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Sebastiane Blu-ray offers decent video and mediocre audio in this enjoyable Blu-ray release
Filmed entirely in vulgar Latin, this experimental film recounts the life of Sebastiane, a puritanical but beautiful Christian soldier in the Roman Imperial troops who is martyred when he refuses the homosexual advances of his pagan captain. When this film was released, it was the only English-made film to have required English subtitles, and it is an early film by the noted experimental and outspokenly homosexual director Derek Jarman, who died in 1994.
For more about Sebastiane and the Sebastiane Blu-ray release, see Sebastiane Blu-ray Review published by Casey Broadwater on August 8, 2012 where this Blu-ray release scored 3.0 out of 5.
An art-house sword 'n' sandal movie? A cinematic hagiography? A soft-core thrill? An examination of the tensions—and similarities—between the
rapture of the spirit and the lust of the flesh? is all of the above and more. The film was the first narrative feature from the late
English director, prolific diarist, and gay rights activist Derek Jarman—who co-wrote and directed the film with Paul Humfress—and it immediately
announced him as a filmmaker of unique vision and intent. Not only is one of the most frank and unhindered depictions of
homosexuality in 1970s cinema—it faced controversy for its nudity and sensuality—but it's also a remarkable portrayal of faith and the first film with
dialogue recorded in Latin. Unless you've been classically educated, you'll want to make sure the subtitles are turned on.
The subject of the film is Saint Sebastian, an early Christian martyr and soldier whom the Roman emperor Diocletian had executed in AD 288 for the
crime of converting officials to the then-minority faith. A popular subject of paintings in the Middle Ages and throughout the Renaissance, Sebastian is
usually depicted tied to a tree and shot with multiple arrows. It's debatable whether or not these works of art were originally intended to be
homoerotic, but they unquestionably seem that way now, with the saint-to-be nearly naked, his chest straining forward, his arms pinned back or held
over his head BDSM-style, his flesh punctured and penetrated. He's that rare religious figure who's also become a gay icon.
Since Jarman is more interested in the suggestive iconography of the saint than strict biographical detail, he plays fast and loose with history,
changing
the story as he sees fit. begins with a Roman bacchanal that's straight out of or a Fellini film. A male performer
painted white, his mouth dyed a crimson red, flails and flicks out his tongue, while a group of dancers wearing exaggerated phalluses air-hump
around
him and mock-ejaculate onto his face. Emperor Diocletian's sexed-up bash is interrupted when a Christian accused of arson is brought before him
and
promptly strangled to death. Sebastiane (Leonardo Treviglio)—the captain of the palace guard and Diocletian's personal favorite—comes to the man's
defense, revealing himself as a fellow Christ-follower, and for this, he's stripped of his rank and exiled to a remote military post staffed by nine other
persona non grata.
With nothing to do—no wars to fight, no one to guard—the men fill their days with rote weapons exercises, wrestling matches, and bawdy sexual
hijinks. One soldier has a pornographic scroll—an ancient precursor to —and in another scene, the men watch copulating beetles and
give their own crass play-by-play commentary. Two of the men pair up and head down to the rocky tidal pools to make love—this seems acceptable
to
the others, perhaps worthy of light teasing, but not out of the ordinary—and Jarman films them in hypnotic slow-motion as they splash and tousle
with
one another. Glimmering, rippling water is repeatedly used here as a visual motif suggesting the purity of love.
Sebastiane sets himself apart from the revelry; as a Christian, he's an outcast even among other outcasts, and he's especially hated by a brute
named
Maximus (Neil Kennedy), who sees him as a traitor to the Roman gods. When Sebastiane refuses to participate in sword practice and runs away—"A
Christian doesn't fight," he says—the rebellious act earns him several lashes across his back with a whip. This bloody scene will remind most modern
viewers of the similarly sadomasochistic , but on the whole, Jarman's film is more similar to the work of gay Italian
director Pier Paolo Pasolini, whose , like , blends realism with the influence of
symbolic
and religiously-loaded Renaissance art.
The crux of —aside from the literal one upon which the saint is eventually hung—is the spirit/flesh dichotomy that's always been
a
thorn in the side of the faithful. From the moment Sebastiane arrives at the camp, he becomes the object of lust for the stern and perhaps lonely
Captain Severus (Barney James), a blond disciplinarian bent on "having" him. Though tormented and tortured—beaten, staked spread-eagle on the
desert sand, dangled by his rope-tied wrists—Sebastiane repeatedly refuses Severus' physical advances, which only stokes the commander's desires.
