Plot
In 16th century Venice, when a merchant must default on a large loan from an abused Jewish moneylender for a friend with romantic ambitions, the bitterly vengeful creditor demands a gruesome payment instead.
Release Year: 2004
Rating: 7.1/10 (18,341 voted)
Critic's Score: 63/100
Director:
Michael Radford
Stars: Al Pacino, Joseph Fiennes, Lynn Collins
Storyline Venice, 1596. Melancholy Antonio loves the youthful Bassanio, so when Bassanio asks for 3000 ducats, Antonio says yes before knowing it's to sue for the hand of Portia. His capital tied up in merchant ships at sea, Antonio must go to Shylock, a Jewish moneylender he reviles. Shylock wraps his grudge in kindness, offering a three-month loan at no interest, but if not repaid, Antonio will owe a pound of flesh. The Jew's daughter elopes with a Christian, whetting Shylock's hatred. While Bassanio's away wooing Portia, Antonio's ships founder, and Shylock demands his pound of flesh. With court assembled and a judgment due, Portia swings into action to save Bassanio's friend.
Writers: William Shakespeare, Michael Radford
Cast: Al Pacino
-
Shylock
Jeremy Irons
-
Antonio
Joseph Fiennes
-
Bassanio
Lynn Collins
-
Portia
Zuleikha Robinson
-
Jessica
Kris Marshall
-
Gratiano
Charlie Cox
-
Lorenzo
Heather Goldenhersh
-
Nerissa
Mackenzie Crook
-
Launcelot Gobbo
John Sessions
-
Salerio
Gregor Fisher
-
Solanio
Ron Cook
-
Old Gobbo
Allan Corduner
-
Tubal
Anton Rodgers
-
The Duke
David Harewood
-
Prince of Morocco
Opening Weekend: £147,709
(UK)
(5 December 2004)
(67 Screens)
Gross: $17,652,140
(non-USA)
Technical Specs
Runtime:|
Finland:
Did You Know?
Trivia: Dustin Hoffman was interested in playing Shylock; however, when he contacted director Michael Radford about it, Al Pacino had already been cast.
Goofs:
Anachronisms:
When Basanio and his entourage are walking with Portia to inspect the chests they pass a pond with a black swan. Black swans are from Australia and weren't known to Europe until after their discovery in western Australia by Dutch explorers in 1697. The Merchant of Venice takes place more than 100 years earlier.
Quotes: Shylock:
If a Jew wrong a Christian, what is his humility? Revenge. If a Christian wrong a Jew, what should his sufferance be by Christian example? Why, revenge. The villany you teach me, I will execute, and it shall go hard but I will better the instruction.
User Review
An Intelligent and Visually Attractive Look at a Complex Play
Rating: 8/10
'The Merchant of Venice' is one of Shakespeare's better-known plays and
is still regularly performed in the theatre. Incredibly, however, this
film would seem to be the first-ever English-language version made for
the cinema rather than television. There were a number of versions made
in Britain or America during the early days of the cinema, but these
were all silents.
The reason for this neglect of the play may be connected with
sensitivities about the play's alleged anti-Semitism, a subject which
has been even more sensitive since the rise to power of the Nazis in
1933. (This may explain why all previous versions were made during the
silent era; in 1908 or 1922 it would have been easier to portray
Shylock as a straightforward villain than it would be today). Yet in my
view the film is not anti-Semitic at all. It should be remembered that
during Shakespeare's lifetime there was no settled Jewish community in
England; the Jews had been expelled by Edward I in the late 13th
century, and were not permitted to return until the time of Cromwell,
some forty years after Shakespeare's death. As far as we know,
Shakespeare never travelled abroad, so it seems quite possible that he
himself never knew any Jews personally or experienced the effects of
anti-Semitism at first hand. The play is not simply about the Jewish
question, but is, among other things, an analysis of the corrosive
effects of religious prejudice. It may, in fact, be a coded examination
of the mutual antipathy between Catholics and Protestants in Tudor
England (something of which Shakespeare certainly would have had
first-hand experience) and an appeal for greater tolerance between
them.
Then as now, traditional anti-Semitic stereotypes had always depicted
Jews as avaricious, but Shylock's principal sin is not avarice; if it
were, he would certainly have accepted Bassanio's offer to pay him six
thousand ducats, twice the amount borrowed by Antonio. Rather,
Shylock's besetting sin is anger, and the root of his anger is the way
in which he and his fellow-Jews are treated by the Christians of
Venice. Not only are Jews in general regarded as second-class citizens,
but Jewish moneylenders such as Shylock are particular targets for
abuse, even though the services they provide are necessary to the
Venetian economy. The play shows the corrupting effects of prejudice.
