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Hamilton

An American Musical
2020 | 160m | English

(133656 votes)

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Popularity: 5 (history)

Details

Presenting the tale of American founding father Alexander Hamilton, this filmed version of the original Broadway smash hit is the story of America then, told by America now.
Release Date: Jul 03, 2020
Director: Thomas Kail
Writer: Lin-Manuel Miranda, Ron Chernow
Genres: Drama, History
Keywords upper class, corruption, adultery, presidential election, musical, biography, stage show, based on play or musical, 18th century, broadway musical, pistol duel, american revolution, revolutionary war, founding fathers, stage musical, filmed play, live theatre, filmed theater, musical proshot
Production Companies RadicalMedia, 5000 Broadway Productions, Old 320 Sycamore, Nevis Productions
Box Office Revenue: $850,000
Budget: $12,500,000
Updates Updated: Sep 07, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Lin-Manuel Miranda Alexander Hamilton
Leslie Odom Jr. Aaron Burr
Renée Elise Goldsberry Angelica Schuyler
Phillipa Soo Eliza Hamilton
Daveed Diggs Marquis de Lafayette / Thomas Jefferson
Christopher Jackson George Washington
Jasmine Cephas Jones Peggy Schuyler / Maria Reynolds
Okieriete Onaodowan Hercules Mulligan / James Madison
Anthony Ramos John Laurens / Philip Hamilton
Jonathan Groff King George
Carleigh Bettiol Ensemble
Ariana DeBose Ensemble
Hope Easterbrook Ensemble
Sydney James Harcourt Phillip Schuyler / James Reynolds / Doctor / Ensemble
Sasha Hutchings Ensemble
Thayne Jasperson Samuel Seabury / Ensemble
Elizabeth Judd Ensemble
Jon Rua Charles Lee / Ensemble
Austin Smith Ensemble
Seth Stewart Ensemble
Ephraim Sykes George Eacker / Ensemble
Name Job
Alex Lacamoire Music Arranger, Music Supervisor, Orchestrator, Conductor, Musician
Andy Blankenbuehler Choreographer
Bethany Knox Casting
David Korins Set Designer
Nevin Steinberg Sound Supervisor, Sound Designer
Charles G. LaPointe Wig Designer, Hair Designer
David Backus Unit Production Manager
Robin Mishkin Abrams First Assistant Director
Fred Waggoner Hair Supervisor
Nicky Saunders Makeup Artist
Jack Donnelly Camera Operator
Bruce MacCallum Camera Operator
Declan Quinn Director of Photography
Jonah Moran Editor
Howell Binkley Lighting Design
Tom Gaito Second Assistant Director
Nan Marie Sandle Production Supervisor
Tony Volante Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Shannon Williams Makeup Artist
Pat Capone Camera Operator
David Knox Camera Operator
Jay Vicari Sound Engineer
Dave Paterson Sound Editor
Charles Christopher Rubino Title Designer
Frederick Agyemang VFX Artist
Ryan Dodson Wardrobe Master
Daniel Timmons Sound Editor
Chris MacKenzie VFX Artist
Robert Fernandez Additional Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Bernard Telsey Casting
Paul Tazewell Costume Design
Lin-Manuel Miranda Writer, Music Arranger, Songs, Lyricist, Musical
Bill Winters Camera Operator
Maceo Bishop Steadicam Operator
Ron Chernow Book
Thomas Kail Director
Name Title
Chris Rouchard Co-Producer
Lin-Manuel Miranda Producer
Jeffrey Seller Producer
Jill Furman Executive Producer
Sander Jacobs Executive Producer
Jon Kamen Co-Executive Producer
Dave Sirulnick Co-Executive Producer
Thomas Kail Producer
Justin Wilkes Co-Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 26 41 15
2024 5 31 70 15
2024 6 24 37 17
2024 7 29 51 17
2024 8 24 43 16
2024 9 17 24 11
2024 10 25 40 13
2024 11 27 56 16
2024 12 24 42 16
2025 1 25 37 16
2025 2 17 25 4
2025 3 9 23 2
2025 4 4 9 2
2025 5 4 10 2
2025 6 4 7 3
2025 7 3 3 2
2025 8 5 7 2
2025 9 13 18 5
2025 10 6 7 5

