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King Lear Poster

King Lear

2018 | 115m | English

(4694 votes)

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Popularity: 4 (history)

Director: Richard Eyre
Writer: Richard Eyre
Staring:
Details

An aging King invites disaster, when he abdicates to his corrupt, toadying daughters, and rejects his loving and honest one.
Release Date: May 28, 2018
Director: Richard Eyre
Writer: Richard Eyre
Genres: Drama, TV Movie
Keywords theater play, fool, tragedy, storm, king lear, abdication, elizabethan england
Production Companies BBC, Playground Entertainment, Amazon Studios, Sonia Friedman Productions, Lemaise Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Anthony Hopkins Lear
Emma Thompson Goneril
Emily Watson Regan
Jim Broadbent Earl of Gloucester
Florence Pugh Cordelia
Jim Carter Earl of Kent
Andrew Scott Edgar
John Macmillan Edmund
Tobias Menzies Duke of Cornwall
Anthony Calf Duke of Albany
Karl Johnson Fool
Christopher Eccleston Oswald
John Standing Butler
Simon Manyonda Duke of Burgundy
Chukwudi Iwuji King of France
Samuel Valentine Lear's Gentleman
Arinzé Kene Lieutenant
Sharon Wattis 1st Maid
Kaye Brown 2nd Maid
Raphael Desprez French Officer
Peter Forbes Doctor
Sam Redford Young Captain
Liam McKenna Sergeant Major
Paul Tinto Soldier
Eric Kofi Abrefa Officer (Dover Castle)
Nick Khan Refugee
Yassine Mkhichen Refugee
Matt Rentell Soldier
Daria Riz Refugee
Belal Sabir Refugee
Karma Sood Refugee Boy
Shawn Dixon Knight #1 (uncredited)
Name Job
William Shakespeare Theatre Play
Richard Eyre Writer, Director
Matt Curtis Title Designer
Nina Gold Casting Director
Ben Smithard Director of Photography
Stephen Warbeck Original Music Composer
Peter Burgis Foley Artist
Michelle Mullen Line Producer
Emilie O'Connor Dialogue Editor, ADR Editor
Gisela Evert Post Production Supervisor
Charlotte Dirickx Set Decoration
Nick Shuttleworth First Assistant Director
Andrew Caller Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Alex Gavigan Second Assistant Director
Simon Clark Production Sound Mixer
Peter Francis Production Design
Karen Savage Script Supervisor
Doone Forsyth Makeup & Hair
Naomi Donne Makeup Designer, Hair Designer
Ben Gladstone Location Manager
Chris Reynolds Special Effects Supervisor
Helena Evans Assistant Editor
Richard Harrowing Electrician
Laura Panayiotou Tailor
Lewis Morison Music Editor
Martin Ware Casting Associate
Jason Swanscott Foley Artist
Adam Oakley Foley Editor
Mark Wellband Visual Effects Producer
John L. Wilson Still Photographer
Tristan Haley First Assistant "A" Camera
Pawel Polak Lighting Technician
Dan Farrell Editor
Lolly Goodship Makeup & Hair
Brendan Nicholson Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Astrid Sieben Art Direction
Tessa Phillips Costume Supervisor
Luc Gavigan Third Assistant Director
Arron Monkman Second Assistant "A" Camera
Lauren Evans Casting Associate
Sam Walsh Foley Mixer
Andreas Petrides Stunt Coordinator
Glen Gathard Foley Editor
Michael McDermott Gaffer
Chiara Finello Visual Effects Coordinator
Rachel McLean Set Medic
Simon Baker Steadicam Operator
Kevin Day Standby Property Master
Sara Kramer Key Hairdresser, Key Makeup Artist
Sharon Moran Production Manager
Fotini Dimou Costume Design
Mark Heslop Sound Effects Editor
Lorena Pagés Second Assistant "B" Camera
Sam Dormer Armorer
James Smith-Pryor Rigging Gaffer
Zoe Freed Foley Artist
Paul Carter Property Master
Moe Owoborode Camera Trainee
Martin Walker Unit Manager
Sam Farr Set Dresser
Annabelle Hood Floor Runner
Name Title
Noëlette Buckley Producer
Colin Callender Executive Producer
Elyse Dolbec Associate Producer
Sonia Friedman Executive Producer
Scott Huff Executive Producer
Fergus Haycock Executive Producer
Lucy Richer Executive Producer
Laura Macara Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 16 33 8
2024 5 18 28 12
2024 6 15 37 7
2024 7 14 24 6
2024 8 12 24 8
2024 9 8 12 5
2024 10 11 32 6
2024 11 11 22 6
2024 12 9 16 5
2025 1 10 21 7
2025 2 8 12 3
2025 3 5 10 1
2025 4 2 3 1
2025 5 1 4 1
2025 6 1 3 1
2025 7 1 1 0
2025 8 1 1 0
2025 9 1 2 1
2025 10 2 4 1

