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MauritiusToday.com - Shopping Mall - As You Like It

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List Price: $26.98
Our Price: $20.99
Your Save: $ 5.99 ( 22% )
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Manufacturer: Hbo Home Video Starring: Takuya Shimada, Brian Blessed, Richard Clifford, Bryce Dallas Howard, Patrick Doyle Directed By: Kenneth Branagh
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Binding: DVD Brand: Warner Brothers EAN: 0026359401923 Format: AC-3 Label: Hbo Home Video Manufacturer: Hbo Home Video Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Hbo Home Video Region Code: 1 Release Date: 2007-09-25 Running Time: 127 Studio: Hbo Home Video Theatrical Release Date: 2007
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Editorial Reviews:
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Emmy award winner Kenneth Branagh, the man who redefined Shakespeare for a whole new generation with Henry V, Much Ado About Nothing and Hamlet, brings the Bard's most delightful comedy to sensational life! Rosalind is a young woman living in the court of her uncle when she falls in love with Orlando, a young gentleman of the kingdom. When Rosalind is banished, she flees into the forest of Arden disguised as a man...only to encounter Orlando who has also been exiled! But can she win his heart, disguised as she is? With a setting inspired by 19th century Japan and a star-studded cast including Kevin Kline (Dave, A Prairie Home Companion), Bryce Dallas Howard (Spider-Man 3, The Lady In The Water) and Alfred Molina (Spider-Man 2, The Da Vinci Code), AS YOU LIKE IT once again proves that all the world's a stage. Come enjoy!
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Folks, there's no such thing as a "gimmick" for Shakespeare... Comment: A point that might apply to every Shakespearean adaptation or appropriation reviewed here at Amazon.com: there is no such thing as "traditional Shakespeare," or "conceptual Shakespeare," or anything else. Shakespeare's plays never had a chance to develop a "tradition." They had their original performance conditions, and then saw immediate alteration and adaptation by the Restoration. Nahum Tate's "happy ending" King Lear, in which Lear lives and Cordelia marries Edgar, held the stage for 150 years. End of story. Tights and codpiece Shakespeare is a late-nineteenth, early and beyond twentieth-century fetish that is just as much of a "gimmick" or "concept" as, say, The Tempest on Mars. Please stop writing things like "I'm a traditionalist, so...." That invariably means, "I like pretty costumes that are vaguely Renaissance-y and actors speaking in RP in such a way as to invoke a Victorian or Edwardian construct of what Shakespeare might have looked like a long time ago but never really did."
As for As You Like It: for me, it ISN'T (and not because of the Japan "gimmick," which "works" as well as anything KB has done, and worked just as brilliantly for an RSC Coriolanus back in 2002.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Interesting Comment: It is a very interesting movie. The movie is good if your looking for something that uses the actual play. Great for school stuff.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Functional Comment: Easy on the eye with nice photography and art direction. Strong performances by Blessed and Molina. The Rosalind by Bryce Howard is very pleasant if a bit giggly. Stunning work by Adrian Lester as Oliver De Boys. Would show this version over others in school as the Olivier 1936 version's audio is too difficult and the 1978 BBC production is rather plodding.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A movie that proves "all the world's a stage" Comment: XXXXX
This movie is based on William Shakespeare's romantic comedy play "As You Like It" (circa 1600), one of his greatest comedies.
I feel that this movie catches the essence of the play with director Kenneth Branagh (who also adapted the play to the screen and co-produced) focusing on the main love plot with the other love plots being given some attention. (Branagh had to do this or the movie would be far too long.)
What is the essence of the play and the movie? The essence is to create a situation where everything is real and unreal, false and genuine at the same time. This all occurs in the Forest of Arden where time moves slowly and where the main action of the play and movie takes place.
Who are the main characters in the play and movie? They are as follows:
(1) Duke Senior (Brian Blessed), living in exile in the Forest of Arden.
(2) Frederick (again, Brian Blessed), the duke's younger brother and usurper of the duke's dominions, "of rough and envious disposition."