At
the same time, Sebastiane has a kind of Stockholm syndrome relationship with his captor, growing to care for him with a righteously chaste love. He
attunes his mind to the spiritual and guards himself against desire, but this passivity is itself provocative and maybe even a form of sadism. It's a
complicated portrayal of devotion and yearning, one that's satisfyingly open to discussion/interpretation. And quite moving. The inevitable
martyrdom
sequence is devastating, as Sebastian's only confidante, Justin (Richard Warwick)—who harbors his own unrequited love—is forced by Maximus to
follow suite with the other soldiers and shoot an arrow into his friend.
With a budget of only $45,000, Jarman had to work within some serious constraints, but this ultimately made for a better film. The lack of
polish gives a dingy, realistically lived-in look, with the limited number of locations playing into the sense of edge-of-the-world
isolation. When asked about the film's nudity, Jarman allegedly even joked, "We couldn't afford costumes." (Aside from one briefly glimpsed erection,
there's nothing particularly explicit about the film, visually, but it is suffused with a thick atmosphere of testosterone and sex, a reminder that desire
is
a more potent emotion than satisfaction.) The director's greatest coup, though, is the use of vulgate Latin, which ironically keeps the dialogue from
seeming too "common" and poetically elevates the material.
Sebastiane is in the public domain and is currently available for free on the Internet Archive, but Kino's new 1080p/AVC-encoded Blu-ray
transfer is worth the price of the disc, vastly outdoing any standard definition bootleg you'd find online. Granted, the low-budget film—filmed on 16mm
and blown up for 35mm prints—is never going to look spectacular, but this edition at least seems true to source and nicely resolved, with none of the
glaring compression issues seen on DVD or the version found on archive.org. Grain is visible and moves naturally—there's no digital noise reduction
smearing here—and the picture is unsullied by edge enhancement or other unnecessary tweaks. The image is unavoidably soft almost all of the time,
but I'm positive this is due to the focusing and lenses used and 16mm film stock, rather than any issue with the encode. Regardless, the improvement
in clarity is apparent—closeups are sharper, details are more finely attuned—and there's never any doubt that you're looking at a high definition
presentation. Although color does seem slightly washed out and faded, there are no distracting fluctuations, and the level of contrast is more than
adequate. As with most Kino titles, there's been no significant restoration involved, and you will see semi-frequent white and black specks, small
scratches, and occasional hairs stuck in the film gate. No major distractions, though. The quasi-widescreen 1.51:1 aspect ratio of the Blu-ray seems a bit
odd—about halfway between 1.33:1 and 1.66:1—but since some theatrical showings of the film in England were cropped to avoid that single erect
member, which we can clearly see here, it seems we're at least getting a more faithful version of the film.
Sebastiane's low-budget audio shows its age, but I doubt there was much Kino could do about it, despite giving the film a new uncompressed
Linear PCM 2.0 track. The Latin dialogue is always understandable—or, at least, as understandable as Latin dialogue is going to be—but voices are a little
muffled at times, and subject to some slight high-end peaking. You'll also hear frequent pops and crackles in the background as well, although these are
quiet and never rise to the level of distraction. Of course, the film is notable for its early Brian Eno score—an ambient but still melodic wash of old-school
synthesizer pads—and this too seems affected by time, with otherwise clean tones exhibiting a bit of pitch-wobble that doesn't seem intentional.
Otherwise, the music has a decent sense of presence. The English subtitles on the disc are optional, but let's face it, you're probably not going to
turn those off.
Unfortunately, there's not a single supplement on the disc.
One of the films in the 1970s to deal most frankly with homosexuality, the beauty of Derek Jarman's was unfortunately
overshadowed by the then-controversial nature of its content. Seen today, it's easier to appreciate the film's nuanced mingling of faith and flesh. Pasolini
would be proud. The low-budget production has never looked sharp—it was shot on 16mm—but Kino's Blu-ray release at least seems true to its source.
Recommended, especially for those interested in the narrow category of gay, religiously-themed cinema.
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Next month, Kino Lorber will bring both Sebastiane and The Tempest to Blu-ray. Viewed together, these two films help detail the creative and intellectual experimentations of acclaimed British filmmaker Derek Jarman (The Last of England). Both Blu-rays street ...