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Zardoz (Widescreen)

Sean Connery , Charlotte Rampling , John Boorman    R (Restricted)   DVD
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (83 customer reviews)
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A bewigged Sean Connery is Zed, a savage "exterminator" commanded by the mysterious god Zardoz to eliminate Brutals, survivors of an unspecified worldwide catastrophe. Zed stows away inside Zardoz's enormous idol (a flying stone head) and is taken to the pastoral land of the Eternals, a matriarchal, quasi-medieval society that has achieved psychic abilities as well as immortality. Zed finds as much hope as disgust with the Eternals; their advancements have also robbed them of physical passion, turning their existence into a living death. Zed becomes the Eternals' unlikely messiah, but in order to save them--and himself--he must confront the truth behind Zardoz and his own identity inside the Tabernacle, the Eternals' omnipresent master computer.

A box office failure, John Boorman's Zardoz has developed a cult following among science fiction fans whose tastes run toward more cerebral fare, such as The Andromeda Strain and Phase IV. An entrancing if overly ambitious (by Boorman's own admission) film, Zardoz offers pointed commentary on class structure and religion inside its complex plot and head-movie visuals; its healthy doses of sex and violence will involve viewers even if the story machinations escape them. Beautifully photographed near Boorman's home in Ireland's Wicklow Mountains by Geoffrey Unsworth (2001), its production design is courtesy of longtime Boorman associate Anthony Pratt, who creates a believable society within the film's million-dollar budget. The letterboxed DVD presentation includes engaging commentary by Boorman, who discusses the special effects (all created in-camera) as well as working with a post-Bond Connery. --Paul Gaita


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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars All Time Worst Big Budget Film Feb 26 2002
Format:DVD
I have to laugh at the reviewers who suggest that 'dumb' people won't like this film. As if this film is some sort of deep, intellectually stimulating masterpiece.
This film is a perfect illustration of the famous Shakespeare line, "full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."
There are a lot of 'confusing' plot points and hallucinatory extremely obvious symbollism to make the film look deep, but when you get right down to it, the film mostly just makes some very cliched obvious statements. Excellent cinematography and gratuitous nudity notwithstanding, the film is surprisingly dull and lacks any sort of emotion or suspense to make it a worthwhile film to watch.
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Format:DVD
One afternoon, 10 years after it was released, I saw Zardoz in a moviehouse in Georgetown and didn't get it - except that Sean Connery was still very sexy. Recently, the serendipity of watching The Swimmng Pool with Charlotte Rampling suggested giving this Boorman allegory another chance. I finally get it and had fun seeing it again. Three reasons to watch Zardoz are John Boorman's emerging vision and personal iconography, the power of Sean Connery's presence and acting (especially at the point in his career when he was trying to break from the Bond type-cast), and Geoffrey Unsworth's masterful photography.

Boorman and his actors put their hearts and talent on the line. Connery pulls off wearing the red loincloth and wedding dress, pulling a rickshaw and effectively performing scenes like the lecture on libido with subtle irony. Charlotte Rampling, Sara Kestelman, and other actresses can survive wearing go-go boots or performing nude while portraying strong women in conflict reacting to Zed's mojo. The whole cast of immortals are such good actors that you can giggle about the horror of wearing macramé tops and overly foofed hair, but they suspend your belief in the nightmare society these characters have created. Unsworth not only films this movie; he validates the vision with clear images that indulges Boorman's penchant for setting archetypes and going all Jungian on us. It is beautiful to watch and mostly poetic.

Boorman stuffs the movie with cinematic references like Welles and Peckinpah, much like the immortals have stuffed their museum. In his commentary, he admits putting too much in the film and that he would do things differently with more money and experience. At the beginning, there are moments that almost feel like Monty Python's Holy Grail or Woody Allen's Sleeper, but the movie progresses past that. The set design was interesting, but I felt that the costuming was just a little too groovy. He also admits that some of this cult classic is laughable, but the actors and the camera take it seriously enough to trap us in the Vortex and follow Zed as he searches for the truth. I am a sucker for personal films, and everybody involved made this personal to their truth.

