Це відео не доступне.
Перепрошуємо.

Hamlet Act1, Scene2 Soliloquy HD

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 12 лис 2012
  • Hamlet Act1, Scene2 Soliloquy HD by Kenneth Branagh
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Hamlet Act1, Scene2 Soliloquy HD:
    • Hamlet Act1, Scene2 So...
    Hamlet Act1, Scene5 Soliloquy HD:
    • Hamlet Act1, Scene5 So...
    Hamlet Act2, Scene2 Soliloquy HD:
    • Hamlet Act2, Scene2 So...
    Hamlet Act3, Scene1 Soliloquy HD:
    • Hamlet Act3, Scene1 So...
    Hamlet Act4, Scene4 Soliloquy HD:
    • Hamlet Act4, Scene4 So...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 65

  • @brianmessemer2973
    @brianmessemer2973 7 років тому +142

    I first saw this film in 1999 as a senior in High School and it changed my life. Immediately bought the double VHS and watched it repeatedly with close friends, discussing it afterwards. Some works of art contain examples so powerfully performed that they instantly convert those who are essentially new to the art form. Ken Branagh's Hamlet remains, for me, the pinnacle of Shakespeare in modern times.

    • @cubdukat
      @cubdukat 6 років тому +3

      Brian Messemer You should have seen it in 70mm when it first opened. I was there opening weekend.

    • @user-xb4pu4gr3q
      @user-xb4pu4gr3q 3 роки тому +1

      110% agree

    • @Aryan-qt6pu
      @Aryan-qt6pu 2 роки тому +1

      L take

    • @brianmessemer2973
      @brianmessemer2973 2 роки тому

      @@Aryan-qt6pu What does that mean?

    • @yowzer00
      @yowzer00 7 місяців тому

      Dude is trolling you. ​@@brianmessemer2973

  • @cubdukat
    @cubdukat 4 роки тому +37

    This film would be incredible in 4K, but seeing as it took nearly ten years before it was even released on Blu-Ray, I don't hold much hope for that.
    I remember seeing this twice opening weekend in 70mm. You could literally count every hair in Brian Blessed's beard when the ghost of Hamlet's father showed up. It was the sharpest and clearest film presentation I had ever seen.

  • @Mamillius-00
    @Mamillius-00 2 роки тому +37

    He does a great job of acting _on_ the lines, not between them. And he seems to have mastered posture, gestures, and inflection.

    • @riorange2083
      @riorange2083 2 місяці тому

      Yea sometimes the pauses are either too long or too short and it comes across as unnatural and contrived

    • @Mamillius-00
      @Mamillius-00 2 місяці тому +1

      @@riorange2083 I think that fits the character: an eccentric who's unhappy, stressed out, and spending much of the play pretending to be crazy.

  • @sistergrimace1567
    @sistergrimace1567 6 років тому +88

    first time I saw this I thought: everyone else is doing it wrong

  • @emmanuelagudo4918
    @emmanuelagudo4918 Рік тому +7

    'O, That this too too solid flesh would melt' I am amazed by how the Soliloquy signals the precedent or else set that stage for the somewhat grand of a storyline. The screenplay brought to life, the words magnificently!

  • @lindasamba4816
    @lindasamba4816 5 років тому +23

    Man I love Shakespeare

  • @Aquablue62
    @Aquablue62 4 роки тому +14

    I had a strong urge to watch this for some reason

  • @DafneOfeliaVallstrom
    @DafneOfeliaVallstrom Місяць тому

    As well spoken and use of the spoken word.. that it is more mesmerising than all music.

  • @isramethaq2163
    @isramethaq2163 7 місяців тому +4

    My Hamlet 🫶

  • @lkmuks
    @lkmuks 26 днів тому

    Excellent, Hamlet is very clearly pissed off in this scene. Good

  • @phillyhippie
    @phillyhippie 5 років тому +7

    I love this

  • @ZFighter2100
    @ZFighter2100 2 роки тому +7

    Loyalty to a father, anger and disgust at his mother and uncle.

  • @jamesmurphy7281
    @jamesmurphy7281 3 роки тому +6

    well performed

  • @purple9414
    @purple9414 8 років тому +89

    he's so hot

    • @Sasori23231
      @Sasori23231 7 років тому +25

      I was trying so hard just to focus on the movie when I had to watch this in class.

