The Merchant of Venice

The Merchant of Venice

Shakespeare on film always presents difficulties, and it may come as no surprise to learn that this is the first appearance on film of one of Shakespeare’s most ‘difficult’ plays. Officially classed as a comedy, The Merchant of Venice has so many dark undercurrents, not least,

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Wed 06 Jul 2005 10:00 PM

Shakespeare on film always presents difficulties, and it may come as no surprise to learn that this is the

first appearance on film of one of Shakespeare’s most ‘difficult’ plays. Officially classed as a comedy, The

Merchant of Venice has so many dark undercurrents, not least, to modern sensibilities, its blatant anti-

Semitism. Michael Radford wisely chooses to more or less ignore the awkward comedy and directs Al

Pacino’s Shylock in a very understated and almost iconoclastic performance that even by the standards

of Shakespeare purists is magisterial and tragic, the centre of gravity of the movie’s finely-judged

weightiness. With glorious production design revealing a painterly Renaissance Venice, and high calibre

supporting performances, notably by Jeremy Irons and Joseph Fiennes (Antonio and Bassanio, respectively),

the film moves at a slow pace, but is continuously absorbing and rewarding, and more than does

justice to the enduring complexities of the original play.

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