A reimagining of Hamlet, told from Ophelia's perspective.A reimagining of Hamlet, told from Ophelia's perspective.A reimagining of Hamlet, told from Ophelia's perspective.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 4 wins & 4 nominations total
Lenka Olsanová
- Lady in Waiting 1
- (as Lenka Olsanova)
Daniela Hirsh
- Lady in Waiting 2
- (as Daniela Hirshova)
Veronika Strapková
- Lady in Waiting 3
- (as Veronika Strapkova)
Nhung Hong Dangová
- Lady in Waiting 6
- (as Nhung Hong Dangova)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I love Shakespeare, but I've also always had a soft spot for Ophelia. This reimagining of Hamlet is not faithful to the original text, so have an open mind and you may enjoy it. I don't generally like movies that apply modern sensibilities to classic stories and characters, but this one was tolerable. The acting was fine, the sets and costumes beautiful. Overall it was a fine film. But if you're a purist, don't bother.
As a huge fan of Shakespeare, I truly enjoyed this alternate take on the tale of Hamlet and Ophelia. The star-studded cast was a delight to watch deliver superb performances. The sets were absolutely breathtaking and the costuming was tasteful and evocative. The film was a rich feast of color and the music touched my heart. I found myself singing along with the theme and humming it after the end of the movie. I just love that a woman wrote the book, another the screenplay and the director was female as well. This definitely is a step in the right direction of telling "herstory" to take its rightful place aside "history".
Hard to believe the hostility directed against this movie.
It's not Hamlet, but another take on the story from the viewpoint of Ophelia. The director chose to show the protagonist as a strong women.
Enjoyed the character development and the storyline. Directing was solid. All the actors were quite believable in their roles.
This was enjoyable in my opinion. I've seen Hamlet. I've read the play. This is not an exact remake of the original work but I liked that it was a reimagining.
In this film, Ophelia is our main character and we seen how things unfold from her perspective. Her role in the original work is a big deal seeing as she was the innocence in a corrupt court who was driven to insanity and then suicide after the deaths of the men she loved most. Suicide was her escape from all the revenge, evil and madness taking place around her. Here we see her much more resilient without losing her innocent nature. The basic plot of the film is still present but things don't go down the same way.
I thought it was filmed well and the acting was good. I thought the concept presented was creative. I'm sure that a lot of folks will take issue and feel like it was to far removed from the original work but if you take it for what it is rather than point out all the differences, it was a good film. I say check it out.
In this film, Ophelia is our main character and we seen how things unfold from her perspective. Her role in the original work is a big deal seeing as she was the innocence in a corrupt court who was driven to insanity and then suicide after the deaths of the men she loved most. Suicide was her escape from all the revenge, evil and madness taking place around her. Here we see her much more resilient without losing her innocent nature. The basic plot of the film is still present but things don't go down the same way.
I thought it was filmed well and the acting was good. I thought the concept presented was creative. I'm sure that a lot of folks will take issue and feel like it was to far removed from the original work but if you take it for what it is rather than point out all the differences, it was a good film. I say check it out.
I watched this because I wanted to see what Daisy Ridley's acting was like outside of Star Wars. I had seen her in Murder on the Orient Express, but her role was relatively small in that. This film isn't incredibly exciting, but Ridley certainly gives a fine performance as a fleshed-out Ophelia. The other actors carry themselves well, in addition; and the period sets, costumes, and locations are convincing.
Did you know
- TriviaThe lyrical chanting heard at several pivotal points comes from the play itself. "Hamlet" Act 2 scene 2 page 5 when Ophelias father Polonius reads aloud a letter from Hamlet containing the lines "Doubt that the stars are fire Doubt that the sun doth move Doubt truth to be a liar But never doubt I love"
- GoofsWhen Hamlet reads the Bible to Ophelia, he recites verses from the Song of Songs, but his book is open to "ParalipomenOn I", i. the first book of the Chronicles.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Ophelia: You may think you know my story. Many have told it. It has long passed into history... into myth.
Ophelia: I have seen more of heaven and hell than most people dream of. But I was always a willful girl, and followed my heart, and spoke my mind. And it is high time I should tell you my story myself.
- Alternate versionsThere are two versions. Runtimes are: "1h 54m (114 min)" and "1h 46m( 106 min) (United States)".
- SoundtracksPalestrina Mix
Written by Bacchus
- How long is Ophelia?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Офелія
- Filming locations
- Krivoklát Castle, Krivoklát, Czech Republic(only the chapel, wedding scene)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $12,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $50,722
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $22,145
- Jun 30, 2019
- Gross worldwide
- $338,940
- Runtime
- 1h 46m(106 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39:1
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