Hamlet (9/10) Movie CLIP - The Poisoned Cup (1990) HD
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- Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024
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CLIP DESCRIPTION:
While Hamlet (Mel Gibson) and Laertes (Nathaniel Parker) duel, Claudius (Alan Bates) attempts to poison Hamlet's drink.
FILM DESCRIPTION:
Franco Zeffirelli directs his third Shakespeare adaptation (after Romeo and Juliet and Otello) with this film version of the tragedy Hamlet. The titular prince of Denmark (Mel Gibson), returns home to his family's castle of Elsinore after years of attending school in Germany to find out his father has died and his uncle Claudius (Alan Bates) is the new king. To make matters worse, Claudius has married Hamlet's mother, Queen Gertrude (Glenn Close), whom he has unusually strong feelings for. Hamlet is visited by his father's ghost (Paul Scofield), who asks him to seek revenge for his murder. In order to find out who the real killer is, Hamlet stages a theatrical scene resembling his father's death. Claudius is upset by the production and leaves to arrange for Hamlet's murder. In the ensuing confusion, Hamlet accidentally kills Polonious (Ian Holm) instead of Claudius; Hamlet's lover, Ophelia (Helena Bonham Carter), goes mad and commits suicide; and eventually Hamlet and Claudius both meet their fate.
CREDITS:
TM & © Warner Bros. (1990)
Cast: Alan Bates, Stephen Dillane, Mel Gibson, Nathaniel Parker, Glenn Close
Director: Franco Zeffirelli
Producers: Dyson Lovell, Bruce Davey
Screenwriters: Christopher De Vore, William Shakespeare, Franco Zeffirelli
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Watching this senior year was the best thing.
Same with me. Along with Gary Oldman in "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead".
On god
Wow, my experience precisely.
Wow i saw on pbs ah little before this scene ah version Directed by Kenny Leon from the public theaters free Shakespeare in the park at The Delacorte Theater in central Park an must say seeinG this RUclips clip I'm Glad it's ah Movie i wonder why it was never shown at my school
I love Claudious’s face after Gertrude drinks the wine.
"I've made a huge mistake"
Hamlet: Since he went to France I will be in continual practice.
Also Hamlet: swings 2-pound longsword like a 90-year-old grandma brandishing a sledgehammer.
Between the adaptation and performance, def my favorite hamlet movie
Sweet detail in Hamlet winking at Gertrude after his joke with the sword.
It might be a minority opinion but I actually like this version of Hamlet I haven't seen the Kenneth Branha version but I may in the future. But this scene is awesome when everyone is slowly realizing what Claudious has done.
Michael Nally so sad you didn't got any likes
It's my favorite :)
This is, personally, my favorite dueling scene out of all the other versions
This version is first rate. Gibson is wonderful. Zeffirelli did a wonderful job. Great cast all around. Perhaps even better than Olivier's version.
Branagh
This scene is great but I prefer how in the Kenneth Branagh version where Derek Jacobi as Claudius screamed, "Gertrude!", then pleads, "Do not drink," and is horrified when she does.
If Claudius did it that way he'd really emphasize that the cup is poisoned. When he doesn't raise his voice so much it emphasizes what a sniveling coward he is, and I think it shows his true nature.
Critics like to argue about Hamlet's feelings for his mother. Some say he loves her, others say he hates her. idk. I think that the key here is deciding whether or not she has guessed what's in the cup, and drinks anyway. Obviously, Claudius has the most difficult line in the play to deliver. Should he shout, in terror, for her not to drink, or just suggest it, or something in between?
2:19 Claudius: "Oh shit..."
I watched I, Clаudius full mooоvie here twitter.com/486895abd1d8d2386/status/822761953072271360 Hаааamlеt 9 10 Mоvie CLIР The Рoisonеd Cuр 1990 HD
Nice to see Hamlet and Gertrude got over "the inmost part of you" bit.
- You can't win,Claudius!
- This is my kingdom!My destiny!
Are those longswords or sledgehammers?
+otsiftik those swords are heavier than the plot of the story in this scene, and that's saying something
+Filthy Fran-ku o And why the fuck did people drink with pearls in their cups back in the story?
"Better try not to choke on this shit, so can a servant get me another cup, cuz Claudius' filthy ass hands messed this shit up?! Seriously, why would you do this shit, Claudius?! Why?!"
In reality longswords are very nimble.
