Houston Chronicle

NOT ‘TRUE’ TO LIFE BUT STILL SATISFYING

“ALL IS TRUE” TAKES CREATIVE LICENSE WHILE EXPLORING THE LIFE OF SHAKESPEAR­E.

- BY MICHAEL PHILLIPS | CHICAGO TRIBUNE

A warm and moving speculatio­n on Shakespear­e’s final years, “All Is True” has no interest in adhering to the historical record of the dramatist’s life and résumé. There is no single historical record. And there’s precious little agreement among any two scholars regarding anything to do with Shakespear­e — from the alleged authorship of his alleged plays (the Oxfordian theory pegs Edward de Vere as the real author) to the particular­s of Shakespear­e’s life before and after returning home to Stratford-upon-Avon.

In “All Is True,” an onscreen inscriptio­n notes that in 1613, Shakespear­e’s Globe Theatre, the toast of London, caught fire during a performanc­e of “Henry VIII” (alternate title: “All Is True”) and burned to a crisp. From there, screenwrit­er Ben Elton sends Shakespear­e home to an uneasy retirement, where he is met by long-neglected wife Anne (Judi Dench) and grown daughters Susanna (Lydia Wilson) and Judith (Kathryn Wilder).

He’s persona non grata in his own home, for good reason: The genius poet has spent his glory years swanning around in London, making plays and a reputation for himself. He was far from Stratford when his only son, Hamnet, died. Now Shakespear­e can only grieve and content himself with building a garden. At one point he acknowledg­es: “I’ve found it easier to create things with words.”

Elton’s narrative heightens a couple of scandals threatenin­g his daughters’ happiness. Eventually the screenplay rolls out its biggest leap: a dramatic twist that owes something to the David

Auburn play “Proof,” as well as something akin to Elizabetha­n soap opera — “As the World Doth Turn,” or thereabout­s. That part of “All Is True” tastes over-egged to me.

And yet the gradual, cumulative effect of this autumnal valentine is undeniable. Branagh’s pretty good at this stuff, as you might know, and his portrayal reveals a man both vain and humbled, imposing but subtly detailed. (Branagh’s prosthetic nose makes him look like Ben Kingsley’s separated-at-birth twin.) Dench cuts straight to the heart of Anne’s long-simmering resentment­s, which dissolve into a closer connection with the man she married and then, partially, lost. Also, there’s a peach of a scene recalling Orson Welles’ “Chimes at Midnight,” where Shakespear­e and his friend, patron and possible crush, the Earl of Southampto­n (a splendid Ian McKellen), exchange spontaneou­s recitation­s of Shakespear­e’s Sonnet 29.

Branagh may be uneven as a director, but “All Is True” shows a better eye and a less fussy, more purposeful sense of rhythm and pacing than all but one or two of the Shakespear­e adaptation­s Branagh has brought to the screen. Elton’s writing is efficient and often droll, especially when Southampto­n or Shakespear­e is gently tearing some Stratfordi­an prig a new one. There’s plenty to argue about here, including whatever happened with Shakespear­e’s contributi­on to what some believe to be his last co-authorship, “The Two Noble Kinsmen.” But that’s another story. This one goes its own way, and the performanc­es are excellent.

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Sony Pictures Classics

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