- Hamlet 2-Disc Special Edition (1996)
In this first-ever full-text film of Shakespeare's greatest work, nominated for 4 Academy Awards®, the power surges through every scene. The timeless tale of murder, corruption and revenge is reset in an opulent 19th-century world, using sprawling Blenheim Palace as Elsinore with much of the action staged in shimmering mirrored and gold-filled interiors. The luminous cast includes actor/director Kenneth Branagh, Kate Winslet, Derek Jacobi, Julie Christie, Robin Williams, Jack Lemmon, Billy Crystal and Charlton Heston.
The excitement of the Bard's words and Branagh's adventurous filmmaking style lift the story from its often shadowy ambience to fully-lit pageantry and rage. Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle said, “In the 80 years that works of world literature have been adapted for the screen, few filmmakers have attempted so much and with such success.â€
Branagh's Hamlet: The Shakespeare Collection
- manicsounds
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 2:58 am
- Location: Tokyo, Japan
Coming August 14:
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kevyip1
- Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2004 11:07 pm
Looks like a 2007 release.
Btw, the film can be rented at Amazon Unbox for $2.99, but don't bother. The film is CROPPED, and is hardly DVD quality, as these screencaps show:
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It's a 4GB download that takes forever. No 5.1 audio. Can only be played on the very feature-poor Unbox software player. File cannot be copied to another PC. You must re-download it on another PC to view it there.
The lousy video quality combined with the not-ready-for-primetime Unbox service made me give up on my first-time viewing of the film and wait for the DVD instead.
Btw, the film can be rented at Amazon Unbox for $2.99, but don't bother. The film is CROPPED, and is hardly DVD quality, as these screencaps show:
Image 1
Image 2
It's a 4GB download that takes forever. No 5.1 audio. Can only be played on the very feature-poor Unbox software player. File cannot be copied to another PC. You must re-download it on another PC to view it there.
The lousy video quality combined with the not-ready-for-primetime Unbox service made me give up on my first-time viewing of the film and wait for the DVD instead.
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 3:46 pm
- Gordon
- Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2004 12:03 pm
It's a magnificent, slick, sumptuously decorated film, but to its own detriment. I'd much rather see Philip Saville's 1964 version with Christopher Plummer, Robert Shaw, Michael Caine and Steven Berkoff which was actually filmed at Elsinore, Denmark - the second of two versions shot there (in addition to the 1910).
- Via_Chicago
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 4:03 pm
I'd agree although there are passages of the film that are, by themselves, quite remarkable. I particularly enjoyed the scene in which Charlton Heston is actually asked to act (and of all the celeb cameos, his is my favorite by far); unfortunately, in typical Branaghian fashion, he cuts away from Heston's performance (making Heston, somewhat ironically, a Biblical epic style narrator) to John Gielgud and Judi Dench writhing about, half-naked, in agony. Likewise, his "to be..." speech is quite good, but he later gives us the "my thoughts be bloody..." speech in such a grandiose, over-the-top fashion that it comes off like camp instead of high art (not that camp can't be high art).Gordon wrote:It's a magnificent, slick, sumptuously decorated film, but to its own detriment. I'd much rather see Philip Saville's 1964 version with Christopher Plummer, Robert Shaw, Michael Caine and Steven Berkoff which was actually filmed at Elsinore, Denmark - the second of two versions shot there (in addition to the 1910).
It's big, it's messy, it has way too many cameos to the film's own detriment, but it should have been available on DVD years ago.
For the record, I prefer the 2000 version with Ethan Hawke. I particularly loved it when Sam Shepherd (as the ghost of Hamlet's father) disappears into a Pepsi One machine.
- tryavna
- Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2005 8:38 pm
- Location: North Carolina
That is a good moment.Via_Chicago wrote:For the record, I prefer the 2000 version with Ethan Hawke. I particularly loved it when Sam Shepherd (as the ghost of Hamlet's father) disappears into a Pepsi One machine.
However, for me, the very best Hamlet moment on film is Paul Scofield's turn as the ghost in the Gibson-Zefferelli version. Not a wholly successful adaptation, but not the fiasco it might have been. And Morricone's score is very good for it -- particularly his cue for the opening titles.
As for Branaugh's version, I too was pleasantly surprised by Heston's performance. But I think the best part of that film is Ophelia's burial. Branaugh may be over-the-top in many other scenes, but there his emotion really gets me.
- Ives
- Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 1:43 am
- Location: West Michigan
I also love Paul Scofield in Gibson's Hamlet. He does eternal torment incredibly well in that early scene. Gives me the willies.
On Morricone's score for the beginning of the film, check out the original source material: Stravinsky's "Symphony of Psalms" (first movement) with a dash of Orff's "Carmina Burana." Not outright theft, but damn close.
On Morricone's score for the beginning of the film, check out the original source material: Stravinsky's "Symphony of Psalms" (first movement) with a dash of Orff's "Carmina Burana." Not outright theft, but damn close.