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 135 539
Year Month High Avg
2025 9 61 263
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 89 526
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 234 637
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 343 734
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 578 736
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 705 791
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 851 922

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Reviews

sykobanana
4.0

A Disappointment This is a musical not made for people outside of the USA. I had to watch the thing again and wiki Hamilton to try to figure out who was who except for some of the bigger names. Going by the poster, this is was meant to be some attempted rise to fame of Harry Potter in Holly ... wood. The casting was varied, which is great generally, but not representative of history (noone looked like what they should have). Historical themes seemed to be swapped around and added in for convenience-sake. Some performances were good, Soo, Groff and Diggs, whilst others (MIranda - who was better in Mary Poppins Returns) just felt flat and tired. It felt like 6 or so cameras were placed and then just recorded. And the choreography was distracting at times, not complimentary. And character development - the only one who shows any is Soo's character. This might be a great musical, but it is not a great movie (despite what people are reviewing it as). It is hard to follow as a citizen of the world who does not know US political history details nor its players. Its cinematography, casting and set pieces felt lazy (this could have been turned into grand cinema). And it was overly long...people might expect this type of thing to go for hours on West End to get their money's worth, but 2hrs 40 is overkill in this medium. The hype behind this made me think this was brilliant. I was majorly disappointed.

Jun 23, 2021
narrator56
7.0

I suppose this movie was behind the eight ball from the very start in a way. On the one hand, there was such a tremendous hype for it as a play, it built the expectation of being blown away, and on the other hand, it being presented in its live theater version made it lose some of the visual impact ... of seeing it in person. We expect a greater production value on the screen. The story is great, and should be required viewing for children at a certain age. I confess, I wasn’t enthralled by it as a musical. I guess I am too used to musicals that have regular dialogue broken up by songs rather than continuous sung dialogue. If there had been dialogue surroundIng eight or ten lovely songs like Helpless, I would have given it top marks. It is still an impressive production. I feel I have to comment on the diverse cast. I am white and had no problem with the cast choices. I would have cried foul if they had presented an all white cast as some seem to think was required. I had an acquaintance complain, “What if they cast a white actor as Martin Luther King? And all I can do is flip it upside down. There are only a half-dozen people of color in our history books for every hundred Caucasians, and if it reaches the point where whites stop whining when people of color play those roles, I am convinced that people of color will be totally fine with whites playing the roles of people of color. But we aren’t there yet, are we?

Jun 23, 2021
CaptNemo
N/A

This is not a Movie. It is a television program. It is a filmed stage play that is being broadcast on television. These things do not add up to this being a film, not even a TV-movie. ...

