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| Twelfth Night [1996] | ![Twelfth Night [1996]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51704C36Z3L._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Trevor Nunn Actors: Helena Bonham Carter, Richard E. Grant, Imogen Stubbs, Steven Mackintosh, Nicholas Farrell Studio: Entertainment in Video Category: DVD
List Price: £12.99 Buy New: £3.93 You Save: £9.06 (70%)
Buy New from £3.93
Avg. Customer Rating:   (26 reviews) Sales Rank: 1023
Format: Pal Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Universal, suitable for all Media: DVD Running Time: 128 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
EAN: 5017239191213 ASIN: B00005S872
Release Date: October 29, 2001 Theatrical Release Date: October 25, 1996 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Read 21 more reviews...
  Excellent, lively and amusing adaptation of the play November 10, 2008 I love this film! Shakespeare converted well into film form is a delight (see Branagh's 'Much Ado' as well) and this film is excellent.br /All the characters are note perfect, and there is not a single weak performance amongst them.br /Although some scenes are swapped around or merged, that helps to show the cohesion of the plot strands and works extremely well.br /Characters have a dark as well as a light side; Sir Toby is a classic funny drunk, but he's also a man who is exploiting Sir Andrew for his money and keeping Maria at arm's length. Mel Smith is absolutely brilliant in the role.br /Feste the Clown is a much more tragic figure than the only usually portrayed; a man with a deep melancholy, driven back to Olivia's house for lack of food and having to clown to regain admittance. br /Even Sir Andrew, the idiot Knight, has unexpected reserves of dignity which surface at the end - wonderfully played by Richard E Grant.br /I found the dialogue was exceptionally well spoken and the settings, costumes and characters were all wonderful.br /I highly recommend this film to any 'Bardolaters' out there.br /br /
  unforgettable August 3, 2008 this is one of my most favourite movies. there are some splendid reviews here already, so i will keep it short.br /this is shakespearian comedy with dark undertones. this tale is about the nature of love. wonderful yet terrible love... etc. not everyone wins at the end. The actors are all wonderfully cast, and the landscape and locations are brilliant to. there is also a wonderful balance between the romance, the pangs of unrequitted love, laughs, music, chaos, revenge, etc. and it is all perfect. Ben Kingsley's Feste i think stands out most. and when Viola speaks of love (hers being impossible), i again feel the pain i had when i had my own heart broken. br /this tale is not all romantic. For instance: Maria maries Sir Toby knowing his bad habits full well, and realising he'll never 'mend'. Orsino marries Viola in the end, but if we have marked his words, it is by no means certain that his love is never-ending. Shakespeare is giving us what we want, (boy gets girl) all the while warning us about the true nature and many faces of love.
  Twelfth Night June 14, 2008 By the way I am not Mr Marc I am his stepdaughter my account does not work at the moment. I must admit that when I first saw this film, it was at school in English. We had a choice MacBeth or twelfth Night 1996. We chose Twelfth Night having already looked at MacBeth in yr7 and found it INCREDIBLY BORING! Twelfth Night however like William Shakespere's "The Tempest" took me by surprise. The film is related to shakespere's life in many ways. One is that Shakespere at his time suffered puritins wanting to shut down theatres all over. The character Malvoilio the servant who is made a fool of is meant to be a puritin. It mocks the puritins but in a comic way. Another is Shakespere had twins and most of his stories protagonists are twins including Twelfth Night. The film portrays one of the two themes shakespere wrote about Tragedy. Seperated by a shipwreck both identical twins have no idea that the other is alive. The stories main protagonist is Viola a young woman on a voyage with her brother. The twins make money and entertain by putting on shows aboard the ship. But when Viola "by chance" is saved by the ships captain and is landed on the island of Illyria, which is now Croatia and whos Duke is her fathers enemey, Viola is lost at what to do. She decides to hide her personality and change her characteristics and emotions to those of a castrated man. She goes to serve the Duke orsino having no idea the mess and lies she would become entangled in. The Duke begins to favour Cessario (Viola) because of her musical abilities. She gets to learn more about the Duke and discovers that he is fancies Olvia although he does not really know her. Olivia recently losing her brother has no mind to marry Orsino, so he sends Cessario to attend her. Olivia then falls in love with the outside looks of Cessario. Meanwhile Orsino begins to fall in love with Cessario's personality. br /Sebastian, Viola's twin brother believed lost, has survived with the help of another sea captain called Antonio who was a travelling guest. He is on Illyria and by chance walks in on Olivia who thinks he is cessario (identical twins). She asks him to marry her and he agrees. But when Orsino visits Olivia himself Sebastain is no where to be found and Cessario (Viola) faces a confrontation with Orsino because Olivia believing she is married to him confronts him in front of Orsino. He thinks Cessario has betrayed him and having finally accepted that he loves Cessario turns him away in disgust. Viola has herself fallen in love with Orsino and can't bear the fact that he has turned her away. Will Sebastian arrive back in time to clear up the disagreement or will shakespere's exquisite play end in the tragedy it began with.br /Other characters include Sir Toby Belch (Olivia's Uncle), Andrew Aguecheek (also related to Olivia), Maria ( Olivia's first maid and best friend), Malvolio (Olivia's servant and fool), Antonio (Sebstian's rescuer and temporary lover).
  Most Wonderful April 16, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
There are many adaptations of the Bard's work out there which fail to do it justice. Happily, this is not one of them. Nunn's casting for this magical piece of cinema is excellent, with Kingsley's mysterious but comical Feste complimenting perfectly the hateful Malvolio (Nigel Hawthorne), corpulant Sir Toby and foppish Sir Andrew Agucheek, ably portrayed by Richard E. Grant. br /br /Sterling though the actors are, it is the female characters which bring this adaptation to life; Bonham-Carter is, as always, perfect as the whimsical and lovely Olivia, and if we can suspend out disbelief that a woman of Stubbs' frame and appearance could possibly be taken for a chap, her Viola builds a tension with Orsino which is compelling for the viewer.br /br /However, the unsung heroine of this drama is undoubtedly Imelda Staunton, who plays the clever and cunning Maria; Staunton's portrayal of the character demonstrates her conflicting emotions revolving around the drunken, yet charismatic Sir Toby, with a sadness at times that brings a tear to the eye.br /br /Nunn's casting is superb, and the locations and costumes are visually beautiful, making this classic tale of love and loss, even for those who are not wildly keen on Shakespeare 'most wonderful' indeed. br /
  Does it justice. July 26, 2007 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Having loved the play studying it for A Level, I wasn't sure if this version would enhance my fondness for it or tear it to shreds... Thankfully, it was superb: the acting was excellent all round, the period setting worked well - in being vaguely ambiguous - and the suspense and surprise were still there (even after copious watching!). Nigel Hawthorne, Mel Smith (the comedy aspects were excellent and Helena Bonham-Carter were particularly good.br /However, I really wanted to mention Feste: always my favourite character (at the centre of my A Level work), I thought Kingsley was the perfect choice for the part, and captured it brilliantly: the songs in particular were even adaptations of the originals, and were performed just as they should have been. Feste's the bittersweet part of Twelfth Night (itself a very bittersweet play, when you look at it), and that did come through.br /br /The ending is the best bit - you just want to follow Feste into the distance as everyone else has their happy (or at least resolved) ending...
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