Hamlet (1996 film)

Hamlet

Film poster
Directed by Kenneth Branagh
Produced by David Barron
Screenplay by Kenneth Branagh
Based on Hamlet 
by William Shakespeare
Starring Kenneth Branagh
Julie Christie
Billy Crystal
Gérard Depardieu
Charlton Heston
Derek Jacobi
Jack Lemmon
Rufus Sewell
Robin Williams
Kate Winslet
Music by Patrick Doyle
Cinematography Alex Thomson
Edited by Neil Farrell
Production
company
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
  • 25 December 1996 (1996-12-25)
Running time
242 minutes
Country United Kingdom
United States
Language English
Budget $18 million
(adjusted by inflation: $27,158,498)[1]
Box office $4,739,189
(adjusted by inflation: $7,150,514)[1]

Hamlet is a 1996 Shakespearean tragedy film adaptation of William Shakespeare's play Hamlet, adapted for the screen and directed by Kenneth Branagh, who also stars in the titular role as Prince Hamlet. The film also features Derek Jacobi as King Claudius, Julie Christie as Queen Gertrude, Kate Winslet as Ophelia, Michael Maloney as Laertes, Richard Briers as Polonius, and Nicholas Farrell as Horatio. Other notable appearances include Robin Williams, Gérard Depardieu, Jack Lemmon, Billy Crystal, Rufus Sewell, Charlton Heston, Richard Attenborough, Judi Dench, John Gielgud and Ken Dodd.

The film is notable as the first unabridged theatrical film version of the play, running just over four hours. The longest screen version of the play prior to the 1996 film was the 1980 BBC made-for-television version starring Jacobi as the title character, which runs three-and-a-half hours.

The play's setting is updated to the 19th century, but its Elizabethan English remains the same. Blenheim Palace is the setting used for the exterior grounds of Elsinore Castle and interiors were all photographed at Shepperton Studios, blended with the footage shot at Blenheim. Hamlet was also the last major dramatic motion picture to be filmed entirely on 70 mm film until 2012, with the release of Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master.

Hamlet was highly acclaimed by the majority of critics and has been regarded as one of the best Shakespeare film adaptations ever made.[2][3][4][5] However, it was not a box office success, grossing just under $5 million on a budget of $18 million.[1] The film received four Academy Award nominations for the 69th Academy Awards for Best Art Direction (Tim Harvey), Best Costume Design (Alexandra Byrne), Best Original Score (Patrick Doyle), and Best Writing (Adapted Screenplay) (Kenneth Branagh).

Plot

The film follows the plot of the original play.

Cast

Main characters

Supporting characters

Production

Origins

Aspects of the film's staging are based on Adrian Noble's recent Royal Shakespeare Company production of the play, in which Branagh had played the title role.[6]

Text

The film uses a conflated text based on the 1623 First Folio, with additions from the Second Quarto and amendments from other sources. According to a note appended to the published screenplay, "The screenplay is based on the text of Hamlet as it appears in the First Folio – the edition of Shakespeare’s plays collected by his theatrical associated Heminges and Condell and published in 1623 by a syndicate of booksellers. Nothing has been cut from this text, and some passages absent from it (including the soliloquy ‘How all occasions do inform against me…’) have been supplied from the Second Quarto (an edition of the play which exists in copies dated 1604 and 1605). We have also incorporated some readings of words and phrases from this source and from other early printed texts, and in a few cases emendations from modern editors of the play. Thus in I, 4, in the passage (from the Second Quarto) about the 'dram of eale', we use an emendation from the Oxford edition of the Complete Works (edited by Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor, 1988): 'doth all the noble substance over-daub' – rather than the original's 'of a doubt'."[7]

Style

Despite using a full text, Branagh's film is also very visual; it makes frequent use of flashbacks to depict scenes that are either only described but not performed in Shakespeare's text, such as Hamlet's childhood friendship with Yorick, or scenes only implied by the play's text, such as Hamlet's sexual relationship with Kate Winslet's Ophelia.[8] The film also uses very long single takes for numerous scenes.

In a radical departure from previous Hamlet films, Branagh set the internal scenes in a vibrantly colourful setting, featuring a throne room dominated by mirrored doors; film scholar Samuel Crowl calls the setting "film noir with all the lights on."[9] Branagh chose Victorian era costuming and furnishings, using Blenheim Palace, built in the early 18th century, as Elsinore Castle for the external scenes. Harry Keyishan has suggested that the film is structured as an epic, courting comparison with Ben-Hur, The Ten Commandments and Doctor Zhivago.[10] As J. Lawrence Guntner points out, comparisons with the latter film are heightened by the presence of Julie Christie (Zhivago's Lara) as Gertrude.[11]

Filming

Hamlet was shot in Panavision Super 70 by Alex Thomson. It was the last feature film to be shot in 70 mm until production of The Master in 2012.[12]

Music

William Shakespeare's Hamlet: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by Patrick Doyle
Released 10 December 1996
Recorded 1996
Genre Soundtrack
Length 76:25
Label Sony Classical Records
Producer Patrick Doyle
Maggie Rodford
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic link
Film Music on the Web link
Filmtracks link

