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Synopsis

Hamlet, son of the king of Denmark, is summoned home for his father’s funeral and his mother’s wedding to his uncle. In a supernatural episode, he discovers that his uncle, whom he hates anyway, murdered his father. In an incredibly convoluted plot – the most complicated and most interesting in all literature – he manages to (impossible to put this in exact order) feign (or perhaps not to feign) madness, murder the “prime minister,” love and then unlove an innocent whom he drives to madness, plot and then unplot against the uncle, direct a play within a play, successfully conspire against the lives of two well-meaning friends, and finally take his revenge on the uncle, but only at the cost of almost every life on stage, including his own and his mother’s. –IMDb

Director

Original

Kenneth Branagh

Perhaps the best-known Shakespeare interpreter of the late 20th century, Kenneth Branagh began his career in a golden haze of critical exultation. First a star pupil at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (one of Britain’s most prestigious drama schools), then a promising newcomer on the London stage, then hailed as “the next Olivier” for his 1989 screen adaptation of Henry V, Branagh could, for a long time, do no wrong. Unfortunately, a string of bad luck, catalyzed by his disastrous Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein in 1994, began to tarnish the halo that had hovered above the actor/director’s head. His lavish, four-hour Hamlet in 1996, however, did much to further his status as a man who knew his Bard, helping to alleviate some of the disappointments that both preceded and came after it.

Although his accent suggests otherwise, Branagh originally hails from Northern Ireland, not England. Born in Belfast December 10, 1960, to a working-class family, he was raised in the strife-ridden… read more

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Publius

18Feb12

A film with serious balls. Balls to adapt a Shakespeare play in its entirety, and balls to cast Charlton Heston in a bit-part. Fantastic.

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Adam Z

17Dec11

Brilliant! A definitive cinematic take on Hamlet. Branagh rings out the tragedy, humour, sadness and thrill of the play, which is obviously one of THE great works of art, on a gorgeous visual tapestry. No wonder stuffy Shakespeare scholars prefer the dry, stupid, easily pinned-down Olivier version, with its silly Oedipal reading of the play. Branagh embraces Shakespeare, with all its indeterminacy and brilliance.

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DT

1Dec11

There are a handful of scenes which inevitably feel superfluous/overlong, but I'm not sure whether this criticism is really valid here, seeing this is something Branagh intentionally decided to fly right in the face of. Besides, the play’s high points - of which there are many indeed - are, in the words of a previous poster, just ‘unbelievably magnificent’, and brilliantly staged and acted here.

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Elliot Kern

8Sep11

The "all-star cast" featuring walk-ins by the likes of Gerard Depardieu and Billy Crystal may be distracting; I know I was more or less wondering which face I'd see next half the time. But I've watched it again to find the shock of Jack Lemmon as Marcellus or Robin Williams as Osric was my issue, not the films. As far as I can gauge they were all cast very well. This is certainly the best Hamlet film adaption.

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