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Reviews

Bertaut
7.0

**_A strong adaptation marred by a poor central performance_** > _The Lear of Shakespeare cannot be acted. The contemptible machinery by which they mimic the storm which he goes out in, is not more inadequate to represent the horrors of the real elements, than any actor can be to represent Lear: ... they might more easily propose to personate the Satan of Milton upon a stage, or one of Michael Angelo's terrible figures. The greatness of Lear is not in corporal dimension, but in intellectual: the explosions of his passion are terrible as a volcano: they are storms turning up and disclosing to t__he bottom that sea, his mind, with all its vast riches. It is his mind which is laid bare. This case of flesh and blood seems too insignificant to be thought on; even as he himself neglects it. On the stage we see nothing but corporal infirmities and weakness, the impotence of rage; while we read it, we see not Lear, but we are Lear, we are in his mind, we are sustained by a grandeur which baffles the malice of daughters and storms._ - Charles Lamb; "On the Tragedies of Shakespeare Considered with Reference to their Fitness for Stage Representation". Originally published in _The Reflector_, Volume II, Number 4 (Winter, 1811), as "Theatralia, No. 1 - On Garrick, and Acting; and the Plays of Shakspeare, considered with reference to their fitness for Stage Representation", signed "X" The thing about seeing a performance of a part in a play or literary adaptation (or really any acting role) that one comes to regard as "definitive", is that such a performance will have a detrimental effect on one's ability to objectively judge any subsequent performance of that part, as any such performance will necessarily be found wanting. Antony Sher as Richard III in Bill Alexander's 1984 RSC production, Kenneth Branagh as Henry V in his own 1989 film, Harris Yulin as Willy Loman in David Esbjornson's 2010 Gate Theatre production of _Death of a Salesman_, Gillian Anderson as Blanche DuBois in Benedict Andrews's 2014 Young Vic production of _A Streetcar Named Desire_, even something like Christopher Lee as Dracula or Marlon Brando as Kurtz in Francis Ford Coppola's _Apocalypse Now_ (1978). All definitive. For me, the definitive Lear is a no brainer - Owen Roe in Selina Cartmell's magisterial 2013 Abbey Theatre production. Roe was very much helped by the extraordinarily ambitious direction of Cartmell (current artistic director of the Gate Theatre). However, irrespective of directorial assistance, the scenes on the heath, were unlike anything I've ever seen, as Roe alternates, sentence by sentence (!) between a fairly standard (if brilliantly staged) raging at the heavens, and turning directly to the audience and speaking quietly and calmly, almost emotionlessly. Sentence. By. Sentence. Without breaking the metre of the iambic pentameter verse!! Of course, Cartmell's choice here is obvious; the use of two different styles of delivery serve as a succinct visual/aural metaphor for the inner turmoil of the character, but although it's a thematically simple enough device, it requires a performance of immense control to bring it off. And then we have Anthony Hopkins in writer/director Richard Eyre's (_Iris_; _Notes on a Scandal_; _The Children Act_) TV adaptation for the BBC. Oh dear. His performance was never going to touch Roe's masterclass for me, but what's especially disappointing is how little interested he seems in doing anything beyond giving the barest essentials in his interpretation of the part. Having said that, that Hopkins would appear in any filmic adaptation of _King Lear_ at all is unexpected. He has played the part before – over one-hundred performances in David Hare's 1986 National Theatre production; a run which was almost immediately followed by over one-hundred performances in Peter Hall's 1987 production of _Antony and Cleopatra_. Hopkins had been growing disillusioned with theatre acting for some time, and his success in films such as David Lynch's _The Elephant Man_ (1980) and Roger Donaldson's _The Bounty_ (1984) served only to expedite his growing dissatisfaction. Disliking the experience of performing Shakespeare over two-hundred times in the course of two years, and feeling burnt out (who can blame him), after Antony finished its run, Hopkins moved to the US to pursue film acting full time. He has often spoken since about just how much he hated those two years, and how much he grew to loathe Shakespeare, particularly Lear. On his commentary track for _Titus_ (1999), he points out that as far as he was concerned, he was done with Shakespeare, until director Julie Taymor convinced him to appear in the film adaptation of her own 1994 Theatre for a New Audience production. He also stresses that Titus will most likely be the last time in his life he plays Shakespeare (calling the performance his "_swan song_"). Obviously, he changed his mind (or Eyre changed it for him), but that he would do so with Lear, of all plays, is decidedly unexpected. So with all of that