The score to Hamlet was composed and co-produced by frequent Kenneth Branagh collaborator Patrick Doyle and conducted by Robert Ziegler. Doyle composed three primary themes for the film to accompany the characters of Ophelia, Claudius, and Hamlet, which are varied throughout the score. The "simple, childlike" theme for Ophelia is mostly string-dominant, often performed by a string quartet yet occasionally accompanied by a full string ensemble or mixed chorus. For Claudius, Doyle composed a theme in the form of a demented canon, using more 20th century harmonies. The theme for Hamlet was considered by Doyle to be "the most daunting and elusive" to conceive, before settling upon a more "simple" motif to accompany the contemplative character.[13]

The soundtrack was released 10 December 1996 through Sony Classical Records and features twenty-six tracks of score at a running time of over seventy-six minutes.[14] For his work on the film, Doyle received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score.

  1. In Pace (3:07) – performed by Plácido Domingo (this is heard in the film during the closing credits)
  2. Fanfare (0:48)
  3. "All that lives must die" (2:40)
  4. "To thine own self be true" (3:04)
  5. The Ghost (9:55)
  6. "Give me up the truth" (1:05)
  7. "What a piece of work is a man" (1:50)
  8. "What players are they" (1:33)
  9. "Out out thou strumpet fortune" (3:11)
  10. "To be or not to be" (1:53)
  11. "I loved you once" (3:27)
  12. "Oh, what a noble mind" (2:41)
  13. "If once a widow" (3:36)
  14. "Now could I drink hot blood" (6:57)
  15. "A foolish prating nave" (1:05)
  16. "Oh heavy deed" (0:56)
  17. "Oh here they come" (4:39)
  18. "My thoughts be bloody" (2:52)
  19. "The doors are broke" (1:20)
  20. "And will 'a not come again?" (1:59)
  21. "Alas poor Yorick" (2:49)
  22. "Sweets to the sweet – farewell" (4:39)
  23. "Give me your pardon sir" (1:24)
  24. "Part them they are incensed" (1:47)
  25. "Goodnight, sweet prince" (3:36)
  26. "Go bid the soldiers shoot" (2:52)

Release

Hamlet was screened out of competition at the 1997 Cannes Film Festival.[15] A shorter edit of the Branagh film, approximately two-and-a-half hours long, was also shown in some markets.[16][17]

Home media

A 2-Disc DVD was released in the US and Canada on 14 August 2007. It includes a full-length commentary by Branagh and Shakespeare scholar Russell Jackson. A Blu-ray Disc was released on 17 August 2010 in the US and Canada with similar additional features, including an introduction by Kenneth Branagh, the featurette "To Be on Camera: A History with Hamlet", the 1996 Cannes Film Festival Promo, and a Shakespeare Movies Trailer Gallery.[18]

Reception

Box office

Hamlet was not a success at the box office, mostly due to its limited release. The film earned just over $90,000 in its opening weekend playing on three screens. It made just over $30,000 in the Czech Republic (the film's only foreign market) and ultimately played on fewer than 100 screens in the United States, bringing its total gross to just under $5 million on a budget of $18 million.[1]

Critical response

Hamlet received overwhelmingly positive reviews. It currently holds a 95% rating at Rotten Tomatoes with the consensus, "Kenneth Branagh's sprawling, finely textured adaptation of Shakespeare's masterpiece lives up to its source material, using strong performances and a sharp cinematic focus to create a powerfully resonant film that wastes none of its 246 minutes."[2]

Roger Ebert, film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times, awarded the film four stars, comparing it to Laurence Olivier's lauded 1948 version, stating, "Branagh's Hamlet lacks the narcissistic intensity of Laurence Olivier's (in the 1948 Academy Award winner), but the film as a whole is better, placing Hamlet in the larger context of royal politics, and making him less a subject for pity."[3] Janet Maslin of The New York Times also praised both Branagh's direction and performance, writing, "This Hamlet, like Branagh's version of Much Ado About Nothing, takes a frank, try-anything approach to sustaining its entertainment value, but its gambits are most often evidence of Branagh's solid showmanship. His own performance is the best evidence of all."[19] The New York Review of Books praised the attention given to Shakespeare's language, "giving the meter of the verse a musician's respect";[20] Branagh himself said his aim was "telling the story with utmost clarity and simplicity."[21]

Some critics, notably Stanley Kauffmann, declared the film to be the finest motion picture version of Hamlet yet made. Noted online film critic James Berardinelli wrote the film a glowing four star review and went so far as to declare the Branagh Hamlet the finest Shakespeare adaptation ever, rating it as the best film of 1996, the fourth best film of the 90s, and one of his top 101 favourite films of all time, saying, "From the moment it was first announced that Branagh would attempt an unabridged Hamlet, I never doubted that it would be a worthy effort. After all, his previous forays into Shakespeare have been excellent. Nothing, however, prepared me for the power and impact of this motion picture. Hyperbole comes easily when describing this Hamlet, decidedly the most impressive motion picture of 1996. Nothing else this year has engaged my intellect, senses, and emotions in quite the same way. I have seen dozens of versions of this play (either on screen or on stage), and none has ever held me in such a grip of awe. This may be Branagh's dream, but it is our pleasure."[4]

