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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsHamnet, a tear jerker I loved.
Hamnet.If you studied the life of Shakespeare - his times - in high school or later, the staging of the movie alone makes it worth watching.. (I had the best possible high school teacher for Shakespeare, who 55 years later I still recall fondly.)
I have never seen the Globe Theater (which is shown at the end of the film) better modeled in the way I have understood it over the years.
The acting is superb, and I found the (fictional) story of Shakespeare's imagined home life very compelling. It's a cut above of similar movies, say for instance, Shakespeare in Love.
I'm an old sentimental fool, but I have to say I wept during part of it, since I cannot imagine living through the death of a child, and the grief it must entail. It's portrayed very well.
I basically concur with this review: The Most Devastating Movie Ive Seen in Years
I recommend the film highly.
rsdsharp
(11,866 posts)We read Romeo and Juliet in my freshman English class. The teacher was a very nice lady, but she pronounced Tybalt as Tie-balt. And this was AFTER they had taken the entire class to see Zeffirellis Romeo and Juliet.
I insisted on pronouncing it correctly when I read, which did not endear me to certain classmates. To her credit, after about a week, she stood up in front of the class and announced that mine was the correct pronunciation.
I look forward to seeing Hamnet.
GreatGazoo
(4,520 posts)It is interesting that they named the twins after neighbors -- Judith and Hamnet Sadler, a baker -- rather than family. Sadler was recorded as a witness on the 3-page will. The Sadlers had 14 children of their own, although 6 died in infancy. Sadler's business burned in 1595. Hamnet Shakspeare dies in 1596 and then the Sadler's named a son "William" in 1598.
