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40 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mad Man
Ian McKellan totters into a circle of light and raises his palsied hands to command his court into prostrate submission. McKellan's Lear has a despot's easy authority that effortlessly requires obedience. Aged, infirm and bright-eyed, Lear enjoys humiliating those who doubtless wish him dead so that they may inherit. McKellan's Lear is a sly-suave tyrant - reminiscent of...
Published on June 20, 2009 by M. Fetler

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35 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Striving to better, oft we mar what's well.
I had the privilege of seeing this production performed live in LA. It was an incredible experience slightly marred by the fact that the concert hall was clearly a larger space than these actors were used to filling with their voices, and for those of us stuck under the balcony, it was not always possible to hear everything over the ambient noises around us. So I was...
Published on May 31, 2009 by Quai Chang Cain


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40 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mad Man, June 20, 2009
By 
M. Fetler (Sacramento, CA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: King Lear (Royal Shakespeare Company) (DVD)
Ian McKellan totters into a circle of light and raises his palsied hands to command his court into prostrate submission. McKellan's Lear has a despot's easy authority that effortlessly requires obedience. Aged, infirm and bright-eyed, Lear enjoys humiliating those who doubtless wish him dead so that they may inherit. McKellan's Lear is a sly-suave tyrant - reminiscent of Olivier. There are other fine Lears - the brutally hostile Ian Holm (the boss from hell), James Earl Jones' as a cranky African tribal chief, or Orson Welles' nightmare fury. All are excellent. Welles, Olivier, and McKellan are more cinematic whereas Jones and Holm are filmed versions of stage productions. Welles and Holm provide a strong dose of Sturm und Drang melodrama - the volume is turned up so high, it is hard to tell when catharsis hits. Olivier and McKellan are beautifully acted and nuanced. Jones has an amazing voice and his presence overwhelms the cast - except perhaps Raul Julia's wonderful plotting, evil Edmund.

Of the directors, Trevor Nunn is the best and most experienced interpreter of Shakespeare to cinema. He is faithful to the text, (cuts are logical and keep the action moving) but with contemporary Hollywood fit and finish. It helps that Nunn takes care of details that Shakespeare neglects. For example, he shows us exactly how Goneril poisons Regan. When Lear complains that "my poor fool is hang'd," - it refers to an earlier scene where the Fool is actually strung up.

The part of Lear demands a strong actor who can easily dominate a production. Only Olivier and Nunn balance the King with a strong supporting cast. Appearing opposite Olivier are John Hurt as the brilliantly sarcastic Fool, Leo McKern (Rumpole of the Bailey) as a pompously lecherous Glouster, and Diana Rigg as the blindingly beautiful Regan.

Trevor Nunn's outstanding cast boasts Romola Gerai as a sensual Cordelia - upswept hair, wearing a strapless, white satin, wedding gown, and a simple gold chain necklace, that accents her flawless profile, neck, shoulders, and decolletage. Nunn's inspiration for Cordelia is a mystery, but to me she looks like Sargent's sensational painting of Madame X, with the black dress changed to white. She speaks from the heart, clear-eyed, like a child, rejecting Lear's incestuous demand that his daughters love only him - and pays a price for her honesty. Sylvester McCoy's amazing performance as the bitter fool -who alone speaks truth to power without punishment - rivals John Hurt's. Where Hurt practices wicked satire as a sport, McCoy is a disappointed romantic, his cynicism mixed with sadness.

Once again, Trevor Nunn has created an excellent film version of Shakespeare. If only more of his works were available for north american viewers.
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35 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Striving to better, oft we mar what's well., May 31, 2009
This review is from: King Lear (Royal Shakespeare Company) (DVD)
I had the privilege of seeing this production performed live in LA. It was an incredible experience slightly marred by the fact that the concert hall was clearly a larger space than these actors were used to filling with their voices, and for those of us stuck under the balcony, it was not always possible to hear everything over the ambient noises around us. So I was thrilled when I heard that they were taking the production into the studio to trap it for posterity, and I immediately bought the (region free) Blu-Ray edition from the UK.

I don't regret the purchase, but I was somewhat disappointed. Outdoor scenes are all filmed against a blue screen that poorly simulates sky, giving all the outdoor scenes a certain cheese factor. On a stage we suspend our disbelief - the lighting changes and we believe we are now out of doors, but on a screen we expect a little more realism.

