Millennium Post

A date with Shakespear­e

The films screened to commemorat­e Shakespear­e’s 400th death anniversar­y, included Macbeth, King Lear, All Night Long, Hamlet, Throne of Blood and Othello

- SHASHWAT SAJAL

Everyone, at least for once, have come across the works of William Shakespear­e or have in the least heard about him. Also, there are many, who are familiar with the name of Shakespear­e, but might not have got a chance to witness his work through a book, a play or a movie.

To introduce such people to the world of the greatest dramatist of all time and to commemorat­e his 400th death anniversar­y, six movies from different internatio­nally acclaimed director were recently screened in the CD Deshmukh Auditorium at India Internatio­nal Centre (IIC) in the national Capital.

The film screening ‘A Date with Shakespear­e’ was the part of IIC annual festival ‘The IIC Experience-2016’.

The films screened included Macbeth, King Lear, All Night Long, Hamlet, Throne of Blood and Othello, which were directed by Roman Polanski, Peter Brook, Basil Dearden, Grigori Kozintsev and Iosef Shapiro, Akira Kurosawa and Orson Welles respective­ly. Each film was critically acclaimed at its time and had bagged many awards. Othello had received Grand Prize of the Festival at Cannes Film Festival in 1952.

The films, which are considered as classics now, are individual­istic. While some portay the plays in traditiona­l manner, others transport the action to other periods and setting. For example, Basil Dearden’s All Night Long, translate ‘Othello’ to the smoky world of sixties London jazz clubs, showing just how current and relatable the themes of Shakespear­e’s work continue to be.

King Lear (1971) is a noted trag- edy in black and white, which delivered the saga of the aging, self-deluding regent in a evocative manner. Whereas Othello (1951) rearrange the order of the tragedy and starts with the funeral of the protagonis­t, thereby turning it into a film noir as the murder investigat­ion takes place to find out the cause of their deaths. The movie concluded the film festival.

William Shakespear­e’s plays remains highly popular and are constantly studied, performed and reinterpre­ted in diverse cultural and political context throughout the world.

Around 400 films based on Shakespear­e have been made and shared online. Shakespear­e has an annual commercial value of over $ 1 billion with over 5,000 individual stage production each year.

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