Maciste
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Image:B-pagano.JPG Maciste, or Machiste (pronounced ma-CHEES-tay) is one of the oldest recurring characters in cinema. He cuts a heroic figure throughout the history of the cinema of Italy, even if the movies that featured him were usually of poor artistical quality. He is usually depicted as a Hercules-like figure, utilizing his massive strength to achieve heroic feats that ordinary man cannot.
The origin of the name is a bit of a mystery. There was no Maciste in Greek mythology or history. The word machiste, however, means "macho man" or "mâle chauviniste" in French.
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Cabiria
Maciste made his debut in the 1914 Italian silent movie classic Cabiria. Maciste first appeared on the screen in the same year that Tarzan made his début in print. Including this first one, there have been at least 52 movies featuring Maciste, 25 of them starring Batolomeo Pagano, who played Maciste in Cabiria.
The silent film was a story about a slave who was involved in the rescue of a Roman princess from an evil Carthaginian king who plotted to sacrifice her to the cruel god Moloch. The film was based very loosely on Salammbo, a historical novel by Gustave Flaubert, and had a plot and screenplay by Gabriele d'Annunzio.
Maciste's debut pretty much set the tone for his later adventures. Typical plots involve tyrannical rulers who practice vile magical rituals or worship evil gods. Typically, the young lady who is the love interest runs afoul of the evil ruler. Maciste is a super-strong guy who must rescue her. There is often a rightful king out there somewhere who wants to overthrow the evil usurper. There is an obligatory belly dance scene. There is often an evil queen who has carnal designs on the hero.
These films, then, could be set in settings from Mongolia to Peru, from Egypt to the Roman Empire. His life story, or his origin in ancient Carthage, did not prevent him from appearing in any setting from classical antiquity or modern times.
Bartolomeo Pagano's Maciste films
As a character, Maciste had two distinct moments in the spotlight. The first was in the Italian silent movie period, in which the original Maciste from Cabiria, the muscular actor Bartolomeo Pagano, starred in a series of at least fifteen sequels over the period from 1915 through 1926.
The Pagano Maciste films established the character as someone who could appear at any place and at any time. Some of the earlier ones, made during World War I, had the distinct flavour of propaganda, and cast the hero in the role of a soldier. Later films in the series return to fantasy, but the fantasy was not always mythological. Maciste appears as an Olympic athlete, in contemporary settings, or in the afterlife. His character and his plots remained consistent in whatever setting; he was a populist Hercules, using his physical prowess to overcome the evil ruses of effete aristocrats and authority figures. Image:Maciste-MarkForest.jpg
Revival of the 1960s
The character was revived in the 1960s. In 1959, Steve Reeves' Hercules, an Italian production, created a minor boom in Italian dramas featuring American bodybuilders in vaguely mythological or classical historical subjects. The actual mythology was frequently pied to make up the improbable plots. Maciste was a frequently recurring hero in these films. This sword and sandal fad continued for about seven years, until the new fad for spaghetti Westerns took over the attention of the Italian cinema industry. The title character in the English version of several of these films was not Maciste: when these films were imported into the USA and dubbed in English (usually in a poor way), the hero's name was often changed to Hercules, Samson, Goliath, Atlas, or Colossus, because the name of Maciste was not widely recognised in the USA. Image:Alansteel23.jpg The biggest source of the second series Maciste films from the second cycle in the USA was The Sons of Hercules, a film series which was later made into a syndicated TV show. Best remembered for its stirring title song - hear it once and it will never get out of your head - films originally featuring Maciste were dubbed into a variety of Sons of Hercules pictures, with stock narration at the opening relating each character to Hercules.
One of the first films to appear in the second series was Il Trionfo di Maciste, anglicized as Triumph of the Son of Hercules. Other Maciste films available in English are Terror of Rome v. the Son of Hercules, Beast of Babylon v. the Son of Hercules, and The Son of Hercules v. Venus. Many of these films are available from Sinister Cinema.
In comic books
In the 1970s, Maciste was introduced to another American audience by being made a recurring character (under the spelling "Machiste") in DC Comics' Warlord sword and sorcery comic. In this version, the character was a gladiator of African appearance.
He, along with Warlord, has appeared in Justice League Unlimited as a member of Warlord's resistance against Deimos.
Influence of Maciste
- Some authorities have made Maciste out to be a somewhat darker figure. The character is the enslaved embodiment of physical strength and vitality; as he travels to exotic locations, particularly in Africa and the Middle East, he does battle against Oriental decadence and barbarism, as particularly embodied in the cult of Moloch that figured in the plot of Cabiria. It is certainly true that Cabiria tapped into Italy's celebration of its colonial adventure in Libya, and that Maciste appears as the ideal slave, always longing to be re-united with his Roman master.
