The Outpost Store
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Movie & TV Downloads » Dramas » BBC Shakespeare: Hamlet  
Categories
Apparel & Accessories
Audio, TV & Home Theater
Automotive Parts & Accessories
Baby Clothes & Products
Beauty
Bedding & Bath
Books
Camera & Photo
Cell Phones & Service
Computers & PC Hardware
DVD
Electronics
Exercise & Fitness
Food
Fresh Flowers & Plants
Furniture & Décor
Gourmet Food
Grocery Products
Hardware
Health & Personal Care
Home Improvement
Industrial & Scientific
Jewelry & Watches
Kids & Baby Clothes
Kitchen
Kitchen & Dining
Magazines
Movie & TV Downloads
MP3 Downloads
Music
Musical Instruments
Office Products
Outdoor Living
Patio, Lawn & Garden
Personal Care
Pet Supplies
Power & Hand Tools
Shoes
Software
Sports & Outdoors
Textbooks
Toys & Games
Vacuums, Cleaning & Storage
VHS
Video Games
Wireless

BBC Shakespeare: Hamlet

BBC Shakespeare: Hamlet

zoom enlarge 
Director: Rodney Bennett
Actors: Derek Jacobi, Claire Bloom, Patrick Stewart, Eric Porter, Lalla Ward
Studio: BBC
Category: Movie

Buy New: $1.99

Buy

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 12 reviews
Sales Rank: 634

Genre: Book Adaptations
Media: Video On Demand
Running Time: 215

ASIN: B000KBA9DC

Theatrical Release Date: November 9, 1980
Release Date: January 30, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 12
 « PREV  
1 2 3
  NEXT »

3 out of 5 stars Not as good as Zeferrelli   June 14, 2006
 3 out of 6 found this review helpful

BUT it was more complete than the 1968 version. And I will say, Alan Rickman's Tybalt was better than Michael York's. York is another one of those actors who makes a habit of chewing scenery, I much prefer Alan's more understated way of playing him. Not to mention, young Alan+tight costume=happy me!!!!


5 out of 5 stars Derek Jacobi's Hamlet is a marvel to behold...   April 10, 2006
 8 out of 11 found this review helpful

...and is the reason why I bought the boxed set. In my opinion the other adaptations are tepid, though I must admit I haven't watched Hopkins as Othello yet.

Jacobi is the definitive Hamlet for me (and the definitive Claudius in Branagh's 1996 version).

I suppose I will have to save my pennies and buy the Histories boxed set to own his Richard II. I recall seeing it as a youth on PBS and being duly impressed.

Too bad the DVDs are not sold individually.



5 out of 5 stars The Gold Standard.   September 30, 2005
 39 out of 41 found this review helpful

In 1978, the BBC ambitiously set out to produce all of Shakespeare's 37 plays for television. (Alright - so it's 38 ... so they didn't include "The Two Noble Kinsmen," which is cribbed from Chaucer's "Knight's Tale" anyway. But who's counting beans?) With casts featuring the better part of British acting nobility, including some promising (then-)newcomers, the enterprise was completed in two launches with distinct creative approaches and, for all occasional frictions in continuity, remains a one-in-a-kind endeavor: the gold standard every Shakespeare enactment must either meet or fall short of in comparison; for truthfulness to the Bard's intent as much as for stellar acting and production values. Fifteen plays have since been released in sets of five tragedies, comedies and histories: one might've wished for some additions, or more sets overall; but all three compilations are worth their price's every penny.

Laced with murderous schemes, revenge, and the search for justice, love, and peace of mind, Shakespeare's tragedies delve into the human mind's darkest recesses; exploring greed, envy, ambition, guilt, remorse, and pure evil next to compassion, generosity, humility, and innocence, all interwoven in timeless plots unmatched in variety, construction, and richness of characters. Interpretation is substantially left to the actors: Despite Hamlet's litany of directions to the Players appearing in that tragedy's "play-within-the-play" - directions representing Shakespeare's own grievances, including his irritation with comedian Will Kempe's tendency for spotlight-seeking beyond his scenes' actual confines (therefore, "let those that play your clowns speak no more than is set down for them. For [some] will ... set on [the uninformed] spectators to laugh ..., though [meanwhile] some necessary question of the play [must] be considered. That's villanous and shows a most pitiful ambition in the fool that uses it," Hamlet quips) - the ultimate actors' playwright gives few express stage directions, leaving his own players considerable freedom, and making the world wonder, ever since their Globe Theatre premiere: What's driving the Prince of Denmark - madness? revenge? indecision? something else entirely? Is Claudius, that tragedy's king, evil incarnate or a man wrecked with guilt? Is Othello's antagonist Iago bent on revenge because he "hate[s] the Moor," or giddily enjoying his malicious plots' every second? How much capacity for guilt has Macbeth ultimately left: is he truly, thoroughly corrupted, or has something of the king's loyal thane remained inside him?

