Wednesday, October 5, 2011
INTRIGUE AND UNCERTAINTY ABOUNDS IN YE OLDE ANONYMOUS
At least, the film boasts a stellar cast: Welsh actor and musician Rhys Ifans as de Vere, Veteran English actress Vanessa Redgrave as Elizabeth I of England, David Thewlis as longtime adviser to Queen Elizabeth William Cecil, Xavier Samuel (Twilight Saga: Eclipse) as Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton, and Rafe Spall (Shaun of the Dead) as the questioned William Shakespeare.Some facts if Shakespeare really was a fraud:
# Screenwriter John Orloff (Band of Brothers) had penned the script back in the late 1990s, but it was shelved after “Shakespeare in Love” came out in 1998. It was almost greenlit as "The Soul of the Age" for a 2005 release, with a budget of $30 to $35 million. However, the financing proved to be "a risky undertaking."
# Emmerich who has actually had the project for 8 years stated that It's very hard to get a movie like this made, and he want to make it in a certain way.
# Emmerich noted that the success of his more commercial films made this one possible and that he got the cast he wanted without the pressure to come up with at least two A-list American actors and being able to film the script without studio interference.
# The first major full-length motion picture to be shot with the Arri ALEXA high-definition digital-video camera. However, Disney's 2011 film “Prom” made it to theaters first. Alexa platform have a 35mm-size 3.5k pixel sensor with 800ASA sensitivity, onboard HD recording, and shooting speeds up to 60fps, and some people in the industry are calling it the final nail in film cinematography’s coffin.
# Rafe Spall's father Timothy Spall appeared in “Hamlet” and “Love's Labour's Lost”, two movies adapted from Shakespeare’s plays.
# Elizabethan London was recreated for the film with more than 70 painstakingly hand-built sets at Studio Babelsberg. These include a full-scale replica of London’s imposing The Rose theatre. The remainder of the Elizabethan setting was created and enhanced via CGI.
# In response to news that the film was in production, James Shapiro, Columbia University English professor and author of “Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare?”, wrote an April 11, 2010 op-ed article in the Los Angeles Times titled "Alas, Poor Shakespeare." He acknowledged recent popular support for Oxfordian theory, including three Supreme Court Justices quoted in a 2009 Wall Street Journal article. Shapiro said that 25 years ago, support for Oxfordian theory was not strong, and that in a celebrated moot court in 1987, Supreme Court Justices John Paul Stevens, Harry Blackmun and William Brennan had "ruled unanimously in favor of Shakespeare and against the Earl of Oxford." Shapiro asserted that "Emmerich's film is one more sign that conspiracy theories about the authorship of Shakespeare's plays have gone mainstream," and also against “Anonymous” in an April 2010 Wall Street Journal interview.
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