(3) Orlando (played by black actor David Oyelowo), youngest son of Sir Rowland de Boys, "never school'd, and yet learn'd; full of noble device; of all sorts enchantingly beloved."
(4) Oliver (played by black actor Adrian Lester), Orlando's wicked elder brother.
(5) Rosalind (Bryce Dallas Howard), the beautiful witty daughter of the banished Duke. "There is a pretty redness in [her] lip, a little riper and more lusty red than that mix'd in her cheek."
(6) Celia (Romola Garai), daughter of Frederick, but the devoted friend of Rosalind.
(7) Touchstone (Alfred Molina), a "motley-minded," "roynish." court jester or fool, who directs his realistic professional wit against courtiers' oaths, the pastoral life, sentimental love, and the etiquette of duelling and who "sometimes speaks wiser than he is ware of."
(8) Jaques (pronounced "Jayqueeze") (Kevin Kline), a cynical, sentimental malcontent, who "can suck melancholy out of a song as a weasel sucks eggs," and who "most invectively...pierced through the body of the country, city, court, yea, and this our life." Though attached to the banished Duke's court, he is no more at home in Arden than is Touchstone.
When the end credits appear, this signifies the end of this movie. Well, not quite. After a few end credits, Rosalind appears and delivers a speech (called the epilogue) where she talks (while walking) directly to the audience. What Branagh does here is quite interesting.
He has Rosalind step from the Forest of Arden into an area that has the motor homes, equipment, etc. of the cast and crew of this movie. Why does Branagh have her do this? Because she is addressing a modern audience and so she is put into a modern, contemporary atmosphere. (She is even given a cup of coffee by one of the crew at one point.) I was quite impressed by this entire epilogue.
I should also mention what happens right at the beginning of the movie. The movie is set in Japan and there are ninjas (who are working for Frederick) that overthrow Duke Senior's kingdom. This all lasts a few minutes. (Once the action moves to the Forest of Arden, the viewer becomes unaware that this movie is set in Japan.)
Many critics thought this opening was bad (and even, unbelievably, panned the entire movie because of it). I, however, thought this was a stroke of genius. It creates tension and at the same time, there are hilarious moments created. For example, the play has a wrestling match. In this movie there is, instead, a Sumo wrestling match. (To see why this is so comical, you're going to have to watch this movie.)
All actors in this movie deliver their lines surprisingly well. I mention this because I thought we might have another "Love's Labours Lost" where the actors (except Branagh) seemed to have trouble delivering the Elizabethan language. I also found that the background music throughout this movie aided each scene and that the cinematography was well-done.
In fact, Kevin Kline received a Screen Actors Guild award for his performance of Jaques. Bryce Dallas Howard received a Golden Globe nomination (in my opinion, deservedly so) for her performance of Rosalind.
Finally, the DVD itself (the one released in 2007) is perfect in picture and sound quality. It has one extra, a behind-the-scenes featurette.
BOTTOM LINE:
This movie is a worthy addition to the Bard's cinematic canon.
(2006; 2 hr (excluding end credits); wide screen; 12 scenes)
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Takes some getting-used-to, but enjoyable in the end. Comment: Usually, I prefer my opera or play set in traditional production, with the time frame, costumes and cast as plausible and realistic as possible. This movie is therefore a disappointment to me at the very beginning, with the background set to 19 century Japan and the de Boys brothers played by black actors. Director Kenneth Branagh's leisurely pacing does not help.
Strangely, as the story goes on and the action moves away from the Japanese "court" to the forest, I find myself gradually swayed by the excellent performance of every actor in the movie and begin to truly enjoy some of the best dialogues from Shakespeare.
Branagh really does a good job bringing the best out of his talented cast. It is obvious that they are all having a fun time. But the most attention getting has to be the two leading ladies. Bryce Dallas Howard's lips and Romola Garai's eyes are so lively and exuberant, one wonders how anyone can top their performance. Amazingly, the answer to that question is also right there on the screen. Kevin Kline's Jaques is subtle, true and touching at the same time. Just seeing him read "All the world's a stage..." is worth the price of the DVD already.
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