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Hamnet

Keep your heart open.
2025 | 126m | English

(8797 votes)

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Popularity: 18 (history)

Details

The powerful story of love and loss that inspired the creation of Shakespeare's timeless masterpiece, Hamlet.
Release Date: Nov 26, 2025
Director: Chloé Zhao
Writer: Chloé Zhao, Maggie O’Farrell
Genres: Romance, Drama
Keywords based on novel or book, grief, death of son, woman director, 16th century, inspirational, intense, tragic, william shakespeare
Production Companies Amblin Entertainment, Neal Street Productions, Hera Pictures, Book of Shadows
Box Office Revenue: $11,394,682
Budget: $30,000,000
Updates Updated: Jan 08, 2026
Entered: Oct 10, 2025
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Full Credits

Name Character
Jessie Buckley Agnes
Paul Mescal Will
Emily Watson Mary
Jacobi Jupe Hamnet
Joe Alwyn Bartholomew
David Wilmot John
Bodhi Rae Breathnach Susanna
Olivia Lynes Judith
Noah Jupe Hamlet
Justine Mitchell Joan
Faith Delaney Young Agnes
Smylie Bradwell Young Bartholomew
Freya Hannan-Mills Eliza
Dainton Anderson Edmond
Sam Woolf Bernardo
Jack Shalloo Marcellus
Laura Guest Midwife
Elliot Baxter Richard
Louisa Harland Rowan
Eva Wishart Joan's Girl 1
Effie Linnen Joan's Girl 2
Hera Gibson Francisco
Zac Wishart Thomas
James Lintern James
Matthew Tennyson Gertrude
John Mackay Priest
Clay Milner-Russell Laertes
Name Job
Simon Carroll Sound Effects Editor, Sound Supervisor
Brendan Feeney Sound Effects Editor, Sound Effects Designer
Ewa Mazurkiewicz Foley Editor
Risto Puukko VFX Artist
Duncan Eland CG Artist
Laura Scott CG Artist
Shaun Rogers CG Artist
Fiona Crombie Production Design
Johnnie Burn Sound Designer, Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Supervising Sound Editor
Rashad Hall-Heinz Production Sound Mixer
Daniel Leigh Second Assistant Sound
Toby Marrow Special Effects Supervisor
Tim Blake Supervising Art Director
Agueda Del Castillo Visual Effects Supervisor
Chloé Zhao Editor, Director, Screenplay
Alice Felton Set Decoration
John Van Der Pool Special Effects Supervisor
Lucy Amos Casting Associate
Marc A. Wilson First Assistant Director
Sol Saihati Gaffer
Max Richter Original Music Composer, Orchestrator
Sheila Silveira Visual Effects Producer
Adam Chestnutt Boom Operator
Steph Tataryn Casting Assistant
Filip Stefanowski Foley Mixer
Aakash Praful Solanki VFX Artist
Grégoire Hoarau CG Artist
Olivia Grimmer CG Artist
Dave Foster Orchestrator
Kasia Chojnowska Costumer
Juliette Carton Second Assistant Camera
Radosław Kokot First Assistant Camera