Likewise, I found the sets of the stage performance more effective as well. They had a grandeur - and later in the play, a decay - that was really missing from the sets used in the studio. I understand that the studio was aiming for more realism, so you wouldn't have the same backdrop for a whole act when the scenes shift and so on. But they didn't manage to replace the missing set with anything more effective dramatically.

Furthermore, the cinematography was very heavy handed in terms of constantly flashing from one actor's face to another to make sure no reaction is missed. It was at times very jarring. On a stage, one of the interesting dynamics is that each audience member can choose where to focus attention, and so each person walks away with a different experience. Here in an attempt to capture the richness of each scene, the camera tried to show everything, and the result wasn't pleasant. O.K. The camera didn't show EVERYTHING. The infamous scene were Lear strips down is trimmed by the frame of the camera for modesty. So if such things as male nudity bother you, this is a production you can watch with your kids.

But if you get over the cheese factor of the camera work and sets, this is still Trevor Nunn, Ian McKellan and the Royal Shakespeare Company doing their thing. You'll hear Shakespeare's words interpreted and performed with great skill.
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30 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Superb, Disappointing Production, April 24, 2009
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This review is from: King Lear (Royal Shakespeare Company) (DVD)
This is a superb but ultimately disappointing production of Shakespeare's greatest play. How can it be both? It is superb for several reasons. Ian McKellen is one of the great Shakespearean actors of his generation, and he here delivers a masterful Lear, moving and credible and utterly faithful to the character in the text; if there are a few too many of the familiar McKellen mannerisms, who's to complain--they work as well here as elsewhere. The rest of the acting is at a very high level indeed; there is not a single performance I would fault, and I couldn't say that of any other video "Lear". The dialog has been intelligently edited, and clearly and audibly recorded; for once in a production of Lear there are no "What did he just say?" moments, not even with the Fool's dialog. Logic and clarity are equally evidenced in Trevor Nunn's direction. A small example: in this production, the disappearance of the Fool midway through the play is explained dramatically, as we witness his hanging by forces pursuing Lear, something not in the stage directions and only vaguely supported by the text. It's dramatically satisfying; we need not ask "What happened to him?" Another example: the poisoning of Regan by Goneril occurs on stage, and is thereby made genuinely horrifying instead of being a bit of off-stage melodrama. The initial displeasing of Lear by Cordelia and his instant, irrevocable rage, which are hard to make credible in performance because of the compressed stage-time, are easier to believe in here; they come off as (perhaps) some good-natured teasing gone horribly awry (though I'm not sure that's what was intended, and if so that it is faithful to the text). So why is the production nevertheless disappointing? When a great actor takes on a great character of Shakespeare, we want to come away with something new and great--some new understanding, some new emotion, some new experience of the play which will change forever our relationship to the text. Here, alas, there is nothing new. No new sense of Lear as an individual, as in the Olivier video, or of his relation to his daughters, as in Ian Holm's version. Just a very straightforward, highly competent rendition. Superb, but disappointing.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Royal Shakespeare "King Lear", May 14, 2009
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This review is from: King Lear (Royal Shakespeare Company) (DVD)
It's not exactly complete--and director Trevor Nunn even feels he can switch a speech to a new place in the text when it suits him. But this "King Lear" is an intelligent and often deeply persuasive performance of what is generally called the greatest tragedy in English. Ian McKellan is the name-above-the-title star, but his collagues are no faceless pickup group but rather the mighty Royal Shakespeare Company. And even if the video version has too much rain and other realistic effects, it gives you much of the power of the staging on which it is based. (Incidentally, onstage McKellen tore off his clothes in the storm scene but is not naked here. PBS prudery?)The groundbreaking Brook/Scofield RSC "Lear" isn't available on DVD for some reason, but this production compares favorably with the all-star Olivier edition and the minimalist Holm/National Theatre staging. That DVD reminded you right under Holm's name of the actor's "Lord of the Rings" identity but, happily, "X" DOESN'T mark the spot with McKellen.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars McKellen's Lear, May 22, 2011
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C. C. Black (Princeton, NJ USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: King Lear (Royal Shakespeare Company) (DVD)
I don't know of a perfect film adaptation of "King Lear"; perhaps there's no such thing. In my mind's theater I amalgamate elements from different productions: the spectacle of Kurosawa's "Ran," the performances of Diana Rigg (Regan), Leo McKern (Gloucester), and John Hurt (Fool) in Olivier's version. Other reviewers have astutely pointed up the values in different modern interpretations of the play's leading figure. On balance I'd say that McKellan's Lear is as fine as any we may expect in this generation. He's a soldier, bully, a bastard (not in the Edmundian sense), a fool, a maniac, and finally a very pathetic man who cannot comprehend, any more than we can, the scope of the tragedy that has overtaken him. Lear is a role that tempts the ham in even the best actors (see Olivier); McKellan is not once porcine. The actors surrounding him are uniformly fine; in particular, the three sisters are sharply delineated (and sexed up in ways that, while not gratuitous here, are often missing in the play's production). Trevor Nunn's staging remains on an interior set, as was Olivier's, though Nunn's are better interiors, with less cheesy production values. (The "Howl, wind" scene rains such buckets that you wonder how the studio was ever drained.) Nevertheless, this is not a filmed version of a play; the camera is used intelligently for close-ups. The disc's single special feature is a delightful interview of McKellan, who speaks very insightfully about the challenges presented by Shakespeare's masterpiece.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not Olivier or Kosintsev, but passable, September 12, 2009
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David Cope (Grandville, Mi. USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: King Lear (Royal Shakespeare Company) (DVD)
The role of Lear is famously difficult for the many contrary demands it places on the actor, and it must be said at the outset that Ian McKellan acquits himself admirably in this production. Romola Garal's Cordelia and Sylvester McCoy's Fool are also carefully interpreted, as is Jonathan Hyde's Kent. Ben Meyjes' Edgar begins as a nerdy older brother and completes the metamorphosis through Poor Tom the madman to avenging hero in a way that stretches the role: I was left wondering if that initial Edgar would even know how to handle a sword, so in the end there may be some unanswered questions about the character. Beyond this, pacing and filmic quality are good, despite the inevitable risks in trying to shoot a stage production on film. McKellan's interview, the only special feature here, is also a "don't miss"--the great actor meditates on his profession. The problem is the rest of the cast--an Edmund (Philip Winchester) who couldn't hold a candle to Robert Lindsey's dynamic performance in Olivier's production, a Goneril and Regan (Frances Barber and Monica Dolan) who rarely capture the intricacies of their roles. Despite the flaws, this film makes a worthy addition to my collection, though it does not rise to the intense pathos of Olivier's tenderly heartbreaking agony or the mythic, heroically tragic Lear of Kosintsev.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Definitely not an Easy Watch!, July 3, 2011
This review is from: King Lear (Royal Shakespeare Company) (DVD)
Not surprisingly from a Royal Shakespeare Company production, the emphasis in this rendering of King Lear is placed on acting. Potential viewers should therefore not expect a filmed theatrical performance with the energy it entails from the interaction with the public nor a truly cinematographic piece with sophisticated sets, sound and lighting à la Kenneth Branagh.