in mind, what exactly is wrong with his performance? How can someone who played the part over one-hundred times possibly give an under par performance? Well, probably because he played the role over one-hundred times. The performance is lethargic, jaded, lazy, as if it's routine, become so familiar that all meaning has evaporated from the text (similar to when you say a word over and over and it starts to sound strange). Hopkins plays Lear as an easy-to-anger man, used to getting his own way, with little time for sentiment, whose grip on reality is becoming increasingly tenuous. Nothing wrong with that - it's a very basic reading of the character, but still nothing inherently wrong with it. The problem is, we've seen Hopkins play this character before, or a variation thereof, in everything from Edward Zwick's _Legends of the Fall_ (1994) to Oliver Stone's _Nixon_ (1995) to Joe Johnson's _The Wolfman_ (2010). Indeed, his performances in Eyre's Lear is, beat for beat, a virtual carbon copy of his performance in Taymor's _Titus_. There are many similarities between the characters, to be sure, but not so many that the parts should be played in exactly the same way (as a contrast, look at Brian Cox's performance in the two roles; Titus in Deborah Warner's ground-breaking 1987 RSC production, and Lear in Warner's 1990 National Theatre production – three years, and an ocean of interpretive difference separate the performances). Hopkins's performance has two gears – scenery chewing and shouty scenery chewing. That's it. Compare the lack of pathos, emotion, or nuance in his performance to, for example, Cox, Paul Scofield (in Peter Brook's 1971 film), Jüri Järvet (in Grigori Kozintsev's 1971 film), Laurence Olivier (in Michael Elliott's 1983 TV movie for ITV), or Anthony Sher (in Gregory Doran's 2018 RSC production). All of them show more range, and a wider and more complete understanding of the text than Hopkins's one note performance. Also, his tendency to pause in the middle of verse lines is extremely distracting, and completely disrupts the meter. Such pauses serve to create artificial caesuras in the iambic pentameter lines, turning the verse into a bizarre amalgamation of anapaestic and dactylic hexameters, and even heptameters. A stronger director would have stamped this out, or had the actor speak in prose (as a few of the other actors do), but to have the actor speak in verse, but show no respect for the verse is...strange. Thankfully the rest of the cast are universally strong. And what a cast! Emma Thompson as an especially nasty Goneril; Jim Broadbent as a deeply sympathetic Gloucester; John MacMillan as a soft-spoken Edmund; Andrew Scott as a highly emotional Edgar; Jim Carter as a gruff Kent; soon-to-be-superstar Florence Pugh as a very young and wide-eyed Cordelia; Karl Johnson as a decidedly serious Fool; Christopher Eccleston as a suitably ridiculous Oswald; Anthony Calf as a take-charge Albany; and Chukwudi Iwuji as a considerate France. However, the film is stolen by the work of Emily Watson and Tobias Menzies as an insanely bloodthirsty Regan and Cornwall. Watson's Regan oozes raw sexuality, and the (very graphic) blinding scene clearly turns both of them on. Two terrific performances which left me wishing there was more of them together in the play. Also impressive is Eyre's direction, although the lack of editing rhythm in the opening scene is a little strange, and the shot composition in places tends to flatten the image, making it seem a little like a filmed play. His decision to set the play in modern London, however, with Lear as a retiring pseudo-dictator, works very well (Edgar is an astrophysicist, Edmund is in the armed forces). In this context, the shopping mall scene is especially well conceived and executed, as a now quite mad Lear wanders around a near-derelict shopping mall in a bad part of town, dressed like a vagrant, pushing a shopping trolley, and talking to a doll. It's a deeply unsettling image that encapsulates perfectly just how far he has fallen. Also well conceived is the scene set in an asylum seekers' refugee camp. The political commentary is a little on the nose, as Lear looks around the camp at the faces of the refugees, forcing him to consider issues of which he's never before conceived, but it's effective, timely and non-intrusive. So, all-in-all, a strong adaptation with an excellent cast brought down only by a weak central performance. Unfortunately, the part of Lear is so completely central, pivotal, and dominating, that if it doesn't work, there's a problem. Hopkins's performance isn't so bad as to distract too much from the excellent work done elsewhere in the piece, but what's annoying about it is it could easily have been so much better. Mind you, members of the cast have been active on Twitter and the interview circuit for the last couple of weeks talking about how much they loved working with Hopkins, and how tremendous they think he is in the role (oftentimes, going to the set even when they weren't working, just to watch him filming). So, what the hell do I know?

Jun 23, 2021