Update / Correction re: Shakespeare in Love Winners

Hi Everyone,

When I chose winners for the Shakespeare in Love DVD giveaway I ended up picking the names Colin, Becky and Daanando, which I announced.  This however was a mistake on my part — Daanando had made an entry and then wrote, lower, “Sorry, didn’t see rule #4, take my name out of the hat.”  So I have to assume that means he does not live in the continental US, and thus I have to retract that announcement.  Both Colin and Becky have contacted me and their DVDs will be sent shortly.

However that leaves a gap to fill for this third one, and ironic1, you’re my winner!  I actually already checked his Blogger profile and he’s in the continental US, so assuming that he sees this and wants his prize, please get in touch with your mailing address so I can send your prize.

My apologies to Daanando. Hopefully one of these days I can offer prizes on a larger international scale.

Review : Shakespeare in Love on Blu-ray

Is there anyone out there who reads a blog like this one and who hasn’t seen Shakespeare in Love? Well I know you haven’t seen it in shiny new high definition Blu-ray, because it just came out this week :).


In case you haven’t, let me recap a bit.  Joseph Fiennes (yes, Coriolanus’ brother) plays a Shakespeare we never really think about — a struggling playwright with a serious case of writer’s block.  Worse, all he’s doing is banging out whatever he can sell for some quick coin.  He has no grand plan, he’s just scraping out a living in the shadow of men like Christopher Marlowe.  The play he’s working on right now?  “Romeo and Ethel, the Pirate’s Daughter” which of course becomes Romeo and Juliet.

Enter Viola, played by Gwyneth Paltrow, who for a change is madly passionately in love with Shakespeare’s work rather than Marlowe’s.  So much so, in fact, that she dresses up like a man for a chance to play a role on his stage.  See what they did there?  A movie about Shakespeare that has a girl dressing like a boy?  A girl named Viola? You have to love it already. 😉

Shakespeare develops a strong bond with this character of hers (who goes by Thomas Kent), and it’s only a matter of time before Shakespeare meets and falls in love with Viola as well (breaking from the Orsino parallel), putting her in that odd…well…Viola-like state of being in love with the man she works for, who happens to think that she’s a boy.

How will it all end?  It’s a mystery! 🙂

The movie is just beautiful on all fronts.  The costumes are beautiful, the scenary is beautiful (both even more so in high def like this). The script is beautiful (if the name Tom Stoppard doesn’t mean anything to you, it should!), the pacing is beautiful. There’s an amazing sequence where Shakespeare and Viola are going over lines in bed together, intermixed with Viola as Thomas Kent on stage delivering the lines in public.  Later, when the play begins, we keep cutting back to several interest parties who are racing to put a stop to it.  What will happen? Will the show go on? You’ll find yourself gasping every time the Globe audience gasps.

Of course, like all these movies I have my standard complaint – I don’t care about the not-Shakespeare parts.  There’s a whole story about how Viola has been betrothed to a random nobleman weasel whose name I don’t even remember, and other than as an obstacle I just don’t care anything about him. When Shakespeare’s not on screen and there’s nobody doing Shakespeare lines?  I might as well hit fast forward for how much I’m paying attention.

There’s some special features on the disc, although I’m unsure if they are new for Blu-ray or were on the original DVD release.  I watched “deleted scenes” (not a blooper reel, just scenes that did not make it in) and listened to the audio commentary track from “the whole gang”.  I’m not used to doing that, that was weird.  I kept thinking “Stop stepping on the lines!” 🙂

In the end, though, I was serious when I said I expect that most of my audience has seen this movie.  The question is whether you want to add the Blu-ray edition to your collection. Right now Amazon looks like they have it for about eight bucks, so why wouldn’t you?

What Should He Do Next?

I hope that you’ve all see impressionist Jim Meskimen’s Shakespeare video where he goes through Gloucester’s Richard III speech in no less than 25 celebrity voices.

