Othon

Straub-Huillet’s first color film, adapts a lesser-known Corneille tragedy from 1664, which in turn was based on an episode of imperial court intrigue chronicled in Tacitus’s Histories. The costuming is classical, and the toga-clad, nonprofessional cast performs the drama’s original French text amid the ruins of Rome’s Palatine Hill while the noise of contemporary urban life hums in the background. Their lines are executed with a terrific flatness and frequently through heavy accents; the language in Othon becomes not merely an expression but a thing itself, an element whose plainness here alerts us to qualities of the work that might otherwise be subordinated.

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Camera

Renato Berta

Director of Photography

Ugo Piccone

Director of Photography

Directing

Editing

Production

Klaus Hellwig

Producer

Sound

Louis Hochet

Sound Recordist

Lucien Moreau

Sound Recordist

Writing

Pierre Corneille

Theatre Play

Jean-Marie Straub

Screenplay

Danièle Huillet

Screenplay

Camera

Renato Berta

Director of Photography

Ugo Piccone

Director of Photography

Directing

Editing

Production

Klaus Hellwig

Producer

Sound

Louis Hochet

Sound Recordist

Lucien Moreau

Sound Recordist

Writing

Pierre Corneille

Theatre Play

Jean-Marie Straub

Screenplay

Danièle Huillet

Screenplay