Anonymous
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Anonymous: Movie Clip
Director: Roland Emmerich
Starring: David Thewlis, Rhys Ifans, Vanessa Redgrave
Details: UK/Germany / 130mins (12A).
Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford (Ifans) approaches struggling writer Ben Johnson (Sebastian Armesto) to be his 'front', as it was seen as below the station of an Earl to write poems and plays. However, before the plan can click into action, William Shakespeare (Rafe Spall), a limited actor, claims that he's the writer of Oxford's plays, which are creating a stir. Meanwhile, Queen Elizabeth (Redgrave) learns of a plot to depose her from first her trusted advisor William Cecil (Thewlis), and then his son Robert (Edward Hogg). De Vere hopes to use his quill, which has a great influence over the mob, to severe the ties between the Queen and the conniving Cecils forever.
Or something. Anonymous is a movie of two halves and its first half can be quite confusing. The constant flashbacks and forwards don't allow the story to flow and it's difficult to suss out who is the younger version of whom. Edward de Vere is called Edward, de Vere, the Earl, Oxford, and the Earl of Oxford depending on who is talking to him and it doesn't help that Ifans looks nothing like his younger counterpart Jamie Campbell Bower. Rafe Spall is in a different film to the rest of the cast: Emmerich asks him to play the Bard as a bumbling illiterate buffoon and it just doesn't work (when told he has had a poem published, Shakespeare replies, "What, like in a book?"). Sure, Tom Hulce's Mozart was a giggling hyena in Amadeus but he was seen through the biased, jealous eyes of F. Murray Abraham whose prejudice exaggerated the personality of his enemy.
But somehow, about halfway through, that the plot finally settles down and Emmerich pulls a highly entertaining flick out of the muddle. The various subplots mesh into one strong narrative, albeit an increasingly implausible one, in the second half and the story becomes riveting. Despite the seriousness on show, it's great fun as the love story and political meanderings worm their way out of the deluge and become the film's focus.
Apart from Spall's turn, which was no fault of his own, it's hard to fault anyone here. Ifans is fantastic as the haunted Earl. Thewlis is magnificent and Edward Hogg's turn as the hunchbacked Robert Cecil is a memorable one: a cunning and ruthless plotter but also one that drowns in self-pity and fear. Redgrave, and her younger counterpart Joely Richardson, have two different takes on the Queen but each one works.
Review by Gavin Burke
Your Comments
FilmBuff76
Roland Emmerich may not be the most obvious choice for dealing with the authorship question hanging over William Shakespeare. However, this intriguing film has been fermenting in his mind for some time and it shows. Treat it for what it's worth - a Tudors-style conspiracy drama that should be regarded as fantasy (like From Hell) and I think you will quite enjoy it. Whether the whole story is true or not doesn't really matter - whether it's a rollickingly good piece of entertainment is. On that count, it succeeds. Rhys Ifans also gives a surprisingly understated performance as the possible true author (?), given that he often plays larger-than-life characters. A film for the curious-minded and adventurous...
Posted 28/10/2011 22:56:37
Bren
At the end felt more like a drama than anything else, could have done with more of the action and conspiracy and slightly less of the drama,politics and relationships. For a film about Shakespeare, he didn't get much ado about anything. His character was ruined and underused in the plot. The plot seems to go off on the tangent of politics. It gives you the very detailed story of the Lord, Court and the politics and doesn't thicken enough the story of the bard or the plays. Not a bad film but I felt if left something out.
Posted 31/10/2011 03:09:20
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