They would have used bated (blunted) rapiers. In his audience, everyone carried weapons; those who could afford it had swords -- rapiers, for choice. These were serious weapons; they weighed two-three pounds, and had blades up to three feet long. They would have passed right through the absurd mail leotards worn by these actors. Remember, this was a fencing contest, not , at least in the beginning, a serious duel. The fencers would have worn what they wear today -- a padded jacket. The point is, his audience knew sword-play, just like boxing fans know good boxing, and they would have booed this jokey shit right off the stage. Shekespears even gets the pre-fight gamesmanship right: "Hey kid! get me another sword! this thing's too heavy!" "MINE feels just fine -- but wait -- are you SURE these are the same length?"
Claymore.
Laertes from 2:07: 👁👄👁
Hamlet was one of the best fictional characters ever.
Mel gibson had a kind of Russell Crowe thing going on for a while, didn't he?
Well, seeing they're both Aussies...
+TheHamarbi Mel isn't Australian he simply moved there when he was 12 technically he's American
Gibsons been around longer than Crowe
otherway dontcha think ?
Inspector Lynley is a wild fencer...
Now Claudius realizes that he's caught possibly. Remember, he doesn't know what's going to happen. He's sad that he;s about to lose his wife, as I suppose he loves her, but now there is evidence against him as a regicide and usurper. Now he can be removed from the throne and executed. He knows Hamlet knows exactly what's going on with the "pearl". He knows that Hamlet will tell everyone if Horatio doesn't end up killing him. Horatio might even testify against him, if Hamlet doesn't go crazy and kill him, which he just might have anyway. But, even so, the king realizes he's in trouble..that he's in danger of either being removed by force or if he has a great support, a civil war..well, those are what might happen in his mind, other than "my wife is dead" and "Ham
He's fighting Laertes here not Horatio
For a professionnal fight it is one of the worse I have ever seen : No speed, no technique, no credibility !
The longswords were technical weapons, capable of speed and vicious actions. Medieval fencing was technical and refined (and also brutal with a lot of grappling techniques).
The fight director should have taken informations before creating this.... thing.
this was how hamlet was written,.. he is goofing off in the first half of the fight
Hamlet is actually faking being incompetent. He is a master swordsman. So is Laertes and Horatio. Laertes is simply trying to keep up with the seemingly stupid Hamlet.
Hamlet with helmet
Martin Riggs vs. Martin Tanley.
Wow so hansome Mel Gibson he was!!
better than the branagh version. Mel does a phenomenal job here
I agree, when Branagh took the settings out of Denmark for Russia I never even watched it.
Mil Gibson is excellent.
Ah, come on! Comedy from Hamlet, played by Gibson, when he tries at 1:25, false swing--heavily with a broadsword: "Oh, my shoulder..." whereas Laertes played by Parker remained calmly patient... Where is the next continuation clip of the duel, please?
good book
oh my god he played agravaine on merlin.
I KNOW, right?
Great color!
Production Companies:
Warner Bros. (Distributor)
Vivendi (current owner)
StudioCanal (current owner)
Carolco International N.V. (International Distributor)
Ignitor Media Group (Presentation)
Shakespeare Film Classics (copyright holder)
Hamlet Association (copyright holder)
Icon Productions (production)
Ignitor Film Finance II (financement)
Ignitor Film Finance III (financement)
Hamlet is a great character: we all know mini-Hamlets: home from a year away at college, and the total, know-it-all prick, and just too- too squee for the hillbilly heaven that he finds that the old home town has become. He is so goddam smart -- but he's the Prince, so who's gonna tell him different. He belittles and humiliates his father's old chancellor (who IS a long-winded old fart, but he deserves better treatment). He plays mind games on his fiancee, driving her to suicide. And, yet, he has some of the greatest lines in the canon. Shakespeare must have loved the little bastard -- he name his own son "Hamnet."
It's comments like these that make me wish the dislike button actually worked so I could more visibly express how fundamentally wrong an interpretation of Hamlet's character this was.
you know, i was taught that literature often doesnt have right or wrong interpretations
this is just wrong LOL
Que viva el rey ok no
The best. I loved Oliver. Both awesome. More Physical. .
Lol. Olivia Newton John 😃😅
the queen carousses... so,but no more? look you, this o're hanging firmament fretted with fire ...we defy augery! and then the next line 'there is providence in the fall of a sparrow' how beatious a lyrical paradox. In regards to these matters, my infantile misuse of words and meanings begs your clemancy. In my case that fell sargent redundancy is strict in his arrest. Anyway , Mel's, (and everyone's) was superb, No? ps, forgive me. R.E.
i like odin
Hail, Allfather.