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UCLA Film & Television Archive

Alexander the Great

At the time of its release, Theo Angelopoulos insisted thatAlexander the Greatwas his “most simple film” to date, owing to its linear structure beginning at New Year’s Eve 1900 and proceeding from there.

Friday, Nov. 4, 7:30 p.m.

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Alexander the Great

O Megalexandros, Greece, 1980

At the time of its release, Theo Angelopoulos insisted that Alexander the Great was his “most simple film” to date, owing to its linear structure beginning at New Year’s Eve 1900 and proceeding from there. The film’s straightforward chronology belies, however, the complex interplay of history, myth, and politics that Angelopoulos weaves into this newly urgent fable of a would-be liberator who devolves into despotism. A bandit leader, Megalexandros, sparks an international incident when he kidnaps a group of English tourists to force economic reforms, but when he and his men return to their village to hold up, they find the revolution may have already passed them by.

35mm, color, in Greek and English with English subtitles, 199 min. Director: Theo Angelopoulos. Screenwriters: Theo Angelopoulos, Petros Markaris. With: Omero Antonutti, Eva Kotamanidou, Mihalis Giannatos.

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