- tryavna
- Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2005 8:38 pm
- Location: North Carolina
Ah, I'd always suspected the Orff influence, but I am not familiar with that particular Stravinsky piece. Will definitely have to check it out. Thanks for the recommendation.Ives wrote:I also love Paul Scofield in Gibson's Hamlet. He does eternal torment incredibly well in that early scene. Gives me the willies.
On Morricone's score for the beginning of the film, check out the original source material: Stravinsky's "Symphony of Psalms" (first movement) with a dash of Orff's "Carmina Burana." Not outright theft, but damn close.
As for Scofield, he's just amazing in nearly everything he does. His performance pushes The Crucible from the merely good into the, at times, transcendent.
- Fletch F. Fletch
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 7:54 pm
- Location: Provo, Utah
- Gordon
- Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2004 12:03 pm
Gargh! Don't mention that film around Gordon, man! A classic example of a potentially great film ruined by an overbearing score and unnecessary camera moves if ever there was one. Brilliant script and acting, though. Scofield is, indeed, a joy to watch in any film.tryavna wrote:As for Scofield, he's just amazing in nearly everything he does. His performance pushes The Crucible from the merely good into the, at times, transcendent.
- Jeff
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 1:49 am
- Location: Denver, CO
- godardslave
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 8:44 pm
- Location: Confusing and open ended = high art.
- Lino
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 10:18 am
- Location: Sitting End
- Contact:
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ByMarkClark.com
- Joined: Thu Apr 14, 2005 7:59 pm
- Location: Columbus, OH
- Contact:
- Lino
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 10:18 am
- Location: Sitting End
- Contact:
That makes perfect sense, as strange as it may sound at first. But not if you think about something like Rabbit Moon.Matt wrote:It's pretty wild. And, of course, the child who would grow up to be Kenneth Anger is in it.Lino wrote:That version of MSND sounds like a hoot. Is it? Never heard of it until now.
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solent
Try as I might I can't get into filmed versions of the Bard's plays. I always miss what has been cut out of the text (lines and/or characters). For this reason I prefer TV versions like the mammoth BBC collection box set available in the UK. Some of the plays in this series still have to have minor cuts in the text but this is what happens even with stage versions. At least the integrity of the play is maintained (in terms of text). I know that no one version of HAMLET will please everyone. We all have a subjective view of any particular version (as with classical music). I like watching various film versions of the plays but in terms of collecting I would stop at the BBC versions.
- MichaelB
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 10:20 pm
- Location: Worthing
- Contact:
The quality of the BBC cycle varies enormously, and some of the most famous plays got the dullest adaptations (As You Like It, Romeo and Juliet, The Tempest) - so I really wouldn't recommend stopping there! Antony and Cleopatra and Macbeth were better, but both were massively overshadowed by Trevor Nunn's RSC productions, which were adapted for television in the 1970s (the Nunn Macbeth, with Ian McKellen and Judi Dench, is available on DVD, and for my money is the best television adaptation of any Shakespeare play).solent wrote:in terms of collecting I would stop at the BBC versions.
The year of production often makes a difference - the first two BBC seasons (1978-80) were produced by Cedric Messina, who firmly believed in a conservative "bring the Bard to the masses" approach, with texts generally cut to about two hours and resoundingly conventional staging. By general consent the worst productions date from that era, though there are a few gems - Measure for Measure was terrific, as was the rarely-staged Henry VIII, while the Richard II/Henry IV/Henry V cycle was very watchable.
Things improved significantly from the third season onwards when Jonathan Miller took over, and completely reversed Messina's policy by openly encouraging his directors to be adventurous (albeit within some fairly strict bounds dictated by the co-production agreement with Time-Life Television). His regime was also marked by unconventional casting - John Cleese as Petruchio, Bob Hoskins as Iago.
The three primary directors of the Miller era were Miller himself, Elijah Moshinsky and Jane Howell, who collectively made some of the cycle's strongest adaptations - Miller did The Taming of the Shrew, Troilus and Cressida (a personal favourite of his), Timon of Athens, a contentious Othello (though Anthony Hopkins was a last-minute substitute for James Earl Jones, banned from appearing by Equity) and a King Lear that was essentially an extended version of his 1975 BBC production with many of the same actors, as he didn't believe he'd changed his view of the play.
Moshinsky often made significant changes to the text (heavy cuts, reshuffled scenes), and sometimes his extraordinarily lush visuals worked against the original (A Midsummer Night's Dream), but his most successful productions (All's Well That Ends Well, Cymbeline, Coriolanus) were sometimes thrillingly ambitious. Howell arguably went even further, with her ultra-stylised Winter's Tale, children's adventure playground restaging of the Henry VI/Richard III cycle and an admirably restrained and sober Titus Andronicus.
I covered the cycle for BFI Screenonline a couple of years ago - more details here
