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==Synopsis==
==Synopsis==
The central character is a young girl (Elizabeth Moorman, a former [[Playboy Bunny]]), who learns from an astrologer that she will meet a rich husband and proceeds to look for one. She rooms with an older hooker ([[Lila Kedrova]], the veteran Russian-born actress who had won an Oscar for ''[[Zorba the Greek]]'') in a rundown Montreal apartment where a young man of mixed indigenous and European heritage ([[Tommy Lee Jones]] in one of his first screen appearances) falls for her. Later he is killed trying to blow up a bridge as a form of protest. Heavily allegorical and densely symbolic,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Pratley|first1=Gerald|title=Torn Sprockets: The Uncertain Projection of the Canadian Film|date=1987|publisher=Associated University Presses|location=Cranbury, NJ|isbn=0874131944|page=223}}</ref> ''Eliza’s Horoscope'' is a psychedelic film left over from the 1960s – closer to [[Bob Rafelson]]’s ''[[Head (film)]]'' than [[Federico Fellini]]’s ''[[Juliet of the Spirits]]''. [[Robbie Robertson]], formerly of the legendary Canadian group [[The Band]], appears as a background extra in the film.
The central character is a young girl (Elizabeth Moorman, a former [[Playboy Bunny]]), who learns from an astrologer that she will meet a rich husband and proceeds to look for one. She rooms with an older hooker ([[Lila Kedrova]], the veteran Russian-born actress who had won an Oscar for ''[[Zorba the Greek]]'') in a rundown Montreal apartment where a young man of mixed indigenous and European heritage ([[Tommy Lee Jones]] in one of his first screen appearances) falls for her. Later he is killed trying to blow up a bridge as a form of protest. Heavily allegorical and densely symbolic,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Pratley|first1=Gerald|title=Torn Sprockets: The Uncertain Projection of the Canadian Film|date=1987|publisher=Associated University Presses|location=Cranbury, NJ|isbn=0874131944|page=223}}</ref> ''Eliza’s Horoscope'' is a psychedelic film left over from the 1960s – closer to [[Bob Rafelson]]’s ''[[Head (film)|Head]]'' than [[Federico Fellini]]’s ''[[Juliet of the Spirits]]''. [[Robbie Robertson]], formerly of the legendary Canadian group [[The Band]], appears as a background extra in the film.


==Awards==
==Awards==

Revision as of 12:18, 22 June 2017

Eliza’s Horoscope
Directed byGordon Sheppard
Written byGordon Sheppard
Produced byGordon Sheppard
StarringElizabeth Moorman
Tommy Lee Jones
Roes Quong
Lila Kedrova
Pierre Byland
Marcel Sabourin
Alanis Obomsawin
CinematographyJean Boffety
Michel Brault
Paul van der Linden
Edited byGordon Sheppard
Music byElmo Peeler
Distributed byAkoom (Quebec)
Release dates
September 1975, Stratford International Film Festival; May1976, Montreal
Running time
121 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,400,000 (estimated)

Eliza’s Horoscope is a 1975 Canadian feature from Gordon Sheppard, one of the most enigmatic features made in Canada.

Background

Gordon Sheppard (1937–2006) began his career with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in 1960 as a writer and interviewer on public affairs programs such as “The Lively Arts.” In 1965 he was appointed to the Secretary of State as a special consultant on a proposal to create the Canadian Film Development Corporation (later Telefilm Canada). Leaving government service, Sheppard began work on his flawed masterpiece, the splendid Eliza’s Horoscope,[1] an ingenious, exotic feature that he began in 1970 and would take four years to complete (which explains why there are three cinematographers on the film). [2]

Synopsis

The central character is a young girl (Elizabeth Moorman, a former Playboy Bunny), who learns from an astrologer that she will meet a rich husband and proceeds to look for one. She rooms with an older hooker (Lila Kedrova, the veteran Russian-born actress who had won an Oscar for Zorba the Greek) in a rundown Montreal apartment where a young man of mixed indigenous and European heritage (Tommy Lee Jones in one of his first screen appearances) falls for her. Later he is killed trying to blow up a bridge as a form of protest. Heavily allegorical and densely symbolic,[3] Eliza’s Horoscope is a psychedelic film left over from the 1960s – closer to Bob Rafelson’s Head than Federico Fellini’s Juliet of the Spirits. Robbie Robertson, formerly of the legendary Canadian group The Band, appears as a background extra in the film.

Awards

Canadian Film Awards – Supporting Actress (Kedrova), Cinematography (van der Linden), Art Direction, Overall Sound, Special Award

References

  1. ^ Sheppard, Gordon. "The Making of Eliza's Horoscope". Retrieved June 22, 2017.
  2. ^ Morris, Peter (1984). The Film Companion. Toronto: Irwin Publishing. pp. 270–271. ISBN 0 7725 1505 0. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  3. ^ Pratley, Gerald (1987). Torn Sprockets: The Uncertain Projection of the Canadian Film. Cranbury, NJ: Associated University Presses. p. 223. ISBN 0874131944.