Maria de Fatima Rosa

Reception of Mesopotamia on Film


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Instead, in the latter’s plot, the queen never accepted her role as a mother.22 The Italian film La regina di Ninive (1911) by Luigi Maggi would follow this narrative closely, almost a century later, collecting the same ingredients as the murder of the husband, the son’s hideout, and the death of the mother, the regina, by his own hands. Although with different nomenclatures,23 the central story remains, focusing on the vile character of the queen, who kills her husband, just as she had done in Sémiramis (1911) by Camille de Morlhon, and on her disguise as a man to defend the honor of the city (Figure 2.2).

      Figure 2.2Sémiramis, a film by Camille de Morlhon. Pathé frères, 1911. © Fondation Jérôme Seydoux-Pathé.

      As we can see, Italian cinema resorted several times to the past, to literature, and to opera to compose its narratives. As in previous centuries, Semiramis appeared as a perfect model for exploring aspects of contemporary society, as we will analyze in Chapters 7 and 8.

      2.2.2 Sardanapalus, Myrrah and Their Fateful Destiny