer (The Mystic Monk), Amanda Plummer (Catherine de' Medici), Anthony Higgins (King Henry II) and Michael Gough (Jean de Remy). The cinematography is simply lush and each frame looks like it could have been lifted from a Renaissance painting. If I have any complaint about the film (and it's a small one), it is that Nostradamus' life was so full and rich that the nearly 2 hour running time doesn't do it justice. Sometimes it felt like you were getting a rushed, "just the highlights" version of an amazing life. Whether or not you assign merit to his prognostications, Nostradamus remains a fascinating historical figure who lived in a tumultuous and perilous era. He improved the lives of those around him at great personal risk to himself. A thoroughly enjoyable and fascinating biopic. It should be noted that this is an adults only film. There is nudity and explicit sexual behavior throughout.
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