- The Cabiria scene in which Maciste is pushing a mill wheel 10 years long has probably inspired John Milius, who shot a similar one for his movie Conan the Barbarian.
- The scene in Cabiria in which the Carthaginians feed children to the god Moloch was a clear inspiration for sequences in the film Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.
- The temple of Moloch in Cabiria was a clear inspiration for the temple depicted in the Star Trek episode entitled "The Apple."
- Federico Fellini credited the 1926 Maciste all'inferno as the movie that made him decide to become a director.
- The 1960s adventures have been enjoyed mostly by devotees of camp style. Two of the films, Maciste contro i cacciatori di teste (translated as Colossus and the Head Hunters) and Maciste e la regina di Samar (as Hercules against the Moon Men) appeared on the comedy television program Mystery Science Theater 3000 in the 1990s.
Partial filmography
The Silent Era
Silent Maciste films starring Bartolomeo Pagano include:
- Maciste (1915)
- Maciste bersagliere ("Maciste the Ranger", 1916)
- Maciste atleta ("Maciste the Athlete", 1917)
- Maciste medium ("Maciste the Clairvoyant", 1917)
- Maciste poliziotto ("Maciste the Detective", 1917)
- Maciste turista ("Maciste the Tourist", 1917)
- La Rivincita di Maciste ("Maciste's Revenge", 1919)
- Il Testamento di Maciste ("The Testament of Maciste", 1919)
- Il Viaggio di Maciste ("Maciste's Journey", 1919)
- Maciste I ("Maciste the First", 1919)
- Maciste contro la morte ("Maciste versus Death", 1919)
- Maciste innamorato ("Maciste in Love", 1919)
- Maciste in vacanza ("Maciste on Vacation", 1920)
- Maciste salvato dalle acque ("Maciste, rescued from the waters", 1920)
- Maciste e la figlia del re della Plata ("Maciste and the Silver King's Daughter", 1922)
- Maciste contro Maciste ("Maciste versus Maciste", 1923)
- Maciste e il nipote di America ("Maciste's American Nephew", 1924)
- Maciste imperatore ("Maciste the Emperor", 1924)
- Maciste contro lo sceicco ("Maciste versus the Sheik", 1925)
- Maciste all'inferno ("Maciste in Hell", 1926)
- Maciste nella gabbia dei leoni ("Maciste in the Lions' Den", 1926)
The Sword-and-Sandal Era
Maciste films from the 1960s sword-and-sandal revival include:
- Maciste nella Valle dei Re (Maciste the Mighty, Son of Samson, 1960)
- Maciste contro i Cacciatori di Teste (Colossus and the Headhunters, 1960)
- Maciste nella Terra dei Ciclopi (Atlas in the Land of the Cyclops, 1961)
- Maciste alla Corte del Gran Khan (Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World, 1961)
- Maciste, l'Uomo Più Forte del Mondo (Molemen Vs. the Son of Hercules, 1961)
- Son of Samson (1961)
- Hercules against Maciste in the Vale of Woe/Maciste against Hercules in the Vale of Woe (1962)
- Il trionfo di Maciste (Triumph of the Son of Hercules, 1962)
- Maciste contro i Mostri (Fire Monsters Against the Son of Hercules, 1962)
- Totò contro Maciste ("Totò versus Maciste", 1962)
- Maciste, l'Eroe Piu Grande del Mondo (Goliath and the Sins of Babylon, 1963)
- Maciste nell'Infero (Maciste in Hell/The Witch's Curse, 1963)
- Maciste contro il Vampiro (Goliath Against the Vampires (*), 1964)
- Maciste contro gli Uomini Luna (Hercules against the Moon Men/Maciste e la Regina de Samar/Maciste and the Queen of Samar, 1964)
- Invicibili Fratelli Maciste (The Maciste Brothers, 1964)
- Hercules, Maciste, Samson and Ursus Vs. the Universe/Samson and His Mighty Challenge (1964)
- Zorro contro Maciste (Samson and the Slave Queen, 1964)
- Maciste nelle Miniere de Re Salomone (Samson in King Solomon's Mines, 1964)
- Maciste alla Corte dello Zar (Samson Vs. the Giant King, 1964)
- Maciste, Gladiatore di Sparta (Maciste and the Hundred Gladiators/Terror of Rome Against the Son of Hercules, 1964)
- Maciste nell'Inferno di Gengis Khan (Hercules Against the Barbarians, 1964)
- Son of Hercules in the Land of Darkness (1965)
- Maciste, il vendicatore dei Mayas (Maciste, the Avenger of the Mayans, 1965)
Other Macistes
Maciste is also the name of a reflective meta-knowledge based software system by Jacques Pitrat. See e.g. his paper "Implementation of a reflective system" (Future Generation Computer Systems, volume 12, 1996).fr:Maciste