Helen of Troy

Helen of Troy

1956 "Its towering wonders span the age of titans!"
Helen of Troy
Helen of Troy

Helen of Troy

6.1 | 1h58m | PG | en | Adventure

Prince Paris of Troy, shipwrecked on a mission to the king of Sparta, meets and falls for Queen Helen before he knows who she is. Rudely received by the royal Greeks, he must flee...but fate and their mutual passions lead him to take Helen along. This gives the Greeks just the excuse they need for much-desired war.

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6.1 | 1h58m | PG | en | Adventure , History , Romance | More Info
Released: January. 26,1956 | Released Producted By: Warner Bros. Pictures , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Prince Paris of Troy, shipwrecked on a mission to the king of Sparta, meets and falls for Queen Helen before he knows who she is. Rudely received by the royal Greeks, he must flee...but fate and their mutual passions lead him to take Helen along. This gives the Greeks just the excuse they need for much-desired war.

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Cast

Rossana Podestà , Jacques Sernas , Cedric Hardwicke

Director

Edward Carrere

Producted By

Warner Bros. Pictures ,

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Reviews

jvanderwalt5 Now first of i am not a fan of Greek stories the only ones that i like is this one , Walt Disney's Hercules; and Pompeii.Beginning with this movie i was going into it with the intention of hating it.But boy did this one surprise me.I didn't even catch on that this is the story of the Trojan horse i realized it first when the wooden horse showed up on the screen.That aside the love story that's inter wined is perfect Rosanna podesta and Jack sernas was a perfect cast even though their voices were dubbed seeing that both of them are french.That aside this is remarkable movie.Give it a try and you will fall in love.
GeoPierpont Paris in a leopard print toga, sea foam green, lilac blue and various pastels with REALLY short skirts and that's just the guys!! That Lithuanian guy was absolutely gorgeous, never heard of him and I thought he could act given his Adonis looks. I found Helen to be of equal beauty and loved her many different complex hair designs. When did they have time for that in a 10 year war? Although Diane Kruger of "Troy" by comparison is most attractive, she is not a face that launched a thousand ships.It really annoys me that the guise of war and evil is typically blamed on a woman. So we really are all that powerful folks?? Hmmmmm. Sheesh even Bethsheba gets blamed for all the woes of King David! And who could not get enough of the drunken orgies and rape scenes. Of course these chicks were asking for it....A lot! Poor Cassandra is also portrayed as a clueless dimwit, but the only voice of reason in the entire film.OK so what about the action? Pretty amazing for 1956 and no David Lean. I was impressed although the fight scenes were less believable. Even the Greek warship head bongo banger kept missing the wood stump and wondered how they ever made it into town.Despite the aforementioned misgivings, I was "into it" trying to decipher the differences between what I learned back in the day, other films, references, etc. It's very easy to bash a film from the confines of your bedroom notebook but I am trying to be more fair and balanced, BUT a tad of humor helps me write.Recommend for a stylized historical perspective of many moons ago and to keep you wondering what happens on the return trip....YIKES!!! ;}}
Robert J. Maxwell You'd think that by now the story of the Trojan War, based on Homer's "The Iliad", would have become part of our shared data base. Allusions have entered our list of catch phrases. "The face that launched a thousand ships"? "Beware of Greeks bearing gifts"? Computer viruses referred to as "Trojans" or "Trojan horses"? "Achilles heel"? The Stanford football team? Condoms? But I don't know. A poll in 2010 before Independence Day found that one in five Americans didn't know which country we had achieved independence FROM. I'd always thought that was part of our shared vernacular culture too.Anyway, the handsome young Paris from Troy goes on a peace mission to Greece, where he foolishly falls in love with Helen -- it was her face that launched all those ships -- and he steals her from her husband, King Menelaus, and runs off with her to Troy. This irritates Menelaus. He organizes an expedition and besieges the city of Troy, in what is now Turkey. Lots of bloodshed follows. The war lasts something like ten years. Finally, the Greeks pretend to retreat and leave a giant wooden horse outside the gates of Troy. The Trojans think it's a parting gift and drag it inside the walls. But it's hollow. The sneaky Greeks come out after the Trojans have gotten drunk and gone to bed, and the gates are opened. Good-bye Trojans.This is a godless movie. References are made to Athena (ugly and pugnacious) and to Aphrodite (pretty goddess of love, fawned over by Paris). But we don't see the influence of the gods directly. You don't find out how Achilles got to be so nearly invulnerable. It comes close to being one of those cheap sword and sandal epics that were so popular in the 1950s but it rises above them because of its budget and the willingness of the writers to stick a LITTLE more closely to Homer's original. The hundreds of extras are real people -- real actors rather than pixels acting as actors. And the international cast must have cost a lot.I guess Paris is made too much of a hero, at least in my opinion. Even in "The Iliad" he struck me as a moron for running off with a power rival's wife, even if she was as good looking as Rosanna Podesta. Menelaus was even more of a moron for starting a bloody war over the affair. And the other Greek leaders were even more dumb for following him. And it's not as if the Greeks solved all their domestic problems immediately after the victory either.The movie paints the Trojans as honorable and peace loving -- except for that one minor episode of kidnapping and adultery. The Greeks are angry, disputatious, and warmongering. The armor the Greeks wear is uglier than that of the Trojans. Achilles, the greatest of the Greek warriors, is sulky and dresses in drag to avoid being drafted into the war. This was 1956, the middle of the Cold War, and I wonder if all those binary oppositions -- The Free World versus The Iron Curtain -- influenced the writers' construction of the combatants.At any rate, I always liked the Trojans better anyway. The only Greek I admired was Ulysses. When the ships set sail from Greece after the kidnapping, the director, Robert Wise, gives us shots in quick sequence of three of the major plays and their expressions tell us all we need to know about their character and motives. Menelaus scowls grimly, determined to get his wife back. Achilles wears a smirk, anticipating lots of slaughter crowned with victory. And Ulysses wears a self-contained smile, dreaming of plunder.It ought to be added that the musical score is by Max Steiner. As far as I know it's his only attempt at a fully blown orchestral epic score and he handles it pretty well. There's the triumph theme that is required for all historical epics. There's the martial theme when we see those hundreds of armored extras marching towards the forbidding walls of Troy. And there's a love them that dominates them all, as I think the story of Paris and Helen dominate the movie.
jetsetcol I can't believe some of the comments here in the reviews. The film is dated of course, and from our comfortable viewpoint in the age of CGG a lot of the special effects are deeply unconvincing now. But even allowing for this, Helen of Troy is so bad that it is almost laughable. The scripting is awful, just awful, with no characterisation at all. The performances suffer as a result, you can see the likes of Hardwicke and Andrews writhing in an agony of embarrassment as they deliver the most ridiculous shallow trite codswallop lines. The writers seem to feel the need to explain almost everything in a dreadful didactic screenplay that allows the viewer to decide nothing for him/herself at all. The beginning of the movie spells out the historical background as if no one had ever heard of ancient Greece; I know they had American audiences to take into consideration, but the patronising way we are told everything twice to make sure we understood the action is really awful.I honestly can't believe the comments above describing this movie as a great epic film. Even allowing for the comparatively primitive cinematography and the relative sophistication of today's audience, this movie truly stinks.