Othello Movie Review
Othello Review
"Othello" Overview

Rating: R
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Oliver ParkerProducer : Luc Roeg,David Barron
Screenwiter : Oliver Parker
Starring : Lawrence Fishburne,Irene Jacob,Kenneth Branagh
Seldomly have I been so outright disappointed by a film. Othello's problems
are numerous, and given the outstanding cast put together for the film (and an
admitted masterpiece to work with), it's amazing that this film comes off as
being so downright bad.
The story's been around for 400 years. Othello (Lawrence Fishburne) is a
Moorish general in the Italian army, and he is the victim of constant
prejudice. Desdemona (Irene Jacob) is his Italian lover, and when the pair
secretly marry, Othello finds himself the victim of a fiendish plot by his
servant Iago (Kenneth Branagh). Iago's motives are also magnified by the
presence of young Cassio (Nathaniel Parker), who serves as Othello's right-hand
man despite Iago's longer term of service.
And as with any Shakespearean tragedy, there are a number of misunderstandings
and, as a result, everybody dies.
The prime difficulty with Othello is the language. Dripping with archaic
English, anyone unfamiliar with Shakespeare's original play is going to have a
really tough time following the barest facts of the story. The truly sad thing
is that the archaisms are largely not Shakespeare's. Rather, first-time
writer/director Oliver Parker changed 70 percent of the play during his
adaptation, in order to, I guess, make it much more confusing than it really is.
Other problems abound. Iago's motivation (in the film) is never clear at all,
Branagh's acting here is pathetic, the very French actress Jacob is woefully
miscast as an Italian speaking in English, and while the last 20 minutes of the
film are pretty good, they don't make up for the first 100, which are just
dreadfully boring. By the time the end finally rolls around, I was hoping
they'd all die, and soon.
The few good points? Othello's thinly-veiled message about racism is
worthwhile, if a bit obvious, and Fishburne does turn in a great Moor. If he'd
had more to work with here, we'd probably have the definitive version of the
play. As it is now, it's just a lot of death in Venice.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





