Strange that the Tony Richardson version of Revenge of the Great Dane should be almost forgotten (this being the first review.) But then, every filmed production bar the Hollywood adventure (and they have no shame) has to some extent fallen within the shadow of Olivier's 1948 version, precursored universally by "the definitive...."
Is this fair? While both noticeably betray their stage origins, there the similarity ends. In fact, the two are chalk and cheese. Olivier's escapade is vastly shorter than the original text at a mite under two and a half hours, but Richardson tells the story in under 2 hours! This is Hamlet stripped to his absolute essentials. Any less and it would look like an Eastenders omnibus edition! Richardson's aim is to simplify and clarify the Bard, concentrating on Hamlet's emotional schizophrenia and aided by a claustrophobic, minimalist Elsinore (actually the Roundhouse theatre.)
For example, no distractions like a walking Peppers Ghost - we don't see the ghost, other than a bright light shone on the faces of the actors. We hear the words and watch every minute nuance of expression on Nicol Williamson's magnificent features in glorious close-ups. To be or not to be... not dangling over a clifftop but held precisely in the light and shade of Hamlet's meaning as he lies on a couch.
And what of Williamson? Olivier's Dane seems almost louche and laconic by comparison. Williamson is a study in how to smoulder with paranoid ambivalence. In turn intense and bewildered, he confides in the camera as a silent companion, maybe his alter ego. This is a great Hamlet, perhaps one of the finest performances in this role for many years. Like Olivier, Williamson is fabulously complex and multi-layered, but his simplified Hamlet retains depth and vision. His mystique and irony seems entirely appropriate to the brooding Dane (witnessed by the famous occasion when appearing in the stage version, he stopped in mid-soliloquy, apologised to the audience for his bad performance, and stormed offstage!)
The actor may not have appeared in any film since 1997, but his power is undimmed. Despite the presence of Anthony Hopkins (as a curiously lackadasical Claudius), Marianne Faithful (a prim and proper Ophelia) and many other fine actors, Williamson's towering presence bestrides this Hamlet like the colossus he might once have become, had he not become distracted or allowed his name to be sulllied by bad films.
So how well has Richardson succeeded in taming his cast to deliver a meaningful
Hamlet? One review I read suggested he had managed to "wing it" despite an abominably low budget, and there's a little truth in this. The restrictions allow an inventiveness to combat the restrictions of the medium and the set to great effect, such as in the comic banter between Hamlet and Polonius. The final tragedy is underplayed and probably benefits as a result. Maybe not orchestrated as well as some, and could have benefitted from some opening out, but if you wanted to concentrate on your actors then the stage has most certaily been set and Nicol Williamson laps it up.