This page contains various reviews of the movie "A Season of Giants", in which Mark Frankel played the role of Michelangelo. Below you will find the reviews as they were written... (hopefully) ..... as with any review, some are positive and some are negative.... a few don't even mention Mark at all..... (shame on them....). Either way, we hope that in providing this information, you might find that your interest is peaked and you will seek out the movie and decide for yourself. If you have already seen it, perhaps you'll be interested to see which reviewers, if any, agree with your assessment.....
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ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
HOUSTON CHRONICLE
THE SUNDAY PATRIOT - NEWS HARRISBURG
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
March 15, 1991
Television Column
by Ken Tucker, Benjamin Svetkey
THE WEEK
MINISERIES: A SEASON OF GIANTS (TNT, 8-10 p.m., part 1; part 2: 8-10 p.m. Monday) At four hours, this Italian-American coproduction about Michelangelo and the Italian Renaissance is The Agony, the Ecstasy, and the Absurdly Excessive-it's too long and it's shamelessly florid, but A Season of Giants is also well acted, often amusing, and occasionally moving.
The miniseries stars Mark Frankel (Young Catherine), who, early on, stares at a gigantic slab of marble and murmurs, "There's a figure in there, imprisoned in the block. Only a great sculptor will be able to find it, to set it free. When I've freed it, it will be the pride of Florence." That figure will prove to be one of Michelangelo's masterpieces, David, and that's one long murmur.
But then everything about A Season of Giants is that way-long scenes of Michelangelo chipping away at blocks of stone; long scenes of F. Murray Abraham as a huffy, imperious Pope Julius II commanding Michelangelo to build him a massive, grandiose tomb; and long, wonderful scenes in which John Glover, fresh from his triumph as the campy villain in ABC's remake of What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?, plays an even campier Leonardo da Vinci. Glover's Leonardo is a gleefully eccentric genius who, after a long day of painting, likes nothing better than to let off steam by pulling on a pair of paper wings and flapping around an empty field, testing theories of flight while having a darn good time. This Leonardo is grandly overstated ("Why do you always want to be different?" someone asks. "My entire life is a heroic struggle to enlarge the human horizon," Glover sniffs -and what's it to ya, bub?), and he adds immensely to the liveliness of A Season of Giants. B+ -KT
Sunday, March 17, 1991
TELEVISION
Cover story
Location giant among 'Giants'
ANN HODGES, Houston Chronicle TV Editor
Staff
It's a beautiful day in Florence, and all the student sculptors are busy, busy, busy-playing dodge ball.
Young Michelangelo Buonarotti is the best student sculptor of the lot, and he's also the best ball player. Already you know that young Michelangelo is headed for trouble. He's too good for his own good.
That's the opening scene of "A Season of Giants," TNT's international miniseries version of the life and times of Michelangelo and two fellow giants of the Italian Renaissance.
The artistic musketeers of this ambitious four-hour two-parter are taken from the history books, for a group portrait painted in thick coats of dramatic license.
It's been 500 years since Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and Raphael created their masterpieces. But their names and their works have inspired artists and art lovers through the ages.
"A Season of Giants" premieres at 7 p.m. Sunday and Monday on TNT, followed by the customary instant reruns at 9 p.m., same nights, same channel. More encores are two four-hour runs of the whole thing at 11a.m. Thursday, March 21, and 1 p.m. Sunday, March 24.
The chief player in this multinational production cooperative is Italy's RAI-1, in association with Tiber Cinematografica of Rome. That accounts for this film's most successful ingredients-the Italian locations, costumes and the attention to authentic atmosphere.
The international cast does its part pretty well.
It's headed by British actor Max Frankel, last seen as the dashing count who won the heart of "Young Catherine" in that Russian-set TNT two-parter. Frankel plays Michelangelo with all the earnest suffering that a young genius obsessed by his art can muster.
American actor John Glover is a quite unexpected Leonardo d Vinci, rather jolly elder genius. He's so famous he can afford to be charitable to the young upstart who dares to sneer at his painting and to challenge his title as the greatest of them all.
Andrea Prodan, another Brit, is Raphael, the high-living ladies' man who's just beginning to make his mark as a painter and who worships at the feet-and steals from the techniques-of the two already-famous masters.
Oscar-winner F. Murray Abraham is Pope Julius II. History calls
him "The Warrior Pope," but history remembers him more fondly for reunifying
the church and setting the stage for an unprecedented era of artistic achievement.
His greatest achievements were the rebuilding of St. Peter's Cathedral
and having the good sense to hire Michelangelo to
do the Sistine Chapel.
"I think of Julius as an early LBJ," Texan Abraham told his producers. "His size, his appetites, his demand for excellence. Johnson was regarded as something of a buffoon, yet many of the world's powerful leaders respected him more than any other American president, Julius approached that stature."
Ian Holm is Lorenzo di Medici, Florence's great leader and patron of the arts. Steven Berkoff is the fanatical Friar Savonarola, whose religious zeal threatened to kill off the creative spirit that di Medici had so carefully cultivated.
No miniseries would dare be caught dead without a few obligatory minutes (and that's about the size of it here) of grope-and-bundle in the boudoir. Italy's Ornella Muti is the ornamental lady who volunteers herself as Michelangelo's muse, but soon becomes the girl of Michelangelo's tormented dreams. And after that, the mistress of the randy Raphael.
Most of the supporting roles are by Italians and the changing accents do get a bit difficult to tune into at times.
