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Zardoz From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security). Zardoz Theatrical release poster Directed by John Boorman Produced by John Boorman Written by John Boorman Starring Sean Connery Charlotte Rampling Sara Kestelman Music by David Munrow Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth Edited by John Merritt Production company John Boorman Productions

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Page 1: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Page 2: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with

Page 3: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a

Page 4: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

"wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production John Boorman Productions

Page 5: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

company

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Page 6: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora

Page 7: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Page 8: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are

Page 9: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

Page 10: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Page 11: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with

Page 12: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Page 13: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Page 14: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

Page 15: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Page 16: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Page 17: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the

Page 18: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Page 19: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Page 20: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]

Page 21: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden

Page 22: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Page 23: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Page 24: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

Page 25: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Page 26: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Page 27: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an

Page 28: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

Zardoz

Page 29: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Page 30: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed

Page 31: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a

Page 32: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production John Boorman Productions

Page 33: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

company

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Page 34: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora

Page 35: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Page 36: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are

Page 37: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

Page 38: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Page 39: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with

Page 40: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Page 41: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Page 42: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

Page 43: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Page 44: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Page 45: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the

Page 46: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Page 47: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Page 48: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]

Page 49: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden

Page 50: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Page 51: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Page 52: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

Page 53: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Page 54: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Page 55: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an

Page 56: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

Zardoz

Page 57: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Page 58: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed

Page 59: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a

Page 60: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production John Boorman Productions

Page 61: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

company

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Page 62: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora

Page 63: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Page 64: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are

Page 65: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

Page 66: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Page 67: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with

Page 68: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Page 69: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Page 70: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

Page 71: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Reception[edit]

Page 72: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.

ZardozFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the computer security mailing list, see Zardoz (computer security).

Zardoz

Theatrical release poster

Page 73: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Directed by John Boorman

Produced by John Boorman

Written by John Boorman

Starring Sean Connery

Charlotte Rampling

Sara Kestelman

Music by David Munrow

Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth

Edited by John Merritt

Production

company

John Boorman Productions

Distributed by 20th Century Fox

Release datesFebruary 6, 1974

Running time 105 minutes

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Budget $1,570,000[1]

Box office $1.8 million (US/ Canada)[2]

Zardoz is a 1974 science fiction movie written, produced, and directed by John Boorman. It stars Sean Connery,Charlotte Rampling, and Sara Kestelman. Zardoz was Connery's second post-James Bond role (after The Offence). The film was shot by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth on a budget of US$1.57 million.[1]

Contents

  [hide] 

1   Plot 2   Cast 3   Reception 4   References 5   External links

Plot[edit]In a future post-apocalypse Earth in the year 2293, the human population is divided into the immortal "Eternals" and mortal "Brutals". The Brutals live in a wasteland, growing food for the

Page 74: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Eternals, who live apart in "the Vortex", leading a luxurious but aimless existence on the grounds of a country estate. The connection between the two groups is through Brutal Exterminators, who kill and terrorize other "Brutals" at the orders of a huge flying stone head called Zardoz, which supplies them with weapons in exchange for the food they collect. Zed (Connery), a Brutal Exterminator, hides aboard Zardoz during one trip, temporarily "killing" its Eternal operator-creator Arthur Frayn (Niall Buggy).

Arriving in the Vortex, Zed meets two Eternals — Consuella (Charlotte Rampling) and May (Sara Kestelman). Overcoming him with psychic powers, they make him a prisoner and menial worker within their community. Consuella wants Zed destroyed immediately; others, led by May and a subversive Eternal named Friend (John Alderton), insist on keeping him alive for further study.

