Variety
This is picture-making at its best.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Laurence Olivier
Cast
Laurence Olivier,
Jean Simmons,
John Laurie,
Esmond Knight,
Anthony Quayle,
Niall MacGinnis
Genre
Drama
Hamlet is a Danish prince who is still devastated over the sudden death of his father and the quick, subsequent remarriage of his mother to his uncle, Claudius. Informed by the ghost of his father that Claudius murdered him, Hamlet schemes to take revenge.
Variety
This is picture-making at its best.
Chicago Tribune by Michael Wilmington
It's as impressive for the near-flawless performances of its deep cast of British film and theatrical stars (including Jean Simmons as Ophelia, Eileen Herlie as Gertrude and John Gielgud as the voice of Hamlet's father's ghost) as it is for its director's surprisingly rich and baroque visual style. [04 Aug 2006, p.C8]
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
Considering that 90% of those seeing any production of Hamlet will know the story at the outset, the key to an adaptation's success is what the director does beyond the dialogue. That's one area in which Olivier's 1948 version excels.
Variety by Staff (Not Credited)
This is picture-making at its best.
The New York Times by Bosley Crowther
The filmed Hamlet of Laurence Olivier gives absolute proof that these classics are magnificently suited to the screen.
New York Daily News by Kate Cameron
A brilliant, thrilling, vital transference of the play to the screen.
The New Yorker by Pauline Kael
Whatever the omissions, the mutilations, the mistakes, this is very likely the most exciting and most alive production of Hamlet you will ever see on the screen.
Empire by David Parkinson
Olivier's classic and personalised version of the troubled Prince of Denmark is still highly atmospheric and intriguing.
TV Guide Magazine
At 155 minutes, this screen adaptation of Shakespeare's most celebrated play bears scars from deep cuts in the text.
Chicago Reader by Dave Kehr
Laurence Olivier's famous 1948 interpretation of Shakespeare's play suffers slightly from his pop-Freud approach to the character and from some excessively flashy, wrongheaded camera work—including the notorious moment when Hamlet begins the soliloquy and the camera begins to track back.
TV Guide Magazine by Staff (Not Credited)
At 155 minutes, this screen adaptation of Shakespeare's most celebrated play bears scars from deep cuts in the text.
Time Out
Despite winning several Oscars, Olivier's (condensed) version of Shakespeare's masterpiece makes for frustrating viewing: for all its 'cinematic' ambitions (the camera prowling pointlessly along the gloomy corridors of Elsinore), it's basically a stagy showcase for the mannered performance of the director in the lead role (though he's ably supported by a number of British theatrical stalwarts).
Time Out by Staff (Not Credited)
Despite winning several Oscars, Olivier's (condensed) version of Shakespeare's masterpiece makes for frustrating viewing: for all its 'cinematic' ambitions (the camera prowling pointlessly along the gloomy corridors of Elsinore), it's basically a stagy showcase for the mannered performance of the director in the lead role (though he's ably supported by a number of British theatrical stalwarts).
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