Antony and Cleopatra () is a 1913 Italian silent historical film directed by Enrico Guazzoni, starring Gianna Terribili-Gonzales, Amleto Novelli and Ignazio Lupi.
The film nods towards William Shakespeare's play of the same title, with inspiration drawn from Plutarch's Parallel Lives (Demetrius and Antony); the play or dramatic poem Cleopatra (1879), in Italian by Pietro Cossa; and the German novel Cleopatra by Georg Ebers (1893).
The film was distributed in Germany from August 1913 as Die Herrin des NilsâÂÂCleopatra, and in the U.S. by George Kleine as Antony and Cleopatra from January 1914. The film still exists today.
After the assassination of Julius Caesar in 44 BC, the Second Triumvirate was formed by Mark Antony, Octavian, and Marcus Lepidus. After the Battle of Phillipi against Caesar's killers (the Liberatores), the control of Rome's Eastern provinces including the client kingdom of Ptolemaic Egypt fell to Mark Antony, Caesar's nephew. Antony was married to Octavia, Octavian's sister. Egypt was ruled by the beautiful and seductive Cleopatra VII, with whom Antony fell hopelessly in love and fathered several children. A rivalry grew up between him and Octavian, who instigated a war, ostensibly against Cleopatra, since Antony was a true Roman (). Defeated, Antony and Cleopatra separately committed suicide.
The film opens with Antony arriving in Egpyt to arrest Cleopatra for her rebellion against Rome: however he falls for her charms and they fall in love. Antony's wife Octavia, the sister of Octavian, arrives and jealously accuses Cleopatra for her illicit relationship with Antony. Egyptian nobles plot against Rome. The Roman senate denounces Antony as a traitor. Octavian's legions arrive. The naval Battle of Actium (31 BC) takes place in which Octavian wins a crushing victory over Antony's ships and the Egyptian forces. (In the film the action is transferred to the River Nile, rather than the Ionian Sea off the west coast of Greece where it historically took place.) The pair flee to Alexandria which is beseiged. Panic ensues, and Antony commits suicide. Cleopatra still hopes to win the heart of Octavian, the conqueror, but he declares her a prisoner and must go with him to Rome. Unable to bear the humiliation of a triumphal procession with her in chains, Cleopatra commits suicide by an asp bite.
The opening credits of the US version state that the film was staged in Italy and Egypt. The cinematographer, Alessandro Bona, was previously behind the camera for Quo Vadis, also directed by Guazzoni.
In Germany, a press showing of Die Herrin des NilsâÂÂCleopatra took place on 14 August 1913 at the Ufa-Pavillon am Nollendorfplatz, Berlin (at the time named the Cines Nollendorf Theater.) The audience included "other interested parties". The audience, including critics from , , Die Wahrheit, and , seemed to be unanimous in their spontaneous applause. The Nollendorfplatz cinema, the first free-standing, purpose-built film theatre in the capital, was built by Joe Golsdoll and A. H. Woods, Cines' representatives in Germany and owners of Cines film rights. The cinema had opened in March that year with another Cines historical blockbuster, Quo Vadis, also directed by Guazzoni. Antony and Cleopatra was still running in December, after nearly 200 performances.
A competing film with a confusingly similar title (Cleopatra, die Beherrscherin des Nils) and subject matter was released in September by the Rheinisch-Westfälischen Filmzentrale company in Bochum. The 1912 US film Cleopatra starring Helen Gardner was also released in Germany in September 1913.
The film was released somewhere on 26 September 1913.
An anonymous critic writing in the German trade journal ' was very positive:
A copy of the complete US version is available on Archive.org with English intertitles.