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Augustine of Hippo

Augustine of Hippo (1972)

October. 25,1972
|
6.6
| Drama History

A biography of St. Augustine as he enters the episcopacy and deals with heresy and the decline of the Western Roman Empire.

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KnotMissPriceless
1972/10/25

Why so much hype?

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CommentsXp
1972/10/26

Best movie ever!

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Beanbioca
1972/10/27

As Good As It Gets

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Fleur
1972/10/28

Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.

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chaos-rampant
1972/10/29

I come to Rossellini's portrait films incidentally after puzzling for several months over the ways we devise to push against our limits of sense, the notions and models we construct to expand understanding. It isn't an academic interest; the quest is for clarity over the difficult questions, description that preserves the ambiguities.The first step is to be placed in history, this means to inhabit a life in whose horizon it begins to form. Augustine lived through tumultuous times; Rome was the known world, the world worth knowing, and in his lifetime he saw the sack of Rome by the Goths, a devastating event, and all sorts of trouble in a church that less than a hundred years ago had faced its harshest persecution and had only been sanctioned a few decades prior.To inhabit this life means to resist knowing after the fact that Rome would soon end and the church would take over as its own empire, to experience this all as uncertain and new. A lot of it is talked, about the empire not being what it was, overall however it creates a powerful picture of people in a small African town (this is the Roman African province) trying to hold onto a small patch of certainty as distant structures collapse around them. News of the fall of Rome appear as a messenger rides into town at dawn and posts it on a wall, as it would be in the remote province. It's only later when refugees from there show up that we hear more about it. Here we find Rossellini's conception of history then—it's not an excuse to climb walls, it's why the Vandal siege, the historic climax of Augustine's life, is omitted. It's an opportunity to formulate a response, a worldview—they are moral works then in a lucid sense.The second thing is to ask what does that certainty consist of, what response to the collapse? Many of us will find more difficult entry here than Socrates; it preaches grace and virtue, that's fine, the stumbling block with the Christian message is the superstructure of meaning, such as the sermon here about a divine city of god. Entwined with the Christian call however is the Socratic one for reason, beauty in moral truth.The third is what we miss about Augustine but find out about Rossellini. The real Augustine was both more medieval and more modern than we're shown here, the fiery Augustine of sin and predestination and prescient Augustine of time as memory are both absent and he's instead rounded as a teacher of deep principle and practical response. What we miss is the Augustine for whom the soulsearch for god was a search for the mind that attempts to know god. His most known work that traces the searching is an autobiography, the first of its kind ever. If you ever read it, note that his first apprehension of god (inspired by mystical Greeks) is a mind that rises above thought to rest in the presence of itself; this later propels separate chapters on experienced time and memory as space. (It's involving in general though; at one point he ruminates about the moral impact of media, Greek myths), in another he worries about the ills of peer pressure).This can be seen to be Rossellini's own response then, not letting his Augustine stray too much on metaphysics as a way of drawing attention to what matters; practicing the ethos in daily life.

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simon-1303
1972/10/30

This is generally enjoyable. It does a reasonably good job of situating the drama in 5th century Roman Africa, even though the external sets are obviously contemporary (to Rossellini) Roman remains. The interiors are well done and convincing. The drama is dramatic when it needs to be, though there are some lengthy theological discussions, and one does get a sense of the power of St. Augustine's preaching, of the theological disputes of the time and of the tasks of a bishop. The scenes from his life, though limited till his later life, are well chosen to illustrate his character and accomplishments. I'm not sure that I found the principal character terribly convincing or that characterisation came through strongly, but this two dimensional element fitted the didactic style of the film and the art of the time.

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kcvtb
1972/10/31

I have used this film in class as long ago as the 1970s and found it a very helpful visualization and supplement to textual study of the life and work of Augustine. There was a lot of imagination put into representing the later Roman empire as it really was, and even the specialist will find details to admire and little to quibble with. Having looked for it in VHS/DVD for years, I finally came upon a copy in a bookstore in the Vatican in October 2006 and now see that it can be ordered from the online Italian bookseller, bol.it -- dialogue in Italian and comes also with Italian subtitles. There *was* an English-subtitled film version, but that seems not now available. But if teacher or students have even a little Italian and teacher has a decent knowledge of Augustine, this is well worth it. As the other comment says, leisurely but gripping if you let it.Jim O'Donnell Georgetown University

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Gerald A. DeLuca
1972/11/01

This was one of a series of films made by Roberto Rossellini late in his career about important historical figures who changed the world in a significant way. They included "Socrates", "Descartes", "The Messiah", "Blaise Pascal," "The Age of the Medici". The subject here is Saint Augustine (354-430), who became Bishop of Hippo in northern Africa, living and working in that era that marked the fall of the Roman Empire. It is not a devotional film or saintly biography in any conventional sense but an attempt to understand how a visionary and philosophical Christian faced the problems of his age. Augustine had dealings with barbarians, heretics, youth gangs, social misfits of all kinds. Civilization was in great flux and that era bore a great resemblance to our own. Augustine's advice to us is that we must exercise our intellects in the never ending search to know and see things as they are. It is the same advice of Leon Battista Alberti in Rossellini's Medici film and is the same advice the director himself has persistently offered all of us. The film is illustrative, talky, leisurely as are the others in this series, but it has a way of grabbing you and challenging you if you are capable of succumbing to its richness.

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