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Othello

  • Film per la TV
  • 2001
  • 1h 40min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,4/10
684
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Christopher Eccleston, Keeley Hawes, and Eamonn Walker in Othello (2001)
Shakespeare's Othello retold in modern London; racial tension in the police force collides with jealousy and revenge. An officer suspects his new bride of infidelity.
Riproduci trailer2:31
1 video
5 foto
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Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaShakespeare's Othello retold in modern London; racial tension in the police force collides with jealousy and revenge. An officer suspects his new bride of infidelity.Shakespeare's Othello retold in modern London; racial tension in the police force collides with jealousy and revenge. An officer suspects his new bride of infidelity.Shakespeare's Othello retold in modern London; racial tension in the police force collides with jealousy and revenge. An officer suspects his new bride of infidelity.

  • Regia
    • Geoffrey Sax
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Andrew Davies
    • William Shakespeare
  • Star
    • Eamonn Walker
    • Christopher Eccleston
    • Keeley Hawes
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,4/10
    684
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Geoffrey Sax
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Andrew Davies
      • William Shakespeare
    • Star
      • Eamonn Walker
      • Christopher Eccleston
      • Keeley Hawes
    • 14Recensioni degli utenti
    • 3Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Ha vinto 2 BAFTA Award
      • 12 vittorie e 5 candidature totali

    Video1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    Trailer

    Foto4

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali31

    Modifica
    Eamonn Walker
    Eamonn Walker
    • John Othello
    Christopher Eccleston
    Christopher Eccleston
    • Ben Jago
    Keeley Hawes
    Keeley Hawes
    • Dessie Brabant
    Richard Coyle
    Richard Coyle
    • Michael Cass
    Rachael Stirling
    Rachael Stirling
    • Lulu
    Bill Paterson
    Bill Paterson
    • Sinclair Carver
    Christopher Fox
    Christopher Fox
    • PC Adey
    Allan Cutts
    • PC Stiller
    Patrick Myers
    Patrick Myers
    • PC Gaunt
    Samantha McDonald
    • Woman in Crowd
    Nicholas Gecks
    • Home Secretary
    Del Synnott
    • PC Alan Roderick
    Carl McCrystal
    Carl McCrystal
    • Geoffrey
    Tim Faraday
    Tim Faraday
    • Chief Superintendent
    Tim Frances
    • Newspaper Editor
    Phillip Lester
    • Photographer
    Timothy Birkett
    • Photographer
    Michelle Newell
    Michelle Newell
    • Alma Carver
    • Regia
      • Geoffrey Sax
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Andrew Davies
      • William Shakespeare
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti14

    7,4684
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    ColonelK

    Adaptations still work!

    I'm not much of a Masterpiece Theatre watcher, but I luckily stumbled on this fantastic version of Othello. Davies brilliant distillation of Shakespeare's plot, combined with great actors, and very effective direction give one faith in adaptations without the original text.

    It's easily superior to the recent 'O' as well as the Fishburne/Branagh 1995 version of the play.
    8sarastro7

    Very successful

    I am a great Shakespeare aficionado, and I am usually very skeptical about versions that don't use the original text. Yes, adaptation is a valid genre in itself, but a modern-language adaptation is usually only meaningful because it refers back to the original work that we acknowledge the immense value of. People (film-makers and audience alike) must understand that, if you leave behind Shakespeare's language, you invariably leave behind 90% of the art and subtext. You leave behind almost everything that makes the audience think, retaining only the part that is easily digestible as immediate entertainment. In most cases, this is acceptable only to those who do not distinguish significantly between high art and immediate entertainment.

    Then there are the exceptions, like this absolutely excellent modern version of Othello. It is very professionally produced in every way; the language, though mostly modern, is just that little bit prettier than everyday language, containing some nice similes and alliterations here and there, as if inclining ever so slightly towards Shakespearean language. Very nice! The plot has been significantly altered, and with it is also altered a good deal of the original statements of the play, but it is done respectfully, as if understanding that it is impossible to retain all the philosophical substance of the original. And the alterations supply their own new patterns to make the internal logic of this production a wholesome and consistent thing. Beautiful! The actors don't miss a beat. Their performances are flawless.

    As an ardent Shakespeare reader, I must confess that Othello is one of the plays that can sometimes become a bit boring to me. As a person, I am not really that interested in stories that use jealousy as the central plot point, because, frankly, I find it rather unexciting and, for me at least, irrelevant. The original Othello is of course a play pregnant with a myriad thoughts and ideas, justifying repeated rereadings, whereas a modern version will tend to strip away all the circumstantial pondering and leave us with a bare-bones jealousy plot. This can get simplistic and is why adapters as a general rule should be wary of over-simplification, as it tends to get *so* simple that the Shakespeareness of it is entirely lost. And then what was the point of the exercise? However, this particular production has enough connections to the Bardic original, and enough topical connections to the current-day world, that it is more than a jealousy story. It is also a character study, a challenging exercise in plot structure, and a study in near-Shakespearean method acting, and it manages to effectively hold the attention and maintain a level of meaningful entertainment throughout. This is a DVD well worth its price.