The set's natural centerpiece, both for its preeminence among Shakespeare's plays and for this production's superb quality, is "Hamlet," the Bard's four-hour-long adaptation of the Danish Amleth saga. As the Prince, Derek Jacobi - the legitimate heir to Laurence Olivier and John Gielgud, and mentor to Kenneth Branagh - gives a lifetime's performance: if you only know him as Claudius the Stutterer from the magnificent adaptation of Robert Graves's "I, Claudius," or as Cadfael from the equally magnificent series based on Ellis Peters's books, you're in for a truly unexpected treat. For Jacobi's first love is the theater, and it shows: with near-unmatched insight into Shakespeare's world (particularly this play and its title character), he makes the Prince of Denmark all his own, in a portrayal easily on par with the best in existence. There's no pulling of punches here, no wavering like Olivier's; but no genuine madness, either - just pure, unrestrained passion, often swinging between emotional extremes within seconds: I wonder whether Mel Gibson's vaguely similar approach in Franco Zeffirelli's 1990 movie was based on a study of Jacobi's performance. The production also features Patrick Stewart as a Claudius covering emotions from Macchiavellian intrigue to deeply-felt guilt, Claire Bloom as an unrivaled, regal, but very vulnerable Getrude, Eric Porter as scheming master politician Polonius (never mind that Hamlet calls him a "tedious old fool"), Robert Swann as one of the strongest Horatios I've ever seen, Emrys James as a wonderfully congenial Player King, Lalla Ward as a sweet, but not *too* sweet Ophelia, David Robb as impetuous Laertes, Tim Wylton as the First Gravedigger and Peter Glae as Osric (both milking their scenes to optimum, but never over-the-top effect), and an outstanding cast rounded out by Patrick Allen (the Ghost), Ian Charleson (Fortinbras), Jonathan Hyde (Rosencrantz), Geoffrey Bateman (Guildenstern), and Paul Humpoletz (Marcellus).

But while I'd probably have bought this set for "Hamlet" alone, I am equally delighted with the remaining productions: Patrick Ryecart and Rebecca Saire as star-crossed lovers Romeo and Juliet (through which play we're guided by John Gielgud's Chorus) are every bit as youthfully innocent but determined as Franco Zeffirelli's and Baz Luhrman's Leonard Whiting, Olivia Hussey, Leonardo di Caprio and Claire Danes; moreover, there's Anthony Andrews's captivatingly flamboyant Mercutio, a young Alan Rickman's brash Tybalt, Michael Hordern's Capulet, and Celia Johnson's Nurse. - In the play that keeps me yelling, "Othello, wake up!!," Anthony Hopkins gives a tour-de-force performance as the Moor ("the part [he'd] always wanted to play," he is quoted); yet, he's almost upstaged by Bob Hoskins's deliciously, mirthfully evil Iago. Penelope Wilton's Desdemona is all blameless righteousness; and the production wouldn't be the same without the spot-on performances of Anthony Pedley (Roderigo), David Yelland (Cassio), and Rosemary Leach (Emilia). - The "Scottish Play"'s impact rests almost entirely on the shoulders of its title character and his lady, and those of Nicol Williamson and - particularly - Jane Lapotaire's breathtaking Lady Macbeth provide strong support indeed for the Thane-of-Glamis-turned-king (and murderer) and his ruthlessly ambitious wife. Brenda Bruce, Eileen Way and Anne Dyson scare you near-witless as the witches, maliciously mock-echoed by James Bolam's Porter, and besides Ian Hogg's Banquo and Tony Doyle's Macduff, among the production's most impressive performances are Jill Baker's and Crispin Mair's (Macduff's wife and son). In Shakespeare's look at the Ides of March from Caesar's murderers' and heir's perspective, finally - that play without heroes or villains - the four principals are well-divided among Richard Pasco (Brutus), Keith Michell (Mark Antony), Charles Gray (Caesar) and David Collings (Cassius), while Virginia McKenna (Portia) and Elizabeth Spriggs (Calphurnia) make the most of roles easily overlooked in weaker actresses' hands.

Also recommended:
The Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works 2nd Edition
The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatized Plays
BBC Shakespeare Histories (Henry IV Parts 1 and 2, Henry V, Richard II, Richard III) DVD Giftbox
Olivier's Shakespeare - Criterion Collection (Hamlet / Henry V / Richard III)
Grigori Kozintsev's Hamlet
Hamlet
William Shakespeare's Hamlet (Two-Disc Special Edition)
Henry V
Richard III
Peter Brook's King Lear



4 out of 5 stars great set   September 18, 2005
 14 out of 19 found this review helpful

This is great set! It is not worth the money amazon is asking for it. I purchased it for a third of the price the other day from Sam's Club


5 out of 5 stars Superb   January 24, 2005
 17 out of 19 found this review helpful

Derek Jacobi's Hamlet is the best I've ever seen, bar none. He gets it exactly right. Patrick Stewart's Claudius is likewise the most interesting and convincing performance of this role. Claire Bloom as Gertrude will break your heart. Only Lala Ward's whiny Ophelia is not up to snuff; she tends to grow a little tiresome. I haven't seen the other videos in this set, so I can't vouch for them. If you don't want to gamble on them, you can order the individual Hamlet video from Ambrose Video (www.documentary-video.com).

The Outpost Network
Related Categories
• Dramas
Classic TV
TV
Genres
Amazon Video On Demand
• Political
Dramas
TV
Genres
Amazon Video On Demand