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Elektra (2010) Online

Elektra (2010) Online
Original Title :
Elektra
Genre :
Movie / Music
Year :
2010
Directror :
Thomas Grimm
Cast :
Waltraud Meier,Iréne Theorin,Eva-Maria Westbroek
Writer :
Hugo von Hofmannsthal,Sophocles
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h 49min
Rating :
8.6/10
Elektra (2010) Online

Elektra wants vengeance for her murdered father, Agamemnon.
Cast overview, first billed only:
Waltraud Meier Waltraud Meier - Klytämnestra
Iréne Theorin Iréne Theorin - Elektra, ihre Tochter
Eva-Maria Westbroek Eva-Maria Westbroek - Chrysothemis
Robert Gambill Robert Gambill - Aegisth
René Pape René Pape - Orest
Oliver Zwarg Oliver Zwarg - Der Pfleger des Orest
Benjamin Hulett Benjamin Hulett - Ein junger Diener
Josef Stangl Josef Stangl - Ein alter Diener
Orla Boylan Orla Boylan - Die Aufseherin
Maria Radner Maria Radner - Erste Magd
Martina Mikelic Martina Mikelic - Zweite Magd
Eva Leitner Eva Leitner - Vierte Magd
Anita Watson Anita Watson - Fünfte Magd (as Annita Watson)
Arina Holecek Arina Holecek - Die Vertraute
Barbara Reiter Barbara Reiter - Die Schleppträgerin


User reviews

MisterMax

MisterMax

Strauss's Elektra is a tough listen but this excellent production repays the listener amply. It comes from Salzburg, which often means silly productions but here director Nikolaus Lehnhoff gives us an ungimmicky production on a fascinating expressionist set.

Irene Theorin gives a riveting performance in the title role. She is grey-faced, black-eyed with bloodshot eyeballs and matted hair, think Ozzie Osbourne. She exudes hatred throughout her two hours on stage as she rails against her mother Clytemnestra and her lover Aegistheus who have murdered her father Agamemnon It is a role that calls for incredible stamina and concentration.

Eva-Maria Westbroek is also impressive as her ditzy sister Chrysothemis whose main ambition is to make babies and just wants to let bygones be bygones. For me, the best music comes at towards the end as the two sisters together soar above the orchestra in typically Straussian fashion. Waltrauud Meier is the nervous mother Clytemnestra, fearful of her daughter revenge. Rene Pape is luxury casting for the small role of Orestes, Elektra's brother, who finally appears to exact the revenge that she has been calling for.

Mercifully, the slaughter is carried out offstage but we do get a brief glimpse of, presumably, Waltraud Meier's body double hanging upside down on a meat hook. I don't know whether this was performed before a live audience. There is certainly no sight or sound of an audience nor of the orchestra or conductor. Film director Thomas Gunn wants us to concentrate solely on the drama.
Jare

Jare

Elektra is one of my favourite Strauss operas. It is dark, brutal and utterly compelling right up to its devastating conclusion. This Elektra is great. I wouldn't go as far to say it is my personal favourite, as the Nilsson performance was legendary as is the film with Rysanek. The Marton and Behrens performances I also highly recommend. However, judging it sorely on its own and it is still absolutely great. The costumes and sets are very atmospheric, and the lighting further helps to enhance it.

The production/opera is intelligently and grippingly staged by Nikolaus Lehnhoff, especially the recognition scene and Klytamnestra's murder, just two of the highlights of Elektra. But I found the most interesting touch to be with Elektra's state of mind, portrayed as a grey and tempestuous barren landscape. Viewing it on Blu-Ray, I personally think the production could've benefited from more wide-shots, doing that the whole stage could be seen and the viewer could absorb the drama even more. Musically it is a feast. It is a magnificent but very challenging score, and the orchestra play it wonderfully with no signs of fatigue, even the brass in Elektra's death dance.

Daniele Gatti's conducting may perhaps lack Thielmann's edge and Bohm's expertise, but he still does a great job holding everything together. As for the singing, I have to say that Irene Theorin is sensational as Elektra. The role is up there with Isolde, Turandot and Abaigaille as one of the notoriously difficult female roles in opera. Theorin however never shows signs of being taxed by it, the voice is huge yet resplendent and capable of exquisite soft singing, and her stage presence is incredibly powerful.

Eva Marie Westbroek is a tad shrill and harsh on her high notes, but like Theorin she is very committed and controlled as Elektra's sister Chrystothemis, contrasting well with her. As brother Orest, Rene Pape is not perhaps at his very best(like as King Marke, Sarastro and Boris Godunov), but his voice is still warm and beautiful and dramatically, while not as commanding as he has been, he is strong.

Other than Theorin I really have to mention Waltraud Meier, whose Klytamnestra is just outstanding, the best since Brigitte Fassbaender. This production does have a more different approach to the Klytamnestra I usually see, there isn't the bloodcurdling quality of Fassbaender or the personification of evil like Astrid Varnay, but while there is still an essence of evil it is a more troubled and brutalised realisation. Meier's voice is not as velvety as it once was but it is intelligently coloured and the way she holds herself on stage just goes to show what a great artist she is.

All in all, perhaps not definitive but still great. 9/10 Bethany Cox