Given what has been going on in Silicon Valley, Zardoz is still very pertinent. The irony is that celluloid projections on glass, superimposed images on film and light refracting from faceted crystals simulated computers, which were used to depict John Boorman's vision of 2293. In any remake, instead of green bread, Boorman's successor would have to direct the brutals in assembling green pizzas, and a notion of a religious mystery commanding the terminators would be named by the corruption of the phrase - Stock Option. Their god would be called Ckoption. Nyahhh! Just watch Zardoz.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Strange, uneven and often beautiful July 3 2004
Format:DVD
This is a very strange work, a large-scale but highly personal film with many beauties as well as some dubious elements. The opening fifteen minutes are among the most memorable: Boorman begins the movie with numerous striking compositions (greatly enhanced by this pristine DVD edition), and a dreamlike, largely silent progression which highlights his storytelling talent; Zed's 'learning sequence', later in the film, is also remarkably put together. The main character's quest for truth and knowledge is mostly compelling, but brought down a bit by Boorman's simplistic, rarely subtle views on sexuality and spirituality. On the other hand, his use of mythology, classical art and fairy tales is adept and intelligent, and the twist he gives to the Indo-European functional tripartition famously noted by Georges Dumezil (sovereign-religious / physical strength-war / fecundity) is quite provocative. 'Zardoz' is a cult movie par excellence: flawed but ambitious, its weaknesses are as definitive as its strengths in defining its special flavour. This unique film should be seen by adventurous viewers.
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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Director John Boorman's Classic
ZARDOZ is director John Boorman's classic tale of future events. This came at a time when Sean Connery was giving up his James Bond image. Read more
Published on Jun 25 2004 by gobirds2
5.0 out of 5 stars Satisfying on many dimensions
This movie is satisfying on many dimensions from social commentary to sci-fi to visual impact to mystery and so forth. Read more
Published on Jun 20 2004 by bernie
4.0 out of 5 stars Beyond 1984...Beyond 2001...Zardoz Awaits!
John Boorman's outré film ZARDOZ (1974) is a somewhat campy but visually stunning science-fiction dystopian fantasy set in the distant future. Read more
Published on May 25 2004 by Michael R Gates
3.0 out of 5 stars Extraordinary and extraordinarily confusing film
The first time you see this film it may bore and confuse you. Some of the visual elements are very engaging. But John Boorman's story telling seems disjointed in this picture. Read more
Published on May 9 2004 by J. A. Brandon
2.0 out of 5 stars not worth a second look
So bad that it's almost laughable. I can just about promise you that you will not watch it twice. . Read more
Published on Mar 17 2004
4.0 out of 5 stars "Is God in show business?"
So asks Arthur Frayn, alias the god Zardoz, as his disembodied head floats before us and invites us to be entertained by Zardoz, a 1974 film directed by John Boorman, starring Sean... Read more
Published on Mar 16 2004 by Found Highways
3.0 out of 5 stars Boorman's Odd Cod of Sci-fi
ZARDOZ is bizarrely intriquing film.But not,perhaps,for reasons Director John Boorman "wishes" it to be. Read more
Published on Feb 8 2004 by Arthur F. McVarish
5.0 out of 5 stars Zardoz does it!
No matter how critical an attitude I bring to it, I simply cannot dislike this film! Its premises, performances, and images are a godsend to a lover of "thinking... Read more
Published on Feb 4 2004 by Moldyoldie
4.0 out of 5 stars What if you killed god ?
I will start of a small confession, I have not seen the whole film and cannot comment on the ending or lack of one . Read more
Published on Jan 26 2004 by Ronen
5.0 out of 5 stars Must see -- at least to have an opinion...
You can't call yourself a true film geek unless you've seen Zardoz. Hate it or love it or whatever, this is one of those ink blots that reveals. Me, I give it credit. Read more
Published on Dec 22 2003 by Cathryn Mataga
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