    • @SophisticatedPickle
      @SophisticatedPickle 3 роки тому +9

      I’m glad I’m not the only one who thought that

    • @saltech3444
      @saltech3444 2 роки тому +2

      @@SophisticatedPickle Comport yourself, madam. :-D

  • @abdulachik
    @abdulachik 2 роки тому +4

    my favorite scene

  • @shatteringairfist191
    @shatteringairfist191 7 років тому +8

    I need to watch the whole thing cuz i missed a few days :( cant write about it if i dont know anything about it.

  • @user-sk1kw8ii9r
    @user-sk1kw8ii9r Рік тому +2

    My Guy ❤

  • @quinoasalads
    @quinoasalads 2 роки тому +17

    i literally despise reading Shakespeare like almost every other 17 year old but the fact that this movie actually made me feel things says a lot I think-

    • @opaiescents
      @opaiescents 2 роки тому +18

      i hope this film helps you realize how amazing shakespeare is. it’s meant to be heard, seen, and acted, not read. there’s so much nuance you miss when simply reading it as an assignment, and it deserves to be seen in such a way that sparks passion in people rather than empty annotations and worksheets.

    • @user-ju3nq7kj6l
      @user-ju3nq7kj6l 6 місяців тому +1

      Fuck me ....makes me proud to be English when l hear this

  • @1982PRA
    @1982PRA 6 років тому +1

    Couldnt agree more

  • @absmith12
    @absmith12 4 роки тому +15

    So much better than David Tennant's performance.

  • @keithmcmeniman5172
    @keithmcmeniman5172 Місяць тому +1

    Cast:
    Kenneth Branagh
    Derek Jacobi
    Julie Christie
    Richard Briers (1934-2013)
    Kate Winslet
    Nicholas Farrell
    Rufus Sewell
    Michael Maloney
    Robin Williams (1951-2014)
    Jack Lemmon (1925-2001)
    Richard Attenborough (1923-2014)
    Billy Crystal
    Judi Dench

  • @whattid5719
    @whattid5719 Рік тому

    👍

  • @wall7171
    @wall7171 2 роки тому +1

    0:00

  • @wall7171
    @wall7171 2 роки тому

    0:01

  • @user-jm7yt9ob8s
    @user-jm7yt9ob8s 7 років тому

    I am wondering why don't you post the whole movie instaed of these small videos?

    • @2015Drama
      @2015Drama 7 років тому +11

      ali ali copyright

    • @davidbelmares715
      @davidbelmares715 4 роки тому +1

      why would you want to watch the whole movie

  • @megametallimaiden8516
    @megametallimaiden8516 2 місяці тому

    "Hyperion to a satyr"
    "But no more like my father than I to hercules."
    I may be overthinking ths but if the distance between Claudius and elder Hamlet is the difference between hyperion and satyr and that is equal to hamlet to hercules, so Hamlet is calling myself far less than a satyr.
    So it would go
    Hyperion > Hercules > Satyr > Hamlet.
    This reflects Hamlet's insecurity

  • @herowinsor7403
    @herowinsor7403 6 років тому +26

    How I feel every time I turn on the news and see my mother country has married itself to an orange toad with a toupee.

    • @edwarddunn7222
      @edwarddunn7222 3 роки тому +5

      You know, your side always complains that we are full of hate, but to go out of your way to bring current politics into this shows your level of unbridled vitriol.

    • @herowinsor7403
      @herowinsor7403 3 роки тому +1

      @@edwarddunn7222 Hon, that vitriol is well deserved. My rights to bodily autonomy, marriage and free speech are threatened every day under this administration. I wonder which is more hateful: a satirical comment or fascism? And to think that Shakespeare doesn't relate to politics at every point in history is pure naiveté. Sorry that my comment that I made when I was depressed and deep in the closet when I was 16 years old made you uncomfortable

    • @edwarddunn7222
      @edwarddunn7222 3 роки тому +3

      @@herowinsor7403 - Hi Hero, well you are certainly right about Shakespeare. His stories and themes transcend time and speak to the human condition. Clearly, I don't know you or what you have had to face in your life. I guess what I was driving at is that I don't understand the hate. I find hate to be a useless emotion and something that I could never hold onto for very long. There are plenty of things that bring me to anger, but I make very little time in my life for hate. I hope that you have found contentment in yours. Best of luck to you.

    • @TheNabOwnzz
      @TheNabOwnzz 3 роки тому +1

      Piss off.

    • @herowinsor7403
      @herowinsor7403 3 роки тому

      @@TheNabOwnzz Cope

  • @user-wr4zn7pb7h
    @user-wr4zn7pb7h Рік тому

    ٢٠٢٣/١/١٨
    طالب مرحلة ثالثه مسحول
    ويقرا بالمناجاة 💔😂✌🏻.

