Hamlet (2000) Movie Review
Hamlet (2000) Review

"Hamlet (2000)" Overview

Rating: NR
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Michael AlmereydaProducer : Andrew Fierberg,Amy Hobby
Screenwiter : Michael Almereyda
Starring : Ethan Hawke,Kyle MacLachlan,Sam Shepard,Diane Venora,Bill Murray,Liev Schreiber,Julia Stiles,Karl Geary,Paula Malcomson,Steve Zahn,Dechen Thurman
A new school of acting should be constructed based on the method of Ethan
Hawke. I am the first to admit that I enjoy Ethan Hawke in almost anything he
does. The reason I like him so much is because he brings the essence of the
brooding soul to the screen so well. Hawke plays Tortured Guy so perfectly
they should give an award at the Oscars every year and call it the “E. Hawke
Award for Best Brooding Performance of the Year”. As a natural-born brooder,
the character of Hamlet perfectly suits Hawke because the role has always been
given to older guys looking to validate their dramatic acting chops. Hawke’s
Hamlet is the Generation X Hamlet. A Hamlet that uses his “discontent” with
the world as a razor against the neck of reality.
This updated 20th century Hamlet is brought to vivid realism by independent
director Michael Almereyda. Almereyda places the play in the year 2000,
creating the state of Denmark as a huge conglomerate, the slain king a CEO, and
Hamlet as a digital video maker. This interpretation sounds almost like it's
going to be as much fun as a ten-car pileup on the expressway; you want to turn
your head away from in disgust but are strangely curious about what happened.
The surprise is that this is one of the best versions of Hamlet. Almereyda has
studied every film and stage version of the play, and his history lessons have
paid off. He creates a stark, unflinching vision of a dangerous world where
trust is a lost commodity and betrayal is weapon.
Hawke carries the vehicle well with his unflinching performance of a haunted
man pushed to the brink, finding solace among the haunting visions of dead
souls and images he captures with his camera. The supporting cast of Kyle
Machlachan, Julia Stiles, Diane Venora, Bill Murray-- doing a damn good job
with the dialogue -- and Sam Shepard are surprising in their ability to convey
the motivations of the characters. Almereyda does an incredible job of taking
the text and rearranging the structure to capture a better essence of Hamlet as
it exists in the 21st century. The most enjoyable scene is when Hamlet recites
the “To Be or Not to Be” while he is walking up and down the aisles of a
Blockbuster Video. The imagery of the enormity of the aisles and the sense of
Hamlet lost within a world of escapism is haunting and strangely unnerving.
Julia Stiles equally provides a quiet reserve to the character of Ophelia and
her muted voice speaks strongly in scenes as others determine her fate for her.
Michael Almeryda’s Hamlet is dangerous and sharp-edged. It retains a clear
hold of the text and doesn't try to dress up the scenes with numerous cuts and
flashy imagery. The actors smoothly roll through the acts and do not drag
things down with dramatic flair. Speakerphones, video, digital still photos,
laptops, and cell phones are used as not only showpieces, but also as valid
devices to communicate the play’s text. If more classic plays can be updated
with such brilliance, maybe more people will put down their Backstreet Boys
biographies and pick a Hemingway novel or a Shakespearean play and start to
understand the world around us.
Hamming it up.
Reviewer: Max Messier





