Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1965


Othello (1965 British film)

Buy Othello (1965 British film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'Othello' is a 1965 film based on the National Theatre Company's staging of Shakespeare's 'Othello' (1964-1966) staged by John Dexter. Directed by Stuart Burge, the film stars Laurence Olivier, Maggie Smith, Joyce Redman, and Frank Finlay, who all received Oscar nominations, and provided film debuts for both Derek Jacobi and Michael Gambon.

Background



The film retains most of Shakespeare's original play, and does not change the order of scenes, as do Olivier's 'Hamlet' and 'Richard III'. The only major omission is the Fool's scene, although other minor lines are cut here and there, though the stage version contained more of the play than the film. Derek Jacobi (Cassio) and Michael Gambon all made their film debuts in 'Othello', while Edward Hardwicke (Montano) would go on to work with the National for seven years.

The film of 'Othello' used enlarged duplicates of the original stage settings, rather than having elaborate new sets built. Olivier's former backers for his Shakespeare films were all deceased by 1965, and he was unable to raise the money to do a film version on location or on elaborate sets. Nearly a decade earlier, Olivier had been attempting to find financial backing for his own film version of 'Macbeth' after he performed the role in 1955 at Stratford, but ultimately without success.Anthony Davies "Macbeth" in Michael Dobson & Stanley Wells 'The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare', Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001, p.271-75, 275 The National Theatre Company had already produced a staged film of Chekhov's 'Uncle Vanya' (1963) and would later produce Strindberg's 'The Dance of Death' (1969). The Olivier 'Othello' is the first English-language filmed version of the play made in color (there had been a Russian version in color in 1955) and widescreen. It was the second major film adaption of the work after a production in 1952 by Orson Welles. In the U.S., it did not play the usual several-week run given to most films; instead, it played for only two days. The film was exhibited as a roadshow presentation.

Of all Olivier's Shakespeare films, 'Othello' is the one with the least music. Iago and the soldiers sing a drinking song in one scene, and in another, musicians are seen playing briefly on exotic instruments, but, otherwise, the film has no music.

Reception



Olivier played Othello in blackface. He also adopted an exotic accent of his own invention, developed a special walk, and learned how to speak in a voice considerably deeper than his normal one. Columnist Inez Robb disparagingly compared Olivier's performance to Al Jolson in 'The Jazz Singer'. She described Olivier's performance as "high camp", and said "I was certainly in tune with the gentleman sitting next to me who kept asking 'When does he sing 'Mammy'?"Inside Oscar by Damien Boa and Mason Wiley, Ballantine Books, page 383 Film critic Pauline Kael gave the production and Olivier's portrayal one of her most glowing reviews, shaming the major movie studios for giving Olivier so little money to make the film that he and the public had to be content with what was almost literally a filmed stage production, while other films received multimillion dollar budgets.Pauline Kael (1970) 'Kiss Kiss Bang Bang'. Marion Boyars Publishers John Simon, while disagreeing with the approach the production's interpretation took, declared that, "Olivier plays this misconceived Othello spectacularly, in a manner that is always a perverse joy to behold".Stanley Wells. 'Shakespeare in the Theatre: An Anthology of Criticism'.

One particular thing which has caused distinctive amounts of offense, and a device which primarily works in film rather than on-stage, was Olivier's rolling of his eyes: a mannerism often shown in early depictions of black people in blackface films. This device specifically links to Al Jolson and is unconnected to any Shakespearean-era stage direction.Blacks in Films, Jim Pines,

It remains the only Shakespeare film in which all the principals were nominated for Oscars. Finlay (Iago) was nominated for Best Supporting Actor despite having the role with the most lines in the play: 1117 to Olivier's 856. Olivier does, however, appear on screen three minutes longer than Finlay.

In 2021 music professor Bright Sheng stepped down from teaching a University of Michigan undergraduate musical composition class, where he says he had intended to show how Giuseppe Verdi adapted William Shakespeare's play 'Othello' into his opera 'Otello', after a controversy over his showing the movie, allegedly without giving students a warning that it contained blackface. The World Socialist Web Site called the matter a "right-wing, racialist attack" on Sheng, adding that Laurence Olivier's blackface, far from being racist, was actually a deliberate rejection of earlier "semi-racist approaches" that had portrayed Othello as light-skinned, and of "commentators appalled at the thought of the white maiden Desdemona falling head over heels in love with a black man."

Cast includes



*Laurence Olivier as Othello

*Maggie Smith as Desdemona

*Joyce Redman as Emilia

*Frank Finlay as Iago

*Derek Jacobi as Cassio

*Robert Lang as Roderigo

*Kenneth Mackintosh as Lodovico

*Anthony Nicholls as Brabantio

*Sheila Reid as Bianca

*Edward Hardwicke as Montano

*Michael Gambon as Senator/Soldier/Cypriot

See also



*Shakespeare on screen

*1965 in film

References




Buy Othello (1965 British film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1965



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1109412775.