Victorine Tamafo Production Supervisor
Ruthie Falconer Assistant Set Decoration
Nicole Stafford Makeup & Hair
Luke Cosstick Props
Annie Neilson Graphic Designer
Beth Marshall Visual Effects Coordinator
Michael Hopkins Post Production Coordinator
Jacob Crow Assistant Location Manager
Łukasz Żal Director of Photography
Malgosia Turzanska Costume Design
Affonso Gonçalves Editor
Maggie O’Farrell Screenplay, Novel
Nina Gold Casting
Rory Herbert Script Supervisor
Max Behrens Sound Effects Editor, Sound Effects Designer
Kacper Habisiak Foley Supervisor
James Bowman ADR Mixer
Cyrielle Bounser CG Artist
John Ray CG Artist
Reece Horsfield CG Artist
Katrina Schiller Music Editor
Kevin O'Sullivan Animation
Charlotte Finlay Costume Supervisor
Joel James Devlin Electrician
Michael James Robinson Electrician
Sam Courtiour Third Assistant Director
Alex Bowens Art Direction
Peta Dunstall Key Hair Stylist
Isabella Faull Assistant Set Decoration
Maximilian Behrens Sound Designer
Traci Duran First Assistant Editor
Rhys Bidder Location Manager
Charlie Grout-Smith Assistant Location Manager
Neil Leachman Dialogue Editor
Jacek Wiśniewski Foley Artist
Aidan Mellor CG Artist
Jacob Worthington CG Artist
Ralitsa Karova CG Artist
Mark Graziano Executive In Charge Of Post Production
Hannah Coleman Costume Coordinator
Stanisław Cuske Camera Operator
Gregory Lengyel Electrician
Alistair Hopkins Post Production Supervisor
Katie Money Art Direction
Samuel James Wigmaker
Anna Cumming Assistant Set Decoration
Joe Reaney Set Dresser
Jo McLaren Stunt Coordinator
Damien van der Cruyssen Colorist
Paula Freijeiro Location Assistant
Petra Schwane 2D Supervisor
Rosie Grant Assistant Costume Designer
Claire Hanson Electrician
Tomasz Sternicki Key Grip
Oliver Waters Third Assistant Director
Victoria Allwood Art Direction
Charlotte Betts Makeup & Hair
Lilya McGinley Assistant Art Director
Owen McGonigle Visual Effects Designer
Chris Munns Dailies Operator
Megan Bussey Assistant Location Manager
Chris Lyons Special Effects Makeup Artist
Name Title
Pippa Harris Producer
Liza Marshall Producer
Laurie Borg Executive Producer
Chloé Zhao Executive Producer
Maggie O’Farrell Co-Producer
Sam Mendes Producer
Steven Spielberg Producer
Caroline Reynolds Co-Producer
Nicholas Brown Executive Producer
Kristie Macosko Krieger Executive Producer
Nicolas Gonda Producer
Julie Pastor Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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2024 4 4 11 1
2024 5 5 11 1
2024 6 2 5 0
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2024 12 2 6 1
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2025 12 14 23 12
2026 1 15 18 12