It's hard to give this show a proper review, since the preview tape was a very rough cut, with no music and no dialogue looped into most of the pivotal crowd scenes. From what I did manage to make out, though, it's kind of spoonful of sugar that makes artistic medicine go down.
The script by Britain's Julian Bond and producer/creative supervisor
Vincenzo Labella is economy-sized and simplified. But it does point
up that in the time of Michelangelo, da Vinci and Raphael, great art was
to the lives of the masses as important as the not-so-great art of TV is
today. And, even in re-creation, it's fun to see great masterpieces
created-Michelangelo's "Pieta" and "David;" Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona
Lisa." (Your "Last Supper" is a legend, " Raphael gushes when he
meets the great da Vinci.)
The story begins in 1492, the year Columbus is discovering you know what, and Lorenzo di Medici is dying in Florence.
Michelangelo is Lorenzo's fair-haired boy and favorite protégé. But after Lorenzo dies, that and the splendid cloak of his mentor leaves him won't buy Michelangelo a glass of vino.
Michelangelo adores his real father and vows to make him proud. But that flinty patriarch hates his eldest son's profession. "A stonecutter!" he sniffs. It's a disgrace to the family name, and he'll never make a fortune at it. Lorenzo was Michelangelo's "one hope of salvation from a life of mediocrity and poverty,: and now he's dead and gone.
Michelangelo has his eye on one big, cast-off piece of marble, " a giant that cannot be conquered," the sculptors of Florence say. But Michelangelo knows better. "There's a figure in there somewhere-alive, imprisoned in that block, he says. "Only a great sculptor will be able to find it and set it free. But one day, when I have freed it, it will be the pride of Florence."
He does make good on that promise, one day, by creating his great masterpiece, "David."
But meanwhile, when Savonarola's gang goes on the prowl against "pagan art," Michelangelo moves to Bologna, where he finds a new rich patron and his beautiful muse, Onoria.
Leonardo da Vinci is already a famous artist. He's given up sculpting to concentrate on painting, and he spends all his spare time working on would-be inventions. His detailed drawings of those marvels are the forerunners of today's bicycles, airplanes and submarines.
By now, Michelangelo is back in Florence, has done "David" and is drafted by city leaders for a game of one-upmanship. He and da Vinci are to be artistic gladiators-each given half of a magnificent new city hall with orders to paint upon it scenes glorifying Florence.
While they're doing the dueling artists number, Raphael of Urbino drops in to introduce himself. That ambitious young artist admits he wants to crib a few pointers from Florence's superstars.
As this tale ends, Michelangelo is called to the Vatican to paint the Sistine Chapel, and the work that he had expected to be his crowning achievement nearly becomes his nemesis.
To re-create the splendor of Renaissance Italy, the company shot four months in Rome, Florence, Carrara, the medieval town of Viterbo, and the Orsini-Odescalchi Castle in Bracciano. That castle fortress was built in the late 15th century, and they say it looks today much as it did in Michelangelo's time. It treasures include paintings dating back to the 1400s.
Not everything was the real thing. The "David" was a 17-foot plaster cast of the original, and Florence's famed Piazza della Signoria, home of "David" for many years, was a sound stage mock-up at Rome's Cinecitta studios.
THE SUNDAY PATRIOT - NEWS
HARRISBURG
Copyright 1991
Sunday, March 17, 1991
ARTS/LEISURE
Great effort goes for little in "Giants"
Sharon Johnson
Patriot News
Tune in to TNT tonight to see the future of expensive television programming. If you've had enough in an hour-it could take less!-shift to CBS for old-fashioned entertainment.
"A Season of Giants," the miniseries which TNT will air tonight and tomorrow, one of those international ventures that are glorious when they work, disastrous when they don't. This one doesn't.
It takes us on a brief tour of Renaissance Italy, concentrating on Florence in one of the city-state's proudest moments.
We first meet young Michelangelo when he's chipping away at some sculpture for Lorenzo di Medici (Ian Holm, one of the few British actors in the production to make any attempt at an Italian accent).
The young sculptor is regarded as a hired hand, not a genius, by his fellow Florentines, so he's not terribly successful at convincing anyone that sculpture is the greatest art.
"They do tell me that Leonardo da Vinci is doing wonderful things in Milan," his patron tells him.
Yes, it's one of those artificial "life among the artists" biographies. (See Michelangelo release his masterpiece David from a block of marble! See Leonardo paint the Mona Lisa!) The sculptor and da Vinci, who believes painting is the perfect art, are rivals for commissions. They're also unappreciated by those around him.
"You shame me by becoming a common stonecutter. Here I am struggling to maintain some kind of standards," Michelangelo's father (who does not, of course, understand him) tells his son.
Later, ladies' man Raphael shows up to complete the trio of old masters. (Young masters, as they were at the time.) If Michelangelo and da Vinci are artistic rivals, our hero and Raphael are rivals in matters of the heart.
Also rivals in uninteresting performances. The minor saving grace in "A Season of Giants" is John Glover as the spaced out Leonardo.
Other actors turn in performances ranging from uncommonly dull (Mark Frankel and Andrea Prodan as the other two artists) to frighteningly frantic (Steven Berkoff as the Friar Savonarola.) The range of accents (Italian, British, American and occasionally downright incomprehensible) makes you wonder how this international group ever ended up as friends and neighbors.
The miniseries is visually beautiful. The production design is a work of art.
The drama will make you appreciate the fast forward function on your
remote control. Tape the series if you must and zip through the dull
parts. That should permit you to get through the four-hour film in
about 45 minutes.
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