The film did have its detractors however, with Lloyd Rose of The Washington Post calling it "the film equivalent of a lushly illustrated coffee-table book"[22] and Desson Thomson writing of Branagh's performance "...the choices he makes are usually overextended. When it's time to be funny, he skitters over the top. When he's sad or touched, he makes a mechanical, catching noise in his throat."[23] The notoriously severe John Simon also criticised the film, calling Branagh's performance "brawny" and "not easy to like" and stating that Branagh's direction used "explicitness where Shakespeare [...] settled for subtlety or mere suggestion."[24] Leonard Maltin, who gave the film a positive three stars in his Movie and Video Guide (and gave the Olivier version of Hamlet four stars), praised the cinematography by Alex Thomson, but stated that "Branagh essentially gives a stage performance that is nearly as over-the-top as some of his directorial touches."[25]

Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet ranks No. 3 on Rotten Tomatoes list of Greatest Shakespeare Movies, just behind Akira Kurosawa's Ran (1985), which ranks in second place, and Branagh's own Henry V (1989), which ranks in first place.[5]

Accolades

Award Category Recipients and nominees Result
Academy Awards Best Art Direction Tim Harvey Nominated
Best Costume Design Alexandra Byrne Nominated
Best Original Score Patrick Doyle Nominated
Best Writing (Adapted Screenplay) Kenneth Branagh Nominated
Art Directors Guild Awards ADG Excellence in Production Design Award Tim Harvey, Desmond Crowe Nominated
British Academy Film Awards Best Costume Design Alexandra Byrne Nominated
Best Production Design Tim Harvey Nominated
British Society of Cinematographers GBCT Operators Award Martin Kenzie Won
Best Cinematography Award Alex Thomson Won
Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Best Film Kenneth Branagh Nominated
The International Film Festival of the Art of Cinematography CAMERIMAGE Golden Frog Award for Best Cinematography Alex Thomson Nominated
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards Best Actor Kenneth Branagh Nominated
Empire Awards Best British Actress Kate Winslet Won
Evening Standard British Film Awards Special Jury Award Kenneth Branagh Won
San Diego Film Critics Society Awards Best Actor Kenneth Branagh Won
Satellite Awards Best Art Direction and Production Design Tim Harvey Nominated
Best Cinematography Alex Thomson Nominated
Best Costume Design Alex Byrne Nominated
Best Original Score Patrick Doyle Nominated
Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture Kate Winslet Nominated

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Hamlet (1996). Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 26 January 2012.
  2. 1 2 "Hamlet (1996)". Rotten Tomatoes. IGN Entertainment, Inc. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  3. 1 2 Ebert, Roger (24 January 1997). "Hamlet". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 26 January 2012.
  4. 1 2 Berardinelli, James. "Hamlet (1996)". ReelViews.com. Retrieved 26 January 2012.
  5. 1 2 "Greatest Shakespeare Movies". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 21 January 2012.
  6. Crowl, Samuel "Flamboyant Realist: Kenneth Branagh" in Jackson, Russell The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare on Film (Cambridge University Press, 2000)
  7. Branagh, Kenneth (1996), "Hamlet" by William Shakespeare: Screenplay and Introduction by Kenneth Branagh; production diary by Russell Jackson (New York: W W Norton), p.174. ISBN 0393045196
  8. Keyishian, p.79
  9. Crowl, p.227
  10. Keyishian, p.78
  11. Guntner, pp.122–123.
  12. McGavin, Patrick (17 August 2012). "The Master Rules in Chicago: 70 mm Screening Of Anderson Film Recalls Welles' The Lady From Shanghai". Movieline.com. Movieline. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  13. Hamlet (1996): (Patrick Doyle). Filmtracks.com. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  14. Doyle: William Shakespeare's Hamlet (soundtrack). AllMusic. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  15. "Festival de Cannes: Hamlet". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 27 September 2009.
  16. Alternate versions for Hamlet. IMDb. Retrieved 26 January 2012.
  17. http://unseenfilms.blogspot.com/2011/09/hamlet-kenneth-branaugh-1996.html
  18. Hamlet (Includes Blu-Ray Book). Warner Bros. Shop. Retrieved 26 January 2012.
  19. Maslin, Janet (15 December 1996). "Hamlet". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  20. O'Brien, Geoffrey New York Review of Books 6 February 1997, cited by Samuel Crowl, "Framboyant Realist: Kenneth Branagh" in Jackson, Russell The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare on Film (Cambridge University Press, 2000) p.228
  21. Branagh, Kenneth Introduction and Notes to Much Ado About Nothing: Screenplay p.ix cited by Crowl, p.228
  22. "'Hamlet': Kenneth Branagh's Inaction Flick". The Washington Post. 22 July 1997. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  23. "Branagh's 'Hamlet': Not to Be". The Washington Post. 22 July 1997. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  24. John Simon On Film: Criticism, 1982–2001 – John Ivan Simon – Google Books
  25. Leonard Maltin's 2009 Movie Guide – Leonard Maltin – Google Books

External links

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