    9 out of 10. An impressive production.
    10Freddy-38

    Truly tragic - well done!

    Living proof that Shakespeare's plays are truly timeless. People don't change. Great production! The authentic Shakespearean tragedy came through loud and clear. This was the first time we saw Eamonn Walker but it definitely won't be the last.
    dinaia

    Is a crime of passion possible in such a context?

    Othello's story is moved nowadays when prejudices, racisms and all kinds of discriminations are constantly fought. The modern 'Othello' has two guidelines or two focuses: (1) racism and (2)sexual love.

    (1)On the one hand Othello proves a rational, humanistic and open attitude against discrimination, (2) on the other hand he questions the 'purity' of his woman, even her purity before her marrying him. It seems a little bit strange that a man that fights prejudices finds hard to accept that his wife had a life before him (although she didn't have much of life, as we find out) and cannot find the wisdom in him to give her the benefit of the doubt.

    But we know that Othello must kill Desdemona and a large part of the film focuses on Othello's obsession for her (Desdemona aka Dessie). There needs to be built the kind of love and sexual jealousy that leads to murder. And it is believable, but only if we take it out of the context and we ignore the status of this modern Othello. But if we take into consideration the forward-thinking context of today's story and the leading position of Othello in this context...well, I raise at least one eyebrow looking at Othello's actions.
    8Jonny_Numb

    Stunning contemporary adaptation

    My road to appreciating William Shakespeare was indeed a long and strange one--I spent my high-school years loathing this author, who seemed to specialize in stilted, pretentious language for the sole purpose of pissing off contemporary students. Years pass, and my final 2 semesters in college require me to become re-acquainted with an author I never wanted to have to read again. I could almost hear the centuries-dead Bard rattling his jaw with laughter from beyond the grave, chuckling to himself: "I'll teach you to acknowledge my genius yet, just wait!" And a funny thing happened: I actually started to appreciate Bill S. at the end of the first course, and flat-out praised him at the end of the second (which wrapped up with "Othello," now my hands-down favorite Shakespeare play); I graduated with a new-found appreciation for an author I had ignorantly written off years before.

    As I have only seen one filmed adaptation of "Othello" (Tim Blake Nelson's well-done teen drama "O"), I picked this version up with great curiosity, wondering what direction it would take. Set in present-day London amid growing racial tensions, John Othello (Eamonn Walker) is a straight-arrow cop whose honesty and courage earns him a promotion to Police Commissioner; his best friend and confidant, Ben Jago (a wonderfully over-the-top Christopher Eccleston), is poisoned with jealousy at this, thinking it is a racially/politically motivated move at a position that is rightfully his. Caught in the middle is pure-hearted Dessi (Keeley Hawes), Jago's intermediary to Othello's destruction.

    This "Othello" is a gritty, hard-hitting, and compelling production; the contemporary elements are integrated with ease (cell phones, DNA testing, Internet sites, handguns, etc.), the dialog has been substantially modified for modern ears, yet retains the tragic poetry of Shakespeare's text, and the triangle of key performers is of skilled equality. Eamonn Walker is a toweringly confident Othello, with a winning smile and perceptive eyes that portend everything from rapt euphoria to poisonous jealousy to homicidal rage; Eccleston has a field day with Jago, the bitter, bigoted cop once bound by devotion to his friend, now bound by the devotion to tear him to shreds; Hawes has a smaller but no less substantial role, and comes across as a confident, strong, intelligent woman who knows herself, and is not merely a pawn.

    While the entire production is gripping, there are several scenes in particular that stand out: Othello's fearless address to a gang of citizens rioting outside the police station over the beating death of a black man goes from palpable tension to calm seamlessly; Jago's raging 'aside' upon learning of Othello's promotion--his bigoted, blustery rant as he stalks down the corridors of New Scotland Yard swings between sarcasm and seriousness, aided by Eccleston's ability to keep the character grounded in reality; and the scene where Othello, stricken with a full-blown paranoia over his wife's (seeming) misdeeds, tears through their apartment looking for incriminating evidence, filmed in a dizzying style that recalls Roman Polanski's "The Tenant." As a meditation on the frailty of love and the perils of trust, Shakespeare's "Othello" taps into emotions and manipulations that still exist in society; this film faithfully recreates those sentiments through impassioned performances and inspired direction (by Geoffrey Sax). Don't let the words "Masterpiece Theatre" deter you from seeing "Othello"--it really IS that good.

    (Note: "Othello" is not rated, but would merit an "R" for violence, sexuality/nudity, and some harsh profanity.)

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    • Citazioni

      [first lines]

      Ben Jago: It was about love, That's what you've got to understand. Don't talk to me about race, don't talk to me about politics, It was love, simple as that. She loved him as well as she knew how, he loved her more than any man should love a woman. Tragedy, right? No other word for it. I loved him too, you know.

    • Connessioni
      Referenced in (500) giorni insieme (2009)

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 23 dicembre 2001 (Regno Unito)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Regno Unito
      • Stati Uniti
      • Canada
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Otelo
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC)
      • London Weekend Television (LWT)
      • WGBH
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 40min(100 min)
    • Colore
      • Color

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