  • @deenagara9151
    @deenagara9151 4 роки тому +1

    Disney's The Lion King brought me here!

  • @edwardrichardson8254
    @edwardrichardson8254 3 роки тому +4

    Why are we in an 18th century palace? Why is it raining rose petals like some anime? Why is Hamlet pushing 40? Why why why??? This is the foppish, baroque “Hamlet” like the one before it was Lethal Weapon Hamlet. This play still waits to know its director.

    • @edwardrichardson8254
      @edwardrichardson8254 3 роки тому

      ​@Greg Elchert Hamlet is a student at University of Wittenberg, here:
      CLAUDIUS: For your intent in going back to school in Wittenberg. It is most retrograde to our desire.
      At the age he is in this movie, he would be ruling. He's not an adolescent like Juliet or teen like Romeo but he's not a full on adult at an age where he would be married with children either, I put him at about 21-25 max, a young man. Setting here a huge distraction - we have Gibson's Hamlet running around with Lethal Weapon abandon in a dreary "Braveheart" type medieval castle and this one looks like its set in Versailles or some lush palace from the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
      Everyone has their interpretation but it's gotten too wild, especially now with the morass of "postmodern" travesties they're adapting these plays into.
      Best thing I ever read about Hamlet was an essay by Camille Paglia called "Stay, Illusion." I'd roll with her and play up the ambiguity, the ghost scene should be modeled after the spectral art of Henry Fuseli (the ghost scenes in this one and Gibson's are ridiculous, Shakespeare himself was said to play the part of the ghost, it has to be EPIC), and by god keep him young. There is more than a hint of an Oedipal fondness for the mother. I understand Shakespeare had an aging Richard Burbage playing the part but you can get away with that on stage, you cannot get away with it on a two-storey movie screen where an eye in a close up is 6ft across, much less any screen in a close-up.

  • @williamf.buckleyjr3227
    @williamf.buckleyjr3227 7 років тому +4

    0:40
    WHAT are you looking at??
    The money it's going to cost you to pay for this FLOP??

    • @sarahsenseny8180
      @sarahsenseny8180 5 років тому +7

      lmao y'all salty babe

    • @steelpatriot3683
      @steelpatriot3683 5 років тому +10

      Commercially this didn’t do well, that’s a fact. Thankfully, I t’s a masterpiece regardless and it joins many other fabulous films which didn’t do good business at the box office (Shawshank Redemption, Blade Runner 2049, The Assasination of Jesse James by the coward Robert Ford, Children of Men, The Insider......I could go on, but that is already a list that is pretty good company to be keeping). 👍🏻

    • @cubdukat
      @cubdukat 4 роки тому +9

      @@steelpatriot3683 The other reason it didn't do as well was that it was long, intelligent and shot in a format which only a few theatres even back then had anymore. Anyone of those would be the kiss of death on their own, but combine them...
      Then there was Branagh's insistence that the 35mm versions not be edited. Sony thought they could make up part of their potential loss by making the 35mm prints edited versions and reserving the full film for 70mm venues, since that's what it was shot on. Fortunately for us, he prevailed. For Sony, not so much.
      Branagh has to be the only other director out there besides Christopher Nolan who knows his way around a 70mm frame. Those two could give the late David Lean a run for his money...

  • @sorchamccarrey
    @sorchamccarrey Рік тому

    my issue is why is he so terrified of looking into the camera? come on kenneth, throw us a bone. everyone knows you would do that in a live setting-direct address is bread and butter for most shakespeareans. it bugs me that there is no attempt to connect with the audience, even though that device of fourth wall breaking had certainly been done in shakespeare films before and since... i hope in the post-fleabag age every shakespeare adapter realizes it is a-ok to reach out to the audience. i can't enjoy this like others seem to, for that reason mostly.
    also tho,,,, this just seems like an incredibly self-serious vanity project, no? am i the only one who will say that lol

    • @user-ju3nq7kj6l
      @user-ju3nq7kj6l 6 місяців тому

      He's vain...a perfectionist....has to be comfortable with himself on screen....he has to have an aesthetic view of himself to warrant the dedication .xx

  • @williamf.buckleyjr3227
    @williamf.buckleyjr3227 7 років тому

    I have an idea:
    Place so many visual distractions into the movie that no one will notice that the actors CAN'T WAIT to be finished.

  • @williamf.buckleyjr3227
    @williamf.buckleyjr3227 7 років тому +2

    OVERACTING 101.