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2026 1 12 36
Year Month High Avg
2025 12 17 59
Year Month High Avg
2025 11 55 190
Year Month High Avg
2025 10 48 345

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Reviews

msbreviews
8.0

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://fandomwire.com/hamnet-review/ "Hamnet is a true work of art that, despite its slow march and some more challenging moments for the uninitiated, rewards perseverance. It's a film about how pain destroys, but also about the miracle of how art can serve as a ves ... sel for redemption or, at least, for understanding. Chloé Zhao took an empty space in history — the life of a forgotten woman and the silence of a lost son — and filled it with an emotion that's, ultimately, a testament to the power of creation. It's proof that the greatest tragedy in literature was, in fact, born from the greatest possible act of family love and memory." Rating: A-

Oct 13, 2025
Brent_Marchant
4.0

William Shakespeare is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language, though there’s some disagreement about whether he actually wrote the materials attributed to him. Even sketchier than this are some of the details about his personal life, aspects of his character that have been t ... he subject of much conjecture, especially where they may have influenced his literary undertakings. And an examination of that nexus is where this latest offering from writer-director Chloé Zhao makes its appearance on the stage (or, in this case, the screen). Based on the best-selling speculative novel Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell (who co-wrote the screenplay with Zhao), the film presents a fictional take on how the Bard’s most noteworthy work, the quintessential theatrical tragedy, Hamlet, came into being. Essentially, the narrative maintains that the stage play (which, in Shakespeare’s time, used the names “Hamlet” and “Hamnet” interchangeably) came about as a grief/coping response after the author (Paul Mescal) and his wife, Agnes (Jessie Buckley), lost their young son, Hamnet (Jacobi Jupe), to “the pestilence” (assumed to be bubonic plague). It’s presumed that the tragic but heroic Hamlet is a fictional homage to Shakespeare’s courageous, honorable but ill-fated real life progeny (though, admittedly, it’s something of a stretch to understand what connection an 11-year-old boy from rural England might have to a prince of the Danish royal family). Bringing the play to life often led to marital discord between Will and Agnes, given that he was working on the production in London while she maintained the family household in Stratford-on-Avon. And, all the while, the couple struggled to come to terms with their feelings of loss, something that Shakespeare hoped to resolve by creating this latest work. As noble as this sentiment might be (and as truly effectively as it’s addressed in the picture’s closing 15 minutes), the overall execution otherwise leaves much to be desired. To its credit, “Hamnet” features superb performances (particularly by Buckley and Noah Jupe as Hamlet, though Mescal comes across as a bit hammy at times), along with a fine score, stunning visuals and an excellent period piece production design. But, even with all these assets in its favor, this release is sorely in need of editing and a better script, one with fewer repetitious and incongruent elements (most notably the clumsy integration of original Shakespearean on-stage dialog with contemporary off-stage exchanges). These shortcomings, regrettably, make for an often-dull tale, one that prompted a number of viewers at the screening I attended to start nodding off – literally. What’s more, the screenplay would appear to assume that most audience members have an intimate familiarity with both the minutiae of the play and the details of Shakespeare’s biography, inferences that ask an awful lot of viewers upon entering the theater. Indeed, when all is said and done, “Hamnet” truly is a major disappointment, an unapologetic example of Oscar bait, a picture that holds itself in bloated esteem simply because of its lofty attributes and subject matter. But that kind of unrepentant cinematic preening has grown tiresome over time, even though it’s a formula that this filmmaker never shies away from employing in her productions – and this offering, unfortunately, is once again no exception.

Nov 18, 2025
Geronimo1967
7.0

Maggie O’Farrell said at this screening that adapting her novel for the screen was akin to watching the sand flow through an hour glass. She started with something extensive, whittled it down to 90-odd pages and then gave it to a director (Chloé Zhao) who frilled it all out again to make a couple of ... hours for the screen that is somewhat different from the original. I reckon that’s the perfect way to describe just how this story of a part of Shakespeare's life comes across, and at last - I have seen something from Paul Mescal that isn’t just hype. He is the bard, before he was the bard. He taught Latin to uninterested children so he could pay of his father’s debt, and was bored. Then he encounters “Agnes” (Jessie Buckley) and it’s love at first sight - despite some family reservations. After the birth of their first child, he concludes that he can make a better living in London and so heads off in best Dick Whittington style to make his fortune. He finds writing work with some theatrical players, and from now on divides his time between his wife in Warwickshire and his increasingly successful career. Then come the twins, “Judith” and “Hamnet”. Both parents understand the necessity of his being away, but their children - upon whom they both dote - miss their father, and when the plague visits their town a tragedy ensues. Devastated, the couple must deal with this in their own way, and it’s the premise of the novel that it was this grief that inspired Shakespeare to write his “Hamlet”. You can tell that loads of research has gone into this project, and from the production design through to the last twenty minutes in which this most famous of plays is presented in an abridged fashion, the film is engaging, entertaining and really quite a poignant exponent of sixteenth century English life. Mescal’s portrayal starts off with a glint in his eye, but as the plot thickens his character displays a depth to it that mixes joy, frustration and remorse in what I think is his best effort yet. On the other side of this coin, we have a Buckley who has come a long way since I first saw her in “Wild Rose” (2018). Her efforts here border on the visceral, especially when childbearing and parenting. Both Joe Alwyn and Emily Watson add some gravitas as brother and mother, respectively, and not for the first time in their careers, both Jacobi and Noah Jupe stand out, the latter quite literally bringing the house down at the end. Speculative? Well of course it is, but it's still a story that pulls at the heart strings, and leaves precious little room for sentimentality at a time in history when mortality was all too often writ large for all, rich or poor. A love story, a grief story and what’s also rewarding is that we don’t get a rose-tinted conclusion, either. You don’t need to be a period drama fan, nor a lover of complex and wordy prose, to enjoy this. It’s some people at the top of their craft delivering really quite compellingly a story that’s just as relatable now.

Dec 11, 2025