Shakespeare - Twelfth Night - Dir by Kenneth Branagh

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Shakespeare - Twelfth Night - Directed by Kenneth Branagh

Video Codec..........: XviD ISO MPEG-4
Video Bitrate........: 1207kbps
Duration.............: 2:35:20
Resolution...........: 600*456
Framerate............: 29.970
Bits/(Pixel*Frame)...: 0.147
Audio Codec..........: 0x2000 (Dolby AC3) AC3
Audio Bitrate........: 224 kbps CBR
Audio Channels.......: 2
Filesize.............: 1,681,904,688
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelfth_Night


http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0324342/


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Filmed for British television, this 1988 production of William Shakespeare's gender-bending comedy stars Frances Barber as Viola, who takes advantage of a chance to start over by disguising herself as her presumed-dead twin brother. But the cross-dressing deception leads to a romantic muddle when she goes to work for a lovelorn nobleman (Christopher Ravenscroft). The solid cast also includes Richard Briers and Caroline Langrishe.

Cast:Frances Barber, Christopher Hollis, Julian Gartside, Caroline Langrishe, Christopher Ravenscroft, Richard Briers, Anton Lesser, Abigail McKern, James Saxon

Director:Kenneth Branagh, Paul Kafno

REVIEW

Meticulously straightforward, Paul KafnoΓΓé¼Γäós direction of Twelfth Night suits Kenneth BranaghΓΓé¼Γäós inconspicuous stage direction. The minimalist backdrop, which originally appeared in an acclaimed run under the banner of BranaghΓΓé¼Γäós Renaissance Theatre Company, invokes Victorian Christmas pageantry which lends well to the moments of holiday gaiety, but also helps draw out the comedyΓΓé¼Γäós omnipresent cruelty.

Shot in 1988 for Thames Television, it is now available on DVD, and reveals the young BranaghΓΓé¼Γäós development as an interpreter of Shakespeare. Just a year later, he directed the gritty and rousing Henry V, and then in 1996, his colorful Hamlet kept every syllable of the lengthy play intact. BranaghΓΓé¼Γäós Shakespearean renderings commonly showcase the playwrightΓΓé¼Γäós language, making it accessible to all audiences.

Twelfth Night is commonly read by academics as ShakespeareΓΓé¼Γäós most mature comedy. As Branagh states in an interview comprising one of the two pitifully scarce extras on the disc, he sought to bring a ΓΓé¼┼ôChekhovian qualityΓΓé¼┬¥ to the proceedings. Its late 19th-century European location provides pleasant enough viewing, but its downheartedness is most striking, as it frames ongoing discussions of love, mourning, and madness.

The presentation begins with a typical approach: the first two scenes are swapped, allowing ViolaΓΓé¼Γäós (Frances Barber) striking entrance to open the production. Shipwrecked in a foreign land and believing her identical twin brother drowned, Viola asks, ΓΓé¼┼ôWhat country, friends, is this?ΓΓé¼┬¥, and the captain (Tim Barker) accompanying her answers, ΓΓé¼┼ôThis is Illyria, lady.ΓΓé¼┬¥ Purely magical, the lines open up the play into the realm of mystery, as this grants Viola an opportunity to begin anew. Deciding to pose as a man, Cesario, she enters the service of the local duke, Count Orsino (Christopher Ravenscroft). As always in Shakespeare, sexual identity forgery leads to mayhem.

The Count dispatches Cesario to help him woo Olivia (Caroline Langrishe), who is, in turn, mourning her own dead brother, as she has vowed to do for seven years. And so, all romantic lines are crossed: Orsino loves Olivia, Viola loves Orsino, and Olivia loves Cesario. More complications involve ViolaΓΓé¼Γäós twin brother Sebastian (Christopher Hollis), who shows up alive and well, to be mistaken for Cesario by Olivia. Then Antonio (also played by Barker), who is assisting Sebastian, professes love for Sebastian and, in one of the playΓΓé¼Γäós sweetest moments, gives the young man his wallet, saying, ΓΓé¼┼ôHaply your eye shall light upon some toy/You have desire to purchase and your store/I think is not for idle markets sir.ΓΓé¼┬¥ The lines speak to longing and loss without judging chosen objects or desires.

BranaghΓΓé¼Γäós treatment of the subplot involving OliviaΓΓé¼Γäós conservative steward Malvolio (Richard Briers) thoroughly attends to his humiliation by her uncle, Sir Toby Belch (James Saxon), aided by Sir Andrew Aguecheek (James Simmons) and Maria (Abigail McKern). While something of a prig, Malvolio here seems not to deserve his cruel duping, accomplished by way of a forged letter that leads him to believe Olivia has feelings for him. Even at the end of the play, when other deceptions are brought to light, this injustice is left unresolved, so that Malvolio can only skulk off, vowing revenge on all of them. In his bitterness, the production underlines the meanness of this ΓΓé¼┼ôcomedicΓΓé¼┬¥ formula.

The primary weakness here is the television presentation. Kafno tries to convey the original theatrical versionΓΓé¼Γäós immediacy, but his bare direction, relying heavily on medium shots, leaves Twelfth Night looking dull. Without an audience or the benefit of filming on location, the actorsΓΓé¼Γäó performances seem caught up in a void.

Other versions of Twelfth Night have brought their own idiosyncrasies. Trevor NunnΓΓé¼Γäós 1996 refiguring heightened the sexual ambiguities, and in 2003, Tim SuppleΓΓé¼Γäós Channel 4 production emphasized displacement with multiracial casting (Viola is an Indian stowaway). But, Branagh and KafnoΓΓé¼Γäós Twelfth Night is the most durable version, focused on ShakespeareΓΓé¼Γäós language as the central vehicle for ShakespeareΓΓé¼Γäós gender and genre play. Their production exposes the interrelationship of comedy and cruelty, with little diversion.

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Shakespeare - Twelfth Night - Dir by Kenneth Branagh