There are no subtitles to make the text easier to follow and given the movie's very considerable length, close to three hours, a significant effort is required from the watcher, despite the actors' undeniable talent.

Accordingly, this work is recommended to Shakespeare cognoscenti who are already familiar with the play and willing to explore acting subtleties.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ian McKellen is great, January 7, 2010
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This review is from: King Lear (Royal Shakespeare Company) (DVD)
Ian McKellen does a wonderful King Lear, Sylvester McCoy is a great fool, I was also quite impressed by the actor who played Kent. Great DVD, totally worth watching if you're collecting Shakespeare like me.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars McKellen gives another strong performance, May 1, 2009
This review is from: King Lear (Royal Shakespeare Company) (DVD)
3-hour adaptation from the Royal Shakespeare Company. Ian McKellen in wonderful in the title role, and the rest of the company is pretty strong. But I still prefer this story when it was reworked in 'Ran' by Kurosawa, which is a much better film even without Shakespeare's words. Still, this is the only literal version I've seen, and I enjoyed it. (Someday I'll have to watch Olivier's version, which is supposed to be definitive.)
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Surprisingly Good, March 15, 2010
This review is from: King Lear (Royal Shakespeare Company) (DVD)
Lear is my favorite story, favorite play & favorite work of literature ever.

I feared the worst when this production came up (not a Trevor Nunn fan) but was thrilled to see that almost everything in it works perfectly. A few rough spots but hey, it's a massive & supremely complex play! After the 1984 Granada TV version & Peter Brook's icy epic, this is my favorite King Lear available on video.

McKellen & McCoy are both superb.
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