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Shakespeare In Love |
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“Shakespeare In Love” opens in London, in the year 1593. We find a young William Shakespeare (Joseph Fiennes) down on his luck. He is broke and he is having trouble writing. He claims that he needs a muse to inspire his work while he is working for two different theater companies simultaneously. |
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drawn to her. Unfortunately, she is a noble, and worse, her hand in marriage has been promised to Lord Wessex (Colin Firth). |
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high voice, EVERYONE would have known she was a woman. But, that's nitpicking, isn't it? |
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Good actors alone can't save a film if it doesn't have a good script. Fortunately “Shakespeare In Love” has both, a great cast and a rock solid script. The story is a grand mixture of actual historical facts and wholly fictional material created by screenwriters Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard. The story works because of its inherent simplicity. We all know who William Shakespeare is and we all know that he wrote “Romeo And Juliet”. The film asks the simple question, "How did that come about?" While there are many characters and subplots, the story never seems contrived and it is easy to follow. The script's greatest triumph has to do with language. While the characters all speak Elizabethan English, the language never gets too flowery (as it can in Shakespeare's works). You hardly notice the use of "thou" and "anon", but are instead drawn into what the characters are saying. |
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August, 1999 |
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© 1997-99 by “DVD Review”. All rights reserved. |
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