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| As You Like It [2007] (REGION 1) (NTSC) | ![As You Like It [2007] (REGION 1) (NTSC)](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51APjlEX9rL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Kenneth Branagh Actors: Takuya Shimada, Brian Blessed, Richard Clifford, Bryce Dallas Howard, Patrick Doyle Studio: HBO Home Video Category: DVD
Buy New: £13.94
Buy New/Used from £13.94
Avg. Customer Rating:   (1 reviews) Sales Rank: 50664
Format: Ac-3, Closed-captioned, Colour, Dolby, Dubbed, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), Spanish (Dubbed) Media: DVD Running Time: 127 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: HBOD94019D UPC: 026359401923 EAN: 0026359401923 ASIN: B000SM6FKE
Release Date: September 25, 2007 Theatrical Release Date: 2007 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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Amazon.co.uk Review If you think stuffy old Shakespeare could be livened up with some ninjas, Kenneth Branagh (IHamlet/I, IMary Shelley's Frankenstein/I) has heard your call. Adapter/director Branagh has set the pastoral comedy IAs You Like It/I in feudal Japan, where the characters are still British (they live in a community established by Western merchants) but now have reason to dress up in lush Japanese fabrics and engage in sumo wrestling. Due to a feud between two noble brothers, Rosalind (Bryce Dallas Howard, IThe Village/I) is banished and ends up disguised as a man in a nearby forest. There she tests the faith of her beloved (and also banished) Orlando (David Oyelowo, IMI-5/I), who can't recognize her because she looks like a Dickensian ragamuffin. pMeanwhile, a variety of other star-crossed lovers romp around the forest and zen gardens, sparring about love and melancholy. Branagh, never a subtle director, takes every opportunity to squeeze in slapstick and action (like the aforementioned ninjas), but he also keeps the language clear and the movie is beautiful to look at. The strong cast includes Kevin Kline (who previously frolicked in a movie adaptation of IA Midsummer Night's Dream/I), Alfred Molina (ISpider-Man 2/I, IFrida/I), Romola Garai (II Capture the Castle/I, IDirty Dancing: Havana Nights/I), and Adrian Lester (IHustle/I, ILove's Labors Lost/I). I--Bret Fetzer/I
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  Sometimes the Forest of Arden is Just the Forest of Arden! November 8, 2007 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
"As You Like It" is one of my favorite plays. Grounded in the tradition of Greco-Roman pastoral, the play asks the question, via Jaques, if man, who is trying to escape the intrigues of court, escapes to the green cabinet of nature, will he not consequently bring the intrigues of court with him, and therefore ruin nature? Shakespeare answers this question, which seems very timely in our warming world of globalization, in the affirmative. br /br /This film, which is peerlessly acted, gains nothing by its Japanese setting, which, admittedly scrumptious to behold, is merely distracting. I fully expected a mincing Gilbert Sullivan chorus to break into "If you want to know who we are, we are gentlemen of Japan, on every vase and jar, on every screen and fan." I have no objection to updating, nor to removing the setting to another location--or as Shakespeare would say, to another part of the forest. Such a removal was successful in Trevor Nunn's "Twelfth Night," which was set in a Cornish "Illyria." It was also done with delightful tongue-in-cheek in the 1960s' "Midsummer Night's Dream," which focused on a stately British home, labeled "Athens." Furthermore, I even suspended my disbelief when Brannagh set "Much Ado about Nothing" in Tuscany (partly because I love Italy). In none of these cases, did the change of setting disrupt the illusion. By placing "As You Like It"--most of which takes place in the fantastical "Forest of Arden" (to which the characters refer repeatedly)--in the historical context of a violent nineteenth-century Japan, Brannagh disrupts the magic as irrevocably as if he had placed the first scenes of the play in the 1930s' Leni Riefenstall-inspired glamor of the Third Reich and then had everyone escape to the Forest of Bavaria, still calling it the Forest of Arden. br /br /Because Brannagh has already burst the bubble of Shakespeare's magic, his final metatheatrical conceit, of having Rosalind deliver the epilogue (full of gender-bending innuendo, since the part was originally played by a boy playing a girl playing a boy) among the actors dressing-room caravans, falls flat. I also think that Brannagh's moving scenes around, his making cuts (Touchstone, one of Shakespeare's greatest clowns, got lost somewhere in the forest), spoiled the rhythm of the play which takes on an incantatory magic in the "And I for Phebe, And I for Ganymede, And I for Rosalind, And I for no woman" scene between the pastoral Silvius and Phebe, and the lovers Orlando and Ganymede/Rosalind. br /br /I am also cross with Kenneth Brannagh for recycling the ending which was delightful and far more effective in "Much Ado" ("Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more!"), complete with the actors dancing in circles--all viewed from above among cascading rose-petals (Perhaps they were cherry blossoms this time.). br /br /On the plus side, English subtitles were available, and, as I said, the acting is excellent and Rosalind is more than lovely to look at, as are the costumes. br /br /Although I am generally a great fan of Kenneth Brannagh, I do wish he had left the Forest of Arden in its magical land of nowhere.
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