Promises more than it delivers.
William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:121
Fresh:86
Rotten:35
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: A respectable if uneven take on the Bard's The Merchant of Venice.
Theatrical Release:Dec 29, 2004 Limited
Box Office: $3,752,725
Synopsis: One of the immortal bard's most frequently performed works gets a first-rate cinematic treatment here, via director Michael Radford (IL POSTINO). Al Pacino is virtually unrecognizable as Shylock,... One of the immortal bard's most frequently performed works gets a first-rate cinematic treatment here, via director Michael Radford (IL POSTINO). Al Pacino is virtually unrecognizable as Shylock, bringing an old-world gravitas to the role and clearly inspiring the rest of the cast to match his intensity. They succeed, and the result is riveting, rousing entertainment. Even if one is familiar with the play in advance, this is white-knuckle suspense and swooning romance all the way through. A 16th-century Venetian sea merchant (Jeremy Irons), devoted to a young lord (Joseph Fiennes), owes a debt for "a pound of flesh" to the anguished Jewish moneylender Shylock. Lovingly filmed in Venice, the film looks great, with settings and costumes all sporting a dusky, lived-in look that matches the subdued, naturalistic interpretation of the dialogue. Lynn Collins is excellent and ethereal as Portia, and her love scenes with Fiennes have an alchemical power that lifts them to dizzyingly mythic romantic heights. Vague homoerotic content and the grim realities of Jewish oppression are not shied away from here, which lends the film further richness and complexity. With the play's rich array of dramatic and comedic elements all perfectly in tune, MERCHANT OF VENICE earns its place as the first truly great Shakespeare film of the 21st century. [More]
Starring: Al Pacino, Jeremy Irons, Joseph Fiennes, Zuleikha Robinson
Starring: Al Pacino, Jeremy Irons, Joseph Fiennes, Zuleikha Robinson, Charlie Cox, Heather Goldenhersh, Lynn Collins, Kris Marshall
Director: Michael Radford
Director: Michael Radford
Screenwriter: Michael Radford
Producer: Cary Brokaw, Jason Piette, Michael Lionello Cowen, Barry Navidi
Composer: Jocelyn Pook
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice
Al Pacino's powerful, poignant performance is matched by most of the supporting cast...
The film itself occasionally plods, but Pacino, tackling a tough trap of a role, raises the bar in a mesmerizing acting triumph.
Despite some clunky exposition and rote iambic line readings, it attains a bona fide Shakespearean vibrance.
A respectable attempt to deal with the issues the text raises in a way that minimizes the potential offensiveness without unduly diluting its power.
Only Al Pacino, badly miscast as Shylock, is a crushing disappointment, one that weighs down the whole production with the air of a vanity project gone bad.
Credit Radford for keeping his sterling cast in an admirably understated mode.
Setting an historical fact in opening subtitles...may prepare the audience for what many view as an anti-Semitic work, but it does not address the play's tonal disjointedness
The women get to be tough and heroic and still be charming and get want they want in the end - let's hear it for Renaissance Girl Power.
Connects so emotionally glancingly as to leave you questioning your admiration for and faith in the source material.
Michael Radford tries valiantly but only semi-successfully to subvert and redirect Shakespeare's intent. Pacino is much less appropriate for historical roles.
Worth seeing for its lovely Venetian settings and evocative score but most of all for Pacino's spectacular rendering of Shylock.
Writer-director Michael Radford ... forgets that the play, for all its ugliness, is meant to be played as a comedy.
The best film version of a Shakespearean play since Julie Taymor's Titus.
Shylock, Portia, money-lending and betrayal get a little too much help from director Michael Radford.
Latest News for William Shakespeare's The Merchant of...
February 04, 2009:
Al Pacino Is King Lear ![]()
Al Pacino and Michael Radford are having a Shakespeare reunion: the "Merchant of Venice" star and director are re-teaming for a "King Lear" adaptation, with Pacino in the title... More...
July 13, 2006:
Kidman & Pacino in "Prosecution" Remake?
Billy Wilder's 1957 film "Witness for the Prosecution" is rather excellent, which is why most (old) movie fans will take exception to the news that ... a remake is... More...
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