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 Description:
  This is a musically and visually superb treatment of a 20th-century masterpiece.  Based on Thomas Mann's novella, Benjamin Britten's last opera is not only a story  of hopeless, idealistic, vaguely homoerotic love; it touches on deep philosophical  questions: the nature of beauty, the agony of creativity and the greater agony of  its loss; the ravages of time, the conventions and rituals we devise to mask life's  horrible vacuums; ultimately, the mysterious meaning of life and death.   The cast is small and excellent: Robert Gard is the aging writer, Christoph von  Aschenbach, whose genius has dried up but seems about to revive in the  contemplation of an aristocratic boy he encounters in Venice. John Shirley-Quirk  contributes equally to the effect in a half-dozen cameo roles that he pioneered in  the first production under Britten's supervision. Steuart Bedford conducted that  premiere, working closely with the composer. Director Palmer takes full advantage  of the film medium's freedom to make Venice a character--monumental and  crumbling buildings, seascapes, canals, bridges, and gondolas; the visuals are often  breathtaking. --Joe McLellan
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