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Iphigenia

 Iphigenia
type
TVTItem
 Iphigenia
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Iphigenia
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Iphigenia
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Iphigenia is a 1977 film from Greece directed by Michael Cacoyannis.It is an adaptation of the Ancient Greek play Iphigenia in Aulis by Euripides, which was itself an adaptation of the ancient myth of Iphigenia. The Greeks are in the port town of Aulis, having assembled to set sail to Troy and get The Trojan War rolling. But there's no wind and the human race is still about three thousand years away from inventing the steam engine, so the ships are sitting in port, and the thousand soldiers there are getting restless.King Agamemnon, commander of the Greek army, leads a hunting party to corral some sheep. One soldier follows a sacred deer into the temple of the goddess Artemis and kills it, which is a very bad thing. Calchas, the oracle of Artemis, arrives in the Greek camp with unwelcome news: Artemis demands a human sacrifice to atone for the killing of the deer. If Artemis doesn't get her sacrifice, she will make sure that the Greek fleet never gets a favorable wind and thus won't be able to set out for Troy. And Artemis doesn't want any old human for her sacrifice, she wants a specific one: Agamemnon's eldest child, his teenaged daughter Iphigenia.Irene Pappas appears as Iphigenia's mother, Clytemnestra. Iphigenia is the third film in Michael Cacoyannis's "Greek Tragedy" trilogy, following Electra and The Trojan Women. This film is basically a prequel to Electra, which deals with Agamemnon facing the consequences of sacrificing his daughter. (Irene Pappas played Electra in the earlier film, and she plays Electra's mother in this one.)
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2023-08-31T13:58:16Z
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2023-08-31T13:58:16Z
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Dropped link to CallBack: Not a Feature - ITEM
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DBTropes
 Iphigenia / int_289008dc
type
Incorruptible Pure Pureness
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Incorruptible Pure Pureness: Iphigenia is sweet and innocent and virginal.
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 Iphigenia / int_396e1c2a
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Face Death with Dignity
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Face Death with Dignity: Iphigenia initially panics, as one might expect, running away, and then later begging her father to mercy. But once it becomes clear that there's no escape she becomes calm, asks for her bridal robe, and walks to her death unaccompanied.
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 Iphigenia / int_407d3e6d
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Morton's Fork
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Morton's Fork: Agamemnon believes he is facing this once word gets out about the sacrifice. If he doesn't sacrifice his daughter, the soldiers will mutiny and kill them all anyway.
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 Iphigenia / int_5bdffefe
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Jitter Cam
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Jitter Cam: Used to show the POV of the deer in the opening scene as it flees through the forest, then used again in an identical shot to show Iphigenia's POV as she flees in panic.
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 Iphigenia / int_82accf22
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Gainax Ending
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Gainax Ending: Ancient versions of the myth differ on whether or not Iphigenia was sacrificed, with some saying she was, and others saying she was whisked away by the gods at the last second and replaced by a deer. Euripides's play ends with an epilogue indicating that Iphigenia was saved, and while that is of dubious authenticity, he had earlier written a play called Iphigenia In Tauris where she did in fact survive. In any event, this movie ends with Iphigenia disappearing into smoke at the top of the hill. The wind the Greeks have been waiting for rises, and their sails billow. Agamemnon, who has gone into the smoke himself, looks on in shock at...something offscreen.
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 Iphigenia / int_86ee8070
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World of Ham
 Iphigenia / int_86ee8070
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World of Ham: Hammy over-the-top acting throughout, from just about everybody except the actress who plays Iphigenia. Probably appropriate in a film about Ancient Greek myth.
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 Iphigenia / int_9843be73
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As You Know
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As You Know: Agamemnon helpfully sketches out some relationships when, while talking about the impending war, he says "I speak not as Menelaus's brother, nor as the husband of Helen's sister Clytemnestra."
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 Iphigenia / int_ab5eea65
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Dramatic Irony
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Dramatic Irony: Agamemnon has lured his daughter to Aulis on the pretense that she is going to be married to Achilles. Iphigenia wonders if a ritual sacrifice may be necessary for the favorable wind that the Greeks need to get to Troy. She asks her father if she can go with him to the sacrifice and he says "You will be with me to the very end."
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 Iphigenia / int_c66cb5a9
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Human Sacrifice
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Human Sacrifice: Most ancient Greeks are OK with it!
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 Iphigenia / int_dea5fe1
type
Kubrick Stare
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Kubrick Stare: Agamemnon to Menelaus as the latter rips into the former about sacrificing his daughter.
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 Iphigenia / int_e3c36782
type
Call-Forward
 Iphigenia / int_e3c36782
comment
Call-Forward: Iphigenia tries to let her father off the hook, telling Clytemnestra that he isn't to blame. Clytemnestra then shouts "He is! And he'll pay for this!" In Ancient Greek mythology Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus murdered Agamemnon on his return to Greece.
 Iphigenia / int_e3c36782
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 Iphigenia / int_e8e56799
type
Blue-and-Orange Morality
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Blue-and-Orange Morality: The practice of human sacrifice, and a society that not only accepts it but demands it. The entire Greek army demands the sacrifice of Iphigenia when the word gets out, all of them except for Achilles, the only one who volunteers to defend her.
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1.0
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Iphigenia / int_e8e56799
 Iphigenia / int_e9a97564
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Evil Wears Black
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Evil Wears Black: Calchas, the oracle of Artemis who will actually perform the ritual sacrifice of Iphigenia, is clad all in black when she arrives at the altar on the top of the hill.
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 Iphigenia / int_ff41780
type
Young Future Famous People
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Young Future Famous People: Orestes, Agamemnon's son and a small child, is seen and mentioned often. In mythology he grew up to be a hero who killed his mother in revenge for her killing his father.
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Iphigenia / int_ff41780
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ItemName
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Iphigenia

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