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Ophelia

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United Kingdom, United States · 2019
Rated PG-13 · 1h 54m
Director Claire McCarthy
Starring Daisy Ridley, Naomi Watts, George MacKay, Clive Owen
Genre Drama, History, Romance

Ophelia comes of age as lady-in-waiting to Queen Gertrude while capturing the affections of young prince Hamlet. A passionate romance secretly begins between them. However, as lust and betrayal threaten the kingdom of Denmark, Ophelia finds herself trapped between her love for Hamlet and controlling her own destiny.

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What are critics saying?

80

Film Threat by

Ophelia is an amazing movie that puts a positive feminist spin on a very familiar story. I’d love to see more classic stories retold from a female perspective like this one, written by women and directed by women.

90

TheWrap by Alonso Duralde

Ridley is simply extraordinary, and she and MacKay give us a younger, lustier Ophelia and Hamlet than we usually get on the big screen.

70

Variety by Amy Nicholson

The best part of Ridley’s performance is her plodding, heavy-footed walk that reminds us this well-groomed lady is still a stubborn child underneath her fancy dress. She has a blank, open face that absorbs the court’s machinations and reflects little back until she decides to act insane.

42

The Film Stage by Daniel Schindel

Even if the conceit is faulty, that doesn’t mean it’s impossible for this film to rework this material into an intelligent riff on the play. Unfortunately, it still doesn’t.

50

IndieWire by Kate Erbland

McCarthy’s film, based on Lisa Klein’s 2006 novel of the same name, takes its best ideas (and its best performers) and traps them in a cheap narrative that would will likely rank among the worst of many Shakespearean adaptations. It’s such a good idea on paper, rendered totally inert on the screen.

63

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

Director McCarthy stages a red shadow pantomime that’s the best filmed version of “the play within a play.” Ever.

80

The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy

This vigorous, colorful and clever melodrama smartly rethinks both the play and the character, making her a far more proactive figure than Shakespeare did in addition to entirely reimagining her fate.

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