I Am Semiramis

(Redirected from Io Semiramide)

Io Semiramide (AKA: I Am Semiramis, AKA: Slave Queen of Babylon, AKA: Duelo de Reyes) is a 1963 Italian peplum film about Semiramis, a queen of the Neo-Assyrian Empire. It was directed by Primo Zeglio.[1] The legends are in part based on the historical Shammuramat, queen consort of Shamshi-Adad V and regent for her son Adad-nirari III.[2]

I Am Semiramis
Film poster
Directed byPrimo Zeglio
Written byPrimo Zeglio
Luigi De Santis
Screenplay byFede Arnaud
Alberto Liberati
StarringYvonne Furneaux
John Ericson
CinematographyAlvaro Mancori
Edited byAlberto Gallitti
Music byCarlo Savina
Production
company
Apo Films
Distributed byGlobe International Film
Release date
  • 1963 (1963)
Running time
100 min
CountryItaly
LanguagesItalian
English

Plot

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During the reign of Semiramis, the beautiful queen of the Assyrian people, Assyria reaches one of the periods of greatest splendour, and to crown her successes she gives the order to build the great city of Babylon. A young woman of the court of great political ambition, Semiramis falls in love with Kir, a prince enslaved who reciprocates. Kir, king of the Dardanians, is defeated in combat by General Onnos during a military campaign launched by the latter against Nineveh in Assyria.

Reduced to slavery, Kir is taken with other slaves to the capital where the general presents his prizes to King Minurte. Semiramis persuades Minurte to offer him Kir and also obtains a domain. She employs her slaves, including Kir, to build a city that becomes Babylon. Meanwhile, she leads political machinations and alliances with Kir and Onnos in order to overthrow Minurte and take her place on the throne.

The conspirators manage to take Kir from the queen and convince him that he has been betrayed by Semiramis with another man. Furious, Kir takes charge of the conspiracy against his beloved. Discovering the truth, Semiramis poisons Kir by making him drink from a poisoned cup. Later, during the funeral, the queen is shot by an arrow thrown by the conspirators. The bodies of the two lovers are then burned together, united in death.[3]

Cast

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "I Am Semiramis". mubi.com.
  2. ^ Semiramis by Joshua J. Mark from Ancient History Encyclopedia
  3. ^ Io Semiramide (I Am Semiramis) by FilmAffinity.com
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