Overpraised for an award-winning NOMADLAND/’20; then under-performing in her MARVEL misstep/’21, here Chloé Zhao fulfills the promise of THE RIDER/’17, her docu-flavored feature, with this Shakespeare & family re-imagining. Collaborating on the script with original novelist Maggie O’Farrell, it’s a daring rethink of the young Latin tutor William Shakespeare (Paul Mescal) and older Anne (Agnes) Hathaway (Jessie Buckley), a forest-wise Earth Mother type); their courtship & marriage before a quick succession of children (two girls/one boy) and long separations as Will pursues theatrical opportunities in London. Finding believable physical & mental spaces for this to play in (note the static one-shots during intense moments), Zhao carefully builds in period detail and still-modern emotion, refusing to overplay or nail everything in place for us. Late 16th/early 17th century Stratford & London coming fully to life before Hamnet (Jacobi Jupe), their enchanting young son, suddenly falls ill while Shakespeare is away (as he always seems to be) in London. The feeling of desertion particularly acute for Agnes. All of this superbly handled across the board, and all of it heartbreaking. But the miracle of the film comes in what technically amounts to a long coda (it runs its own entire three act structure in about twenty minutes) when Agnes and her brother go to London to see their first play, the premiere of HAMLET at the Globe Theatre. (That’s Jacobi’s real-life big brother Noah Jupe playing a college-age Hamlet.) Scenes of rehearsal and then the opening* before a rapt crowd, knowing what we now know of the personal life . . . has HAMLET ever played in quite this raw a fashion? Zhao showing nothing less than the purpose of art at its highest level, with tear-worthy emotional depth you rarely find in something you know so well.
DOUBLE-BILL/LINK: As mentioned above: THE RIDER/’17, still too little seen. https://maksquibs.blogspot.com/2019/07/the-rider-2017.html
ATTENTION MUST BE PAID: *The modern/thoughtful pace of stage acting we see used in the production of HAMLET works within the film. But at this tempo, could HAMLET get to the finish line in the two-and-a-half hours of natural light available at The Globe?









