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The Baby of Mâcon

The Baby of Mâcon

  • Status: Released
  • 17-09-1993
  • Runtime: 122 min
  • Score: 6.985
  • Vote count: 101

Set halfway through the 17th century, a church play is performed for the benefit of the young aristocrat Cosimo. In the play, a grotesque old woman gives birth to a beautiful baby boy. The child's older sister is quick to exploit the situation, selling blessings from the baby, and even claiming she's the true mother by virgin birth. However, when she attempts to seduce the bishop's son, the Church exacts a terrible revenge.

Julia Ormond

The Daughter

Ralph Fiennes

The Bishop's Son

Philip Stone

The Bishop

Jonathan Lacey

Cosimo Medici

Don Henderson

The Father Confessor

Celia Gregory

The Mother Superior

Jeff Nuttall

The Major Domo

Jessica Hynes

The First Midwife (as Jessica Stevenson)

Kathryn Hunter

The Second Midwife

Gabrielle Reidy

The Third Midwife

Frank Egerton

The Prompter

Phelim McDermott

The First Tutor

Tony Vogel

The Father

Tatiana Strauss

The First Nun

Louisa Milwood-Haigh

The Second Nun

Anna Nieland

The Wetnurse

Graham Valentine

Famine

Diana van Kolck

The Mother

Leslie Cuss

The Second Tutor

Rien Kroon

The Chaplain

Jan Sepers

Carpaccio

Nils Dorando

The Baby of Mâcon

Richard Blair

The First Soldier

Tony Dunham

The Second Soldier

Humphrey Sallons

Cosimo's Servant

Dennis Rudge

Entourage Servant

Hans Bosch

Entourage Servant

Sjoerd Ghijssen

Entourage Servant

Michiel Riedijk

Entourage Servant

Bert Sevenhuijsen

The Deacon

John Hartnett

Cynical Auction Bidder (uncredited)

Bastian Pastewka

Laborer (uncredited)

Dela Maria Vaags

Choir Farmer's Wives (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

I've always found Peter Greenaway films rather hit or miss, and this rather theatrical effort I found more the latter. It all centres around a sort of immaculate conception birth at the Medici court and follows the anticipatory and resultant shenanigans as human nature is (quite literally) laid bare for all to see (and that nature doesn't always come off so well!) It has something of the bawdy romp to it, with some suitably appropriate ecclesiastical excesses and loads of colour - usually red - to liven it up. The story? Well though interesting for the first twenty minutes or so, I felt it fell into pantomime territory all too quickly. The cast are a collection of reasonably competent talent, but too much of the emphasis of this production is on the style, imagery along with an admittedly glorious choral score that does so much to add to the vivid and seamy look of this rather lengthy effort. The message is clear enough, but it has something of sledgehammer and nut to it; there is no subtlety or nuance to it, it's an intellectual brute of a film before a denouement that confirms what most of us - certainly those without religious convictions - may have expected from the outset. As with all of his films, this is certainly worth watching - but as to enjoying it, well I didn't really.