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The movie received a terribly negative review in The New York Times, Renata Adler criticizing the adaptation of the text ("the play has been quite badly cut"), Burton's performance ("he seems happiest shouting in Latin, or in Ms. Taylor's ear"), the score ("some horrible electronic Wagnerian theme music"), and Taylor's role ("in this last role ...
Doctor Faustus: Richard Burton, Nevill Coghill: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton: Drama: The Double Man: Franklin J. Schaffner: Yul Brynner, Britt Ekland: Thriller: Far from the Madding Crowd: John Schlesinger: Julie Christie, Alan Bates, Terence Stamp, Peter Finch: Literary drama: Number 79 in the list of BFI Top 100 British films: Fathom ...
Doctor Faustus, also known as The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus, a 1592 play by Christopher Marlowe; Doktor Faust, a 1925 opera by Ferruccio Busoni; Doctor Faustus, a 1947 novel by Thomas Mann; Doctor Faustus, a 1967 film directed by Richard Burton and Nevill Coghill
Doctor Faustus (1967 film) Dr. Terror's Gallery of Horrors; E. ... Viy (1967 film) The Vulture (1967 film) W. Why the Cuckoo Cries; Y. Yongary, Monster from the Deep ...
It features Doctor Faustroll (an allusion to Doctor Faustus), a scientist who is born in 1898 in Circassia at the age of 63, and who dies the same year at the same age. Written in 1898, the novel was first published posthumously in 1911 by Fasquelle. It was published in paperback in 2007 by Arléa (Arléa-Poche) on the centenary of Jarry's death.
The Guinness Book of Records lists 410 feature-length film and TV versions of William Shakespeare's plays as having been produced, which makes him the most filmed author ever in any language. [ 1 ] The Internet Movie Database lists Shakespeare as having writing credit on 1,171 films, with 21 films in active production, but not yet released, as ...
Christopher Marlowe's The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus (A-text 1604, B-text 1616) William Mountfort's The Life and Death of Doctor Faustus, made into a farce (1697) John Rich's The Necromancer, or Harlequin Dr. Faustus (1723) John Thurmond's Harlequin Doctor Faustus (1723) and The Miser, or Wagner and Abericock (1726)
The film was released in the United States as The Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus along with The Manster in 1962. In this trailer for the double bill, distributor Lopert Pictures plays on the artistic nature of the film that modern critics would later praise. [13]