Film Review
The eerily fractured, fable-like quality of
The
Winter's Tale makes it particularly amenable to a more stylised
approach such as that adopted by Jane Howell in her boldly minimalist
production in the
BBC Television Shakespeare series. The shift
from the more conventional design of previous productions in the series
(strongly influenced by actual period design and contemporary artwork)
towards something far more abstract is striking but effective,
particularly as the sets so vividly evoke the change in mood and the
seasons. The wintry melancholia of the play's first acts, so
redolent of the archetypal Shakespearean tragedy, gives way to a
startling representation of springtime and renewal, an affect that is
ingeniously achieved by simply redressing the same basic set.
The set design is certainly a talking point but it is by no means the
thing that makes the production so memorable. As ever, it is the
quality of the acting on which the success or failure of the play
hangs, and
The Winter's Tale
boasts some of the most compelling performances in the series. Jeremy
Kemp is particularly enthralling as Leontes, one of the few great
tragic figures in the Shakespearean canon to be offered a chance at
redemption. With his remarkable presence and an inordinate capacity for
monopolising the spectator's attention, Kemp dominates the first half
of the play, to the extent that other exemplary performances can only
really be appreciated on a second viewing. It's hard to overlook
Margaret Tyzack's feisty portrayal of Pauline but Anna
Calder-Marshall's Hermione and David Burke's Camillo only come into
their own in the play's second half, such is the reward for their more
subtle approach to their characters.
Subtlety is one charge that certainly cannot be made against Rikki
Fulton, whose larger-than-life persona makes his character, the roguish
clown Autolycus, the focal point of much of the second part of the
play. The Scottish comedian is fun to watch but he does have a
nasty habit of upstaging his co-performers, even gate-crashing another
character's aside in one scene. In the one part of the production
that appears under-directed, or at least under-rehearsed, the likeably
cheeky Fulton distracts from some obvious technical flaws - jarring
recording breaks, erratic vision mixing and poor blocking of crowd
scenes. (The less said about the hysterically funny bear the
better.) Once the chaos of the sheep-shearing feast and frolics
are out of the way the production resumes its more dignified course,
leading to the mystical scene of Leontes' reunion with Hermione, which
is spellbinding despite being totally ludicrous. Having
successfully negotiated one of the most problematic of Shakespeare's
'problem plays' Jane Howe would return to direct some of the Bard's
other challenging works,
Richard III
(1983) and
Titus Andronicus
(1985), and a superb production of all three parts of
Henry VI (1983).
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Polixenes, the King of Bohemia, has enjoyed visiting his old friend
Leontes, King of Sicilia, but decides he must return to his own
country. After Leontes has failed to persuade Polixenes to
prolong his stay his wife Hermione succeeds, prompting the king to
suspect that she has been pursuing an adulterous affair with the
Bohemian ruler. Overtaken by paranoid jealousy, Leontes instructs
one of his courtiers, Lord Camillo, to murder his old friend, but
Camillo betrays him and flees with Polixenes. Hermione is thrown
into jail as a traitor and her new born daughter is disowned by Leontes
as the bastard child of an illicit relationship. Lord Antigonus
persuades his king not to slay the infant but must abandon it in some
desolate place. Once Hermione's innocence has been proclaimed by
the Oracle of Delphi Leontes realises his error, but not before his
queen and son meet with an untimely death. Meanwhile, unbeknown
to the king, Leontes' rejected child is found by a kindly shepherd and
raised as his own daughter, Perdita. Sixteen years on, Perdita
loses her heart to Prince Florizel, son of the King of Bohemia.
When Polixenes learns that his son and heir is betrothed to a common
shepherdess he threatens her adopted father with death and forbids
Florizel to set eyes on Perdita again...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.