Did you know that he just released a part 2?

So.  Funny thing happened last night. You may have seen on Twitter posting these links with wild abandon, trying to drum up some notice (and doing a good job of it, given the references from people like talk show host Craig Ferguson).

Well I managed to get his attention when he posted a blog comment here (Hi, Jim!) and he asked for ideas on what Shakespeare he should tackle next.  Got any good ideas?  The Seven Ages of Man speech from As You Like It came immediately to mind.

But then I thought, I wonder if he’s limiting himself to soliloquies?  It’d be great to see him do an entire scene of half a dozen characters, all interacting.  True it wouldn’t showcase the 20+ voices he manages in the sample clips above, but it would be a new angle on the material.  Especially if he could get creative with the video editing and be in a different costume for each character :).

If you had Mr. Meskimen’s ear, what would you like to see him do next? It might just happen!

Shakespeare in Love Winners Announced!

Hello Everyone!

As promised, Happy Groundhog’s Day!  And I’m here to announce the winners of our Shakespeare in Love on Blu-ray giveaway. 

The winners are …  Daanando, Colin, and Becky! Congratulations to the winners, and thanks to everyone for playing.

If the winners could please contact me with your mailing address I’ll get these DVDs shipped out as quickly as possible.

– D

Coriolanus : The Shooting Script

So they asked me, “Would you like a copy of the shooting script for Ralph Fiennes and John Logan’s movie Coriolanus?”

“Sure,” I said. I don’t know what a shooting script is.

It might be Mexico City. Or Chechnya. Or El Salvador. Or Detroit. Or Baghdad. Or London.

This Rome is a modern place. It is our world right now: immediately recognizable to us. Elements of classical and brave public monuments are lost in a sea of brazen advertising billboards, neon shopping plazas and drab super-highways. Splendor and squalor sit side-by-side.

It is a volatile, dangerous world.

William Shakespeare’s Rome.

…but I love it.

What a fascinating way to split the difference between reading the original Shakespeare, and seeing a movie.  Read a shortened version of the text while, as above, somebody paints you an at times spectacularly vivid picture of how they’d like you to imagine it happening.

Even better, the script comes with notes from both screenwriter Logan and director Fiennes.  Why a voiceover for Volumnia in a certain scene?  How will the first encounter between Coriolanus and Aufidius go down?  What image should we open on, and why?  It is better than the movie in this way, it’s like jumping right to the DVD release with director’s commentary track.  

There are, of course, places where the written word just won’t do.  You can write Coriolanus’ “You common cry of curs!” line in all capital letters and underline it all you want, but all the reader takes away is “Ok, he’s mad.”  How mad and how he shows it is up to the actor/director. That’s why you need to see the play

The book is short, just over 100 pages.  That immediately reminded me of an old Simpsons episode where Homer met Ron Howard and tried to pitch him a screen play.  “The typical movie script is 120 pages,” Howard tells him, “This one is only 17 and several of them are just drawings of a time machine.”  In this format and at that length, I read this in about 3 sittings. Crash course in Coriolanus!

This is a bloody interpretation of a bloody play, there’s no doubt about that. My wife and kids won’t be seeing this one with me, which means I’m not sure if I’ll get to see it even if it does come to my area. Should I get to see it, however, I know that I’m going to get that much more out of it having had this script to read first.  I’d love to read more of these.

UPDATED I certainly rushed this one out, didn’t I!  Two important details missed.  “They” in this case is (are?) the good folks at Harper Collins / Newmarket Press.  When the offer came up I actually asked whether this publishing of scripts as mass-market books was a new publishing trend and I was told that this is basically what Newmarket’s been doing for 20 odd years.  I guess not! 🙂

Second and perhaps most importantly is the fact that this book is currently available on pre-order from Amazon, as well as on the publisher’s website!  It dawned on me after I wrote this post that it sounds like I got some sort of secret behind-the-scenes hookup.  You, too, can read the script.