Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaShakespeare's most iconic work, "Hamlet" explodes with big ideas and is the ultimate story of loyalty, love, betrayal, murder and madness. Hamlet's father is dead and Denmark has crowned Ham... Ler tudoShakespeare's most iconic work, "Hamlet" explodes with big ideas and is the ultimate story of loyalty, love, betrayal, murder and madness. Hamlet's father is dead and Denmark has crowned Hamlet's uncle the new king. Consumed by grief, Hamlet struggles to exact revenge, with devas... Ler tudoShakespeare's most iconic work, "Hamlet" explodes with big ideas and is the ultimate story of loyalty, love, betrayal, murder and madness. Hamlet's father is dead and Denmark has crowned Hamlet's uncle the new king. Consumed by grief, Hamlet struggles to exact revenge, with devastating consequences.
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And also for its idea to cast females in male roles, the most notable being Hamlet and Polonious. Was interested in that experiment but did worry as to whether it would be too much of a gimmick or not be tasteful. Then reminded myself that other Shakespeare productions have cast females in male roles and did so very successfully. A notable example being a female Malvolio in the National Theatre Live production of 'Twelfth Night' and it turned out to be one of the most interesting interpretations of the role courtesy of Tamsin Grieg. Also the Ian McKellen 'King Lear' from two years ago had a female Kent performed by the great Sinead Cusack. Onto talking about this production of 'Hamlet' it is interesting, different and decent, yet not great.
The acting is mostly one of the better assets. My vote for the standout performance goes to Shrapnel as Claudius, suitably noble and serpentine. This is another production to double Claudius with the Ghost and he has the spookiness down pat. Also loved Bevan who even with the gender reversal nails all of Polonious' characteristics in a way that is not overdone and did appreciate her sincere matronly take on the role too. Barbara Marten is a conflicted Gertrude. Most of the supporting cast fit their roles very well.
Visually, this 'Hamlet' generally looks appealing enough. It is modern dress, which will raise alarm bells for traditionalists but for those that have no issue with change won't mind so much. The sets are minimalist but don't look too grim, which is amazing considering the play's tone. The photography is not overblown or too claustrophobic. Shakespeare's dialogue never stops shining in its wide range of emotions and poetry. Even with cuts to the Fortinbras subplot, the drama still has enough cohesion despite the plot feeling somewhat jumpy at that point. The staging is mostly tasteful and enough of it makes sense and has intensity and emotion.
It is not a perfect 'Hamlet' though. Like others, my feelings on Peake were mixed. She definitely has a commanding presence, but the performance could agreed have done with a lot more nuance and toning down as she does try too hard when things get more manic in the drama. Also found Katie West too passive as Orphelia. The music also for my liking didn't fit with what was going on in the drama or with the mood, it was not at all appealing to listen to, it was intrusive and it was like someone was experimenting with Expressionism with not much understanding of the form.
Costumes were too much of a mishmash stylistically, some of the clothes not particularly appealing to look at. Especially those vests. While liking the staging on the whole, there are some very odd touches scattered here and there, such as the actors not holding what are specific objects in the text and story but instead knitwear and such for no discernible reason.
All in all, a lot to like but didn't wow me. More an interesting experiment than a great production. 6/10
Judgement rests here on Hamlet/Peake. Her performance has merit but it has many defects. The shouting, the shrillness and the pitch is set very high and almost old fashioned in its quaint gestures. She does not command through physical movement which is rather too similar to Tom Cruise when he tries to be strong, and instead conveys a lower than average statured man mimicking power. Overall Peake's Hamlet is like a very young angry gang kid from a housing project.
There is, as with the Benedict Cumberbatch Hamlet, which received so much attention, a sense that these productions are used to raise status and advance careers above anything else. This is not a great Hamlet; it is quite interesting, that is all.
There are so many elements within this production that deserve praise; the minimal set design, gender swapping some of the supporting roles (Polonius becomes Polonia, etc.)and the overall storytelling is masterful here. It's too bad that all of it means nothing when your main actress screams at the audience the whole time.
As a character who is dark, brooding and melancholy by nature; any actor tasked with fleshing out a performance must find the balance between his need for revenge and a potentially having a psychological breakdown after finding out your Uncle killed your Father and married your Mother! Therefore creating a relationship and connecting with your audience is crucial as to whether or not we care about Hamlet's situation! In the case of Maxine Peake, the actress playing Hamlet, I quickly found myself wanting her to SHUT THE HELL UP. This is because it seems she was pushing too hard and wasn't able to find any subtle nuances in her vocal performance. I'm not sure if she was trying to fill the space or if the actor chose to portray Hamlet as someone who is not grounded in reality, but ultimately her choices disconnected me from her character and in fact turned me against Hamlet because her dialogue was not believable and felt REALLY forced.
If you cannot modulate your vocal performance in front of a live audience it is very easy to turn them against you. This is what happened here and its a shame because so many other aspects of this production succeed.
You're only as strong as your weakest link - in this case I desperately wanted Hamlet to connect and just talk to me.....not scream and shout for 3 hours!
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- ConexõesVersion of Le duel d'Hamlet (1900)
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- Também conhecido como
- Хамлет
- Locações de filme
- Manchester, Greater Manchester, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(The Royal Exchange)
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- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração3 horas 4 minutos
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