The Actor and the Savages
The Actor and the Savages
| 20 January 1975 (USA)
The Actor and the Savages Trailers

Toma Caragiu plays Costica Caratase character inspired by the personality of the great actor Constantin Tanase. The action takes place in the interwar period and focuses on the conflict between actor and Iron Guard movement ("savages") offended by a satirizes artistic performances. Film question the artist's freedom of expression and the danger posed by his involvement in social issues existing in a dictatorship world.

Reviews
Softwing Most undeservingly overhyped movie of all time??
Lancoor A very feeble attempt at affirmatie action
Erica Derrick By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
Billy Ollie Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
xammer This film is set during the 1930s, when the pro-Nazi policy of King Carol II of Romania gave support to the rising Iron Guard movement of Romania. A theatre manager, Caratase (inspired by the real-life actor Constantin Tanase), is threatened by the Iron Guard in order to cancel his upcoming show which presents a negative portrayal of Nazi Germany.The film is rather slow and confusing, but it picks up speed during the final hour - Caratase and the Iron Guard members have a verbal duel, while the show begins to play.The acting, especially if a current-day perspective is considered, can be perceived as poor and unconvincing (with the exception of some outstanding moments by Toma Caragiu). This, taken with the soundtrack, which doesn't always fit to the tone of the scenes, can sometimes break the suspension of disbelief. Note that this is a general problem of Romanian films, and it has started to be corrected only recently (in films such as "California Dreamin'" or "Restul e tacere").All in all, the ending scenes are worth sitting through the whole 150 minutes of the film. However, patience is advised to an uninitiated viewer.
zazoo1 This film is probably one of the best Romanian movies ever made. Great script, wonderful actors (among them, even the director Mircea Veroiu), ballet ensemble, good dramatic scenes, human mixture of comedy and drama, talking about a troubled period of history when tension was building beneath the apparent tranquility of everyday life. Small signals suggesting the end of Romania's golden age, between the two world wars, when our currency was stronger than today's major currencies. In my opinion, it is probably the most "Hollywood"-style films set in showbiz life, but still very Romanian. I also liked a lot Margareta Pogonat, as the star's understanding wife, and Marin Moraru, as the butler, another brilliant actor, an acting icon for entire generations. One of Toma Caragiu's unforgettable roles - that of a comedian teaching his people dignity at all costs.
ekisest This film is an opportunity to watch great Romanian actors at work, under the direction of Manole Marcus, one of the first Romanian film makers that attended Film School (the first generation at the Academy of Theatre and Film in Bucharest). Toma Caragiu is portraying Constantin Tanase, a great Romanian comedian from the '30s. The film looks like a musical-comedy, but in fact is tragic. The historical background is carefully designed and crafted, starting with the costumes and ending with the grim atmosphere, suggested mainly through an attentive manipulation of light and shadows. Marcus took a pretty long shot with the subject, because Tanase was an "old-time" entertainer, from the the so-called "exploitation" period (that's how the communists called the years of monarchy in Romania). A careful watcher can observe the sympathy for the culture and civilization of that troubled time. Watch for Mircea Diaconu and Mircea Albulescu in two special appearances.
z_urpst Almost 10 years Romania have been under the dark and dreadful political influence of the Hitler's policy The movie show in the genial interpretation of the great Toma Caragiu how difficult was for the theater world to try to defend the freedom in their scenic life... In the final part of the movie, Toma Caragiu make an outstanding imitation of the Hitler's paranoid behavior, Marin Moraru is perfect playing the dumb steward and all the actors play with a strange enthusiasm that because in the real life the mind and soul of the regular citizen in Romania was poisoned by the dreadfully tyranny of the Ceasusescu's system.The difference was not to much between the two historical periods... only a couple of decades...