Jun 23, 2021
tmdb28039023
1.0

"My name is Alexander Hamilton/And there's a million things I haven't done/But just you wait, just you wait," Lin-Manuel Miranda sort of sings at the beginning of Hamilton. About three hours later we're still waiting. Hamilton is divided into two acts. The first covers Hamilton's arrival in New Y ... ork City in 1776, his work as General George Washington's aide-de-camp during the American Revolution, and how he met and married Eliza Schuyler. The second covers Hamilton's postwar work as the first United States Secretary of the Treasury and his death in a duel with Aaron Burr. The first act is strictly hagiographic; Hamilton is so messianic that Burr (Leslie Odom Jr.) might as well be called Judas. Watching the meteoric rise of the protagonist's military and political career unfold in song and dance form, I began to experience a revelation; if they changed the historical pe-riod and characters, this could easily become Forrest Gump: The Musical. We never really get a sense of why Hamilton was so special, important, and essential in the lives of so many people; his success seems to be the result of a geographical-temporal accident — that is to say, Hamilton is always in the right place at the right time. Miranda has allegedly written songs with many adjectives and very few verbs; lyrics that care more about the 'what' than the 'how' and 'why'. "How does a bastard, orphan, son of a whore/And a Scots-man, dropped in the middle of a forgotten spot/In the Caribbean by providence impoverished/In squalor, grow up to be a hero and a scholar?" That’s a good question, deserving of a better answer than "by working a lot harder/By being a lot smarter/By being a self-starter." And, apparently, by being vague as all hell. Hamilton thus moves from one plot point to the next as in a dream, without ever conjuring up a precise image of the cha-racter's trajectory. The second act is more specific about Hamilton's legacy; the character stops just 'being' and starts 'doing.' There is, however, another problem here. The real Hamilton was more a man of words than actions, and his writings must surely be fascinating to the appropriate reader; on the other hand, one doesn’t read him for the sheer entertainment value. To mention just one example, Hamilton helped ratify the United States Constitution by writing 51 of the 85 essays known as The Federalist Papers, which are still used as one of the most important references for the interpretation of the Constitution. This is almost as impressive as it is boring, and all the hip hop choreography in the world can't change the fact that Miranda's alleged songs, although true to the spirit of the statesman who inspired them, are devoid of all trace of showmanship. These are long, heavily expository litanies, laden with facts and dates, as if written by a high school student who can’t remember his History otherwise. Meanwhile, King George III of England (Jona-than Groff, who steals the show in his too brief and few appearances) is depicted as a buffoon, but has the catchiest song in the entire production. All of the above notwithstanding, Hamilton's biggest flaw is Miranda himself. As a composer he clearly favors quantity over quality, but a performer with authority and presence might have been able, with a superhuman effort, to elevate the author's pedestrian material. Miranda is very far from being that performer; his dancing can be generously described as spastic, and his singing is more of an irritating nasal whine, as if he inhaled helium before each number — as opposed to the oxygen for which he visibly gasps as he tries to sing and dance at the same time. Oh, and to be perfectly non-PC, his physical resemblance to the Bumblebee Man from The Simp-sons isn’t very pleasing either. All things considered, Miranda surrounds himself with a wonderful cast; so wonderful indeed that each individual member, as well as the ensemble as a whole, outshines the star, who is exposed as a black hole of charisma and talent that sucks all the joy out of singing and dancing.

Sep 03, 2022
badelf
9.0

If you didn't know going in, this isn't either a film or a TV show. It's a recording of the Broadway play of the same name. Admittedly, this play is for Americans who already have some idea of history. That probably excludes the younger generations, since the public school systems have gone south ... with years of Republican under-funding. (Seriously, some teachers make less than burger flippers.) As a stage actor and a history buff, I loved this play and am so sorry I didn't get a chance to see it on Broadway. There are multiple reasons I gave this a nine, the major of which is that I'm rating it as a play, not a film. First, I was blown away by the creativity. There is no spoken dialogue which is unusual for a musical. Second, it's done nearly all in hip-hop/rap, with one set-piece even in slam battle. The staging is great. Kudos for creative use of a turntable. I was blown away by the amazing, seemingly complicated, "rewind" scene. Yes, it may or may not be historically accurate. (History, or "his-story" is written by the victors, isn't it?) It's good story telling. It's political. It's fun and it's touching.

Nov 22, 2022
GenerationofSwine
1.0

I guess it's a musical, and the world needs more of them, so there is that going for it. And I guess the races are swapped so... that is supposed to make it really good for reasons that aren't really clear. But, really, it's void of wit and insight, it is completely insulting to history with the ... only thing that seems accurate and true to life is that Hamilton existed and was Secretary of State And the views expressed by Hamilton are the least Hamiltonian views you're ever going to see. If you've ever read him, you kind of wonder if this is based on the same Alexander Hamilton. 1776 got a LOT of history wrong for artistic liberties, but at least the theme was accurate and it got more right than wrong. Hamilton doesn't even try. It's the story of Hamilton written by people that haven't even heard of his Report on Manufacturing and the economy he created.

Jan 10, 2023
ARGMAN
1.0

What a load of rubbish, trying too much to be edgy it became disgusting ...

Mar 03, 2024
CapreseMartini
1.0

I didn’t finish Hamilton. I didn’t want to. I didn’t need to. From the moment someone opened their mouth and started rapping about the Federalist Papers, I knew: this was not for me. Impressive, I guess, but also exhausting. It’s like being stuck at a dinner party where everyone speaks in rhyming ... couplets and references the Constitution. I didn’t sign up for “Founding Fathers: The Talent Show.” There’s a certain smugness to it all, too — that unbearable “we’re making history cool!” vibe that only makes it more unbearable. It’s like being trapped in a high school production with a million-dollar budget. Hamilton is uniquely bad because it’s exactly the kind of thing a theater kid thinks is genius while everyone else in the room slowly loses the will to live.

Mar 27, 2025