In time, Zed learns the nature of the Vortex. The Eternals are overseen and protected from death by the Tabernacle, an artificial intelligence. Given their limitless lifespan, the Eternals have grown bored and corrupt. The needlessness of procreation has rendered the men impotent and meditation has replaced sleep. Others fall into catatonia, forming the social stratum the Eternals have named the "Apathetics". The Eternals spend their days stewarding mankind's vast knowledge, baking special bread for themselves from the grain deliveries and participating in communal navel gazingrituals. To give time and life more meaning the Vortex developed complex social rules whose violators are punished with artificial aging. The most extreme offenders are condemned to permanent old age and the status of "Renegades". But any Eternals who somehow manage to die, usually through some fatal accident, are almost immediately reborn into another healthy, synthetically reproduced body that is identical to the one they just lost. The innovative nature of the film extends to technology as well, where a precursor to a search engine (in combination with voice recognition) is shown for the first time in film. One of the characters requests information & all results are displayed in a way recognizably similar.

Zed is less brutal and far more intelligent than the Eternals think he is. Genetic analysis reveals he is the ultimate result of long-running eugenics experiments devised by Arthur Frayn — the Zardoz god — who controlled the outlands with the Exterminators, thus coercing the Brutals to supply the Vortices with grain. Zardoz's aim was to breed a superman who would penetrate the Vortex and save mankind from its hopelessly stagnant status quo. The women's analysis of Zed's mental images earlier had revealed that in the ruins of the old world Arthur Frayn first encouraged Zed to learn to read, then led him to the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Zed finally understands the origin of the name Zardoz — Wizard of Oz — bringing him to a true awareness of Zardoz as a skilful manipulator rather than an actual deity. He becomes infuriated with this realisation and decides to plumb the deepest depths of this enormous mystery.

As Zed divines the nature of the Vortex and its problems, the Eternals use him to fight their internecine quarrels. Led by Consuella, the Eternals decide to kill Zed and to age Friend. Zed escapes and, aided by May and Friend, absorbs all the Eternals' knowledge, including that of the Vortex's origin, to destroy the Tabernacle. Zed helps the Exterminators invade the Vortex and kill most of the Eternals — who welcome death as a release from their eternal but boring existence. Some few Eternals do escape the Vortex's destruction, heading out to radically new lives as fellow mortal beings among the Brutals.

Zardoz ends in a wordless sequence of images accompanied by the sombre second movement (allegretto) of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony (snatches of which are heard throughout the film). Zed and Consuella, dressed in matching green suits and having fallen in love, then sit next to each other in the cave-like stone head and age in time-lapse. A baby boy appears, matures and leaves his parents. The couple eventually decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains in the space but painted hand-prints on the wall and Zed's Webley-Fosbery revolver.

Cast[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed Charlotte Rampling as Consuella Sara Kestelman as May John Alderton as Friend Sally Anne Newton as Avalow Niall Buggy as Arthur Frayn / Zardoz Bosco Hogan as George Saden Jessica Swift as Apathetic Reginald Jarman as voice of Death

Page 75: A Graphically Detailed History of Anal Cysts

Reception[edit]

Sean Connery as Zed, wearing what the UK'sChannel 4 described as "a red nappy, knee-high leather boots, pony

tail andZapata moustache."[3]

The film received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert called it a "genuinely quirky movie, a trip into a future that seems ruled by perpetually stoned set decorators... The movie is an exercise in self-indulgence (if often an interesting one) by Boorman, who more or less hadcarte blanche to do a personal project after his immensely successful Deliverance."[4] Whilst Jay Cocks of Time called the film "visually bounteous", with "bright intervals of self-deprecatory humor that lighten the occasional pomposity of the material." [5] Nora Sayre, in a 7 February 1974 review for The New York Times, called Zardoz a melodrama that is a "good deal less effective than its special visual effects"... a film "more confusing than exciting even with a frenetic, shoot-em-up climax."[6] Decades later, Channel 4 called it "Boorman's finest film" and a "wonderfully eccentric and visually exciting sci-fi quest" that "deserves reappraisal".[3] Despite being a commercial failure and mostly panned by critics, Zardoz has since developed a cult following and found success on the home video market.