Not only do views of this sort corrupt the Christians who hold them,
they can also corrupt the Jews who suffer abuse. Shylock's
vindictiveness is out of all proportion to the wrongs he has suffered.
By spitting on him and calling him a dog, Antonio behaves like a
boorish bigot, but boorishness and bigotry are not generally regarded
as crimes deserving of the death penalty. Moreover, Shylock seeks to
revenge himself on Antonio not merely for the undoubted wrongs that
Antonio has done towards him, but also for all the wrongs, real and
imaginary, that he has suffered at the hands of the Christian
community, such as his daughter's marriage to Lorenzo.
It is to the credit of the film's director, Michael Radford and of its
star, Al Pacino, that they understand all these issues. Pacino's
Shylock has, initially, a sort of angry dignity about him that
gradually gives way to vindictive rage and finally, after his
humiliation in the trial scene by Portia's reasoning, to pathos. We see
clearly that he has been the instrument of his own destruction, but we
can still sympathise with him. In my view, none of Pacino's
performances that I have seen have ever equalled those he gave in the
first two 'Godfather' films (not 'Scent of a Woman', for which he won
an Oscar, and certainly not 'Godfather III'), but 'The Merchant of
Venice is the one that comes closest to those benchmarks. The other
acting performance that stood out was Lynn Collins's luminous Portia,
speaking her lines with great clarity and simplicity and bringing out
the intelligence and resourcefulness that make her character more than
simply a romantic heroine. I was less impressed with Jeremy Irons's
Antonio, who seemed too passive. Antonio is a complex character; part
loyal friend, part melancholy contemplative, part religious bigot and
part enterprising capitalist. Although Irons captured the first two of
those aspects, it was difficult to envisage his Antonio either spitting
on someone of a different faith or hazarding his all on risky trading
ventures.
Radford's interpretation of the play was attacked by the film critic of
the 'Daily Telegraph' who, although he admired Pacino's performance,
disliked the period setting and argued that Shakespeare needs to be
placed in a contemporary setting if it is to have 'relevance' for a
modern audience, citing a recent stage production which set the action
in Weimar Germany. I would disagree profoundly with this approach. The
theatre and the cinema are quite different media and, while there have
been some striking modernist approaches to Shakespeare in the cinema
(Trevor Nunn's 'Twelfth Night' comes to mind), a traditionalist
approach is often the best one. (I preferred, for example, Zeffirelli's
'Romeo and Juliet' to Baz Luhrmann's). The idea that we can only
appreciate Shakespeare in a modern guise is sheer intellectual
laziness; we are not prepared to make the effort to see our greatest
writer in the context of the Elizabethan society that produced him, but
rather prefer him dressed up as an ersatz twentieth-century man.
Radford's traditional approach not only enables us to appreciate that
bigotry and vindictiveness are age-old, universal problems, but also
makes for a visually striking film. In the play, the scenes set in
Venice itself are characterised by turbulent action; those set in
Portia's country house at Belmont are happier and more peaceful. In the
film, the Venetian exterior scenes were shot on location against a
backdrop of misty, wintry grey skies, similar to the look achieved in
'Don't Look Now'. The candlelit interiors, with faces brightly lit
against a dark background, were reminiscent of the chiaroscuro effects
of a Caravaggio painting; I suspect this was quite deliberate, as
Caravaggio was a contemporary of Shakespeare. By contrast to dark or
misty Venice, the Belmont scenes (shot in an enchanting Palladian villa
on an island in a lake) were characterised by sunshine or peaceful
moonlight.
This is one of the best Shakespeare adaptations of recent years; an
intelligent and visually attractive look at a complex play. 8/10.
A couple of errors. We see a black swan on the water in front of
Portia's house. These birds are natives of Australia and were not
introduced to Europe until well after 1596, the date when the film is
set. Also, the portrait of Portia in the leaden casket is painted in
the style of the Florentine Botticelli, who was active about a century
before that date. Lynn Collins may be reminiscent of a Botticelli
beauty, but it seems unlikely that a late 16th century Venetian lady
would have had herself painted in the manner of late 15th century
Florence.
0