Watch Caesar Must Die Movie Online Streaming Megavideo

Watch Caesar Must Die Movie Online Streaming Free in HD

Winner of the Golden Bear at the Berlinale, Paolo and Vittorio Taviani's Caesar Must Die deftly melds narrative and documentary in a transcendently powerful drama-within-a-drama. The film was made in Rome's Rebibbia Prison, where the inmates are preparing to stage Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. After a competitive casting process, the roles are eventually allocated, and the prisoners begin exploring the text, finding in its tale of fraternity, power and betrayal parallels to their own lives and stories. Hardened criminals, many with links to organised crime, these actors find great motivation in performing the play. As we witness the rehearsals, beautifully photographed in various nooks and crannies within the prison, we see the inmates also work through their own conflicts, both internal and between each other. -- (C) Adopt. If You Want to Watch Caesar Must Die Movie Streaming Without Downloading HERE
Release Date Caesar Must Die Feb 6, 2013 Limited

Caesar Must Die Movie Genre: Documentary,Drama,Musical & Performing Arts,Art House & International,Special Interest
Caesar

Caesar Must Die Movie Synopsis

Total Vote User Caesar Must Die : Visitor
User Rating Caesar Must Die : 3.8
User Percentage For Caesar Must Die : 78 %
User Count Like for Caesar Must Die : 709
All Critics Rating For Caesar Must Die : 7.7
All Critics Count For Caesar Must Die : 24
All Critics Percentage For Caesar Must Die : 92 %

Cast For Caesar Must Die

Cosimo Rega,Salvatore Striano,Giovanni Arcuri,Antonio Frasca,Juan Dario Bonetti,Vittorio Parrella,Rosario Majorana,Vincenzo Gallo,Francesco de Masi,Gennaro Solito,Francesco Carusone,Fabio Rizzuto,Maurilio Giaffreda,Cosimo Raga



Review For Caesar Must Die

The film gets on screen not only the play's bloody, double-dealing, hungry essence, but the redemptive potential of art.
Farran Smith Nehme-New York Post

The Tavianis blur the boundaries between fact and fiction, but they couldn't do it without the full complicity of their actors, or the audience.
Elizabeth Weitzman-New York Daily News

You can only guess what the lines mean to the inmates, who register as atmospheric blanks at best and brutal exotics at worst, even if the tale that they enact with such earnest vigor works because the original tragedy does.
Manohla Dargis-New York Times

So solid is that conception, and so resonant the text in which questions of freedom and slavery are paramount, that the impact can hardly be diminished.
Nick Pinkerton-Village Voice

A gimmick film that begins to feel like a whole, natural piece.
Jordan Hoffman-Film.com

Moving away from the literary costume dramas that have been their principal terrain for many years, the Taviani Brothers explore a fascinating encounter between theater and reality.
David Rooney-Hollywood Reporter

If you're looking for an adventurous thought-provoking film, "Caesar Must Die" more than fits the bill.
Cole Smithey-ColeSmithey.com

In just 76 minutes, the Taviani brothers treat us to a deeply affecting adaptation of this ancient play, embedded with even deeper meaning on account of its unconventional stars.
Simon Miraudo-Quickflix

Here's an extraordinary melding of the actualities of modern man with his ancient past. Sadly, humankind hasn't made much progress when it comes to controlling its ambitious and testosterone-tinged impulses. Happily, human frailties make great art.
Brandon Judell-CultureCatch

Paolo and Vittorio Taviani brilliantly merge documentary and fiction in this film about a prison production of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar.
Maria Garcia-Film Journal International

For a movie with such a brisk pace -- it clocks in at just 76 minutes -- "Caesar Must Die" has surprising depth ...
Grant Butler-Oregonian

In Caesar Must Die, the characters are both actor and audience, looking at themselves through the lens of a centuries-old fictionalization of history.
Noel Murray-AV Club

Hardly a dish fit for the gods.
Keith Uhlich-Time Out New York

As much in the corridors, cells and courtyards as on the virtually prop-less stage, these nearly entirely non-professionals give moving performances.
Donald J. Levit-ReelTalk Movie Reviews

Now into their eighties, the Taviani brothers show with this remarkable, fresh and moving drama-documentary they have lost none of that mix of observational rigour and sympathy for the underdog that marked early films like Padre Padrone.
Lee Marshall-Screen International

Italy's Oscar entry for best foreign pic of 2012 is a bold choice, one featuring hardened criminals who deliver a shattering performance of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar.
Harvey S. Karten-Compuserve

A clever meta-narrative achievement that boasts winningly naturalistic performances from the real inmates and doesn't outstay its welcome.
Shaun Munro-What Culture

The 'play-within-the-film' concept keeps the audience held slightly at arms length, but in many of the more intense scenes it's hard not to be sucked in, at least until the real world interrupts again.
Gail Tolley-The List


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