Front cover image for Cinematic Shakespeare

Cinematic Shakespeare

Cinematic Shakespeare takes the reader inside the making of a number of significant adaptations to illustrate how cinema transforms and re-imagines the dramatic form and style central to Shakespeare's imagination. Cinematic Shakespeare investigates how Shakespeare films constitute an exciting and ever-changing film genre. The challenges of adopting Shakespeare to cinema are like few other film genres. Anderegg looks closely at films by Laurence Olivier (Richard III), Orson Welles (Macbeth), and Kenneth Branagh (Hamlet) as well as topics like 'Postmodern Shakespeares' (Julie Taymor's Titus and Peter Greenaway's Prospero's Books) and multiple adaptations over the years of Romeo and Juliet. A chapter on television looks closely at American broadcasting in the 1950s (the Hallmark Hall of Fame Shakespeare adaptations) and the BBC/Time-Life Shakespeare Plays from the late 70s and early 80s. -- From publisher's website
Print Book, English, ©2004
Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, Md., ©2004
Criticism, interpretation, etc
xvi, 227 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
9780742510913, 9780742510920, 0742510913, 0742510921
52272689
The Shakespeare film and genre
Finding the playwright on film
The challenges of Romeo and Juliet
In and out of Hollywood-Shakespeare in the studio era
Branagh and the sons of Ken
Electronic Shakespeares-televisual histories
Post-Shakespeares