It's a surprisingly successful venture, decked out in Anglo-Saxon styles and with a brooding, robust castle setting which oozes horse muck.
Hamlet (1990)
Runtime: 2 hrs 15 mins
Synopsis: Director Franco Zeffirelli and star Mel Gibson combine their talents for this full-blooded adaptation of the classic tragedy. The movie is a concise, trimmed version of the play, as Hamlet returns to Elsinore to finds his mother married to his uncle and his dead father's ghost demanding... Director Franco Zeffirelli and star Mel Gibson combine their talents for this full-blooded adaptation of the classic tragedy. The movie is a concise, trimmed version of the play, as Hamlet returns to Elsinore to finds his mother married to his uncle and his dead father's ghost demanding vengeance. Shot in Northern Scotland amid actual castles and foggy landscapes, the film has a very realistic, rugged feel courtesy of cinematographer David Watkin. Mel Gibson is superb in the title role, burying his movie star persona within a sulking, sometimes completely unsympathetic performance as the prince. Glenn Close as his mother is also disturbingly real--the two share some scenes that are nearly incestuous in their intensity--and Helena Bonham Carter lends Ophelia the perfect note of otherworldly pain. This is a perfect companion to Zeffirelli's earlier Shakespeare films, TAMING OF THE SHREW and ROMEO & JULIET, and proves that he is a true master of poetry and period realism. Shakespeare fans should be very pleased, and beginners will find no better place to start than this accessible and vibrant adaptation. [More]
Genre: Dramas
Starring: Mel Gibson, Glenn Close, Alan Bates, Ian Holm, Paul Scofield
DVD Info
Release:
Dec 2, 2005
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- Snap Case
- Widescreen - 1.85
- Dual Layer
Audio:
- Dolby Surround Stereo - English
Reviews
Not only is Mel Gibson much better than you might expect, but Zeffirelli's Hamlet is often entertaining and rarely hard to endure.
A fine introduction to the greatest play in history, but fairly lightweight for purists.
Performances all fall in a middle range between the competent and the lackluster.
Offers what amounts to a comic book intro to Shakespeare's classic, retaining few of the play's psychological complexities.
In retrospect, it's a small jump from Shakespeare to God. What if Gibson had been stopped then?
[Mel Gibson] is by far the best part of Mr. Zeffirelli's sometimes slick but always lucid and beautifully cinematic version of the play.
Zeffirelli does an excellent job at juggling with updating Hamlet, while staying close to the classic play.
Gibson and his ego fancy himself as an ideal Hamlet, which is tragic to the film in a different sense.
Gibson makes a fine, frenzied Hamlet, but Zeffirelli's direction leaves something to be desired.
Gibson's Hamlet is more than respectable, but Helena Bonham Carter's the best Ophelia I've ever seen.
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by: Chuck 8/23/01


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