The Merchant of Venice (2004 film)
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The Merchant of Venice | |
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Directed by | Michael Radford |
Produced by | Cary Brokaw Michael Cowan |
Written by | Michael Radford |
Starring | Al Pacino Jeremy Irons Joseph Fiennes Lynn Collins |
Music by | Jocelyn Pook |
Cinematography | Benoît Delhomme |
Editing by | Lucia Zucchetti |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) |
Running time | 138 min. |
IMDb profile |
The Merchant of Venice is a 2004 movie based on Shakespeare's play with the same name.
It follows the text very closely, only missing lines here and there. The director, Michael Radford, believed that Shylock was Shakespeare's first tragic hero, who reaches a catastrophe due to his own flaws: thus the film does not show Shylock purely as a villain, but partly also as a victim. It begins with text and a montage of how the Jewish community is cruelly abused by the bigoted Christian population of Venice. One of the last shots of the film also brings attention to the fact that, as a convert, Shylock would have been cast out of the Jewish community in Venice, no longer allowed to live in the ghetto.
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[edit] Cast
It stars Al Pacino as Shylock the Jew, Jeremy Irons as Antonio, Joseph Fiennes as Bassanio and Lynn Collins as Portia.
Other cast members include:
- Zuleikha Robinson (Jessica)
- Kris Marshall (Gratiano)
- Charlie Cox (Lorenzo)
- Heather Goldenhersh (Nerissa)
- Mackenzie Crook (Lancelot Gobbo)
- John Sessions (Salerio)
- Gregor Fisher (Solanio)
- Ron Cook (Old Gobbo)
- Allan Corduner (Tubal)
- Anton Rodgers (The Duke)
- David Harewood (Prince of Morocco)
[edit] Plot
[edit] Reactions
Most film critics praised The Merchant of Venice, especially for Michael Radford's and Al Pacino's sympathetic, yet powerful interpretation of the Shylock character. Critics also praised the dark, realistic look of the streets of Venice for which production designer Bruno Rubeo was honored by the Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists. Despite the praise it received, its performance at the box office left much to be desired. Its worldwide theatrical gross was about $20.2 million (its production budget was $30 million).[1]