Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen Pericles discovers the dread answer to Antioch's riddle, he flees for his life straight into famine, shipwreck, love, fatherhood, and another shipwreck; he loses his wife and daughter, ... Tout lireWhen Pericles discovers the dread answer to Antioch's riddle, he flees for his life straight into famine, shipwreck, love, fatherhood, and another shipwreck; he loses his wife and daughter, and doesn't find them again until the story moves us through resurrection, attempted murde... Tout lireWhen Pericles discovers the dread answer to Antioch's riddle, he flees for his life straight into famine, shipwreck, love, fatherhood, and another shipwreck; he loses his wife and daughter, and doesn't find them again until the story moves us through resurrection, attempted murder, pirates, prostitution, and divine revelation.
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What you don't want is for all this voluptuous over-plotting to get bogged down. And that's precisely what happens here.
It's possible the text could have withstood another round of pruning. It's certain that what is performed here would have benefited from a stronger sense of pace.
The actors themselves are almost uniformly excellent. Amanda Redman as Miranda is superlative, and Juliet Stevenson as Thaisa surprises with a soft, romantic radiance absent from her later gallery of grotesque comic roles (and she dances sexy, too). The supporting cast does not disappoint.
Don Taylor's production design is quite striking, and Martin Best's musical score is among the best in the series.
The villains, however, are three. Mike Gwilym who normally recites Shakespeare about as well as anybody, and excels as Berowne in "Love's Labour's Lost" and Aufidius in "Coriolanus," fumbles this assignment. His Pericles is small, self-involved, under-energized and under-vocalized. Often his voice extends no further than the tip of his nose, and even in tight closeup, we need more.
Likewise Edward Petherbridge, memorable for his Newman Noggs in "Nicholas Nickleby," is downright annoying as a lethargic Gower, who materializes periodically to offer leaden apologies for the length of the story (in a most peculiar accent), and hints at all the stuff that got left out, for which we are truly thankful, amen. This Chorus figure does not energize the audience, but narcotizes it further.
I am inclined to blame the faults of these first two miscreants on the third, the director, David Hugh Jones. There is no discernible shape or pulse here at all, and the result is a lumpy, endless mess. With this overabundance of raw material, one wants a firm directorial hand and a vigorous sense of story-telling, and one doesn't get them.
It looks great, sounds good, and may even produce a tear at the final fadeout, Shakespeare being Shakespeare, but it is not a performance. That's a shame, because when will we see somebody else take a shot at it on TV?
Found this production of 'Pericles, Prince of Tyre' to be very, very good. For me it is among the better productions of the inconsistent (some productions being better than others) but absolutely fascinating BBC Television Shakespeare series, because some of the elements are given some of the best execution of them here of the series. Have found it interesting that in the BBC Television Shakespeare series the productions for some of the lesser known plays are actually better than the productions of some of Shakespeare's most famous plays. Am being serious when saying this. It more than makes do as the to date only production available on DVD.
There is more that is done right than is done wrong in this production, though it takes a little time to get going which is partly down to the play itself.
Visually, 'Pericles, Prince of Tyre' is one of the best-looking of the BBC Television Shakespeare series. Budget limitations did tend to show in the series, even in a few of the best productions, so they looked a bit dreary (very in the case of particularly 'The Tempest' and 'A Midsummer Night's Dream'). The production values may not be quite as interesting as those of a few of the Elijah Moshinsky-directed productions, but they do look absolutely beautiful still, there is a sense of time and place and clearly a lot of effort went into them. Especially the sets and lighting. Loved the music score too, which is up there as among the series' best. It fits the setting and adds a lot and never distracts. It is also a lovely score in its own right.
Shakespeare's text cannot be faulted as usual, while the production does a great job overcoming the play's staging problems like the bigger set pieces (not making them cheap or static) and making the time gap cohesive and believable. Also doing well in giving the story momentum, not easy for a story as sprawling as the one 'Pericles, Prince of Tyre' has, and cohesion, did find myself understanding what was going on which must not have been easy but was done well. The character relationships brought out the right amount of tension and emotional impact and the recognition scene is touching. This is very thoughtful and moving staging in my view.
Also thought highly of the cast. Edward Petherbridge occasionally overdoes it as Gower, but mostly he was fine and did well moving the story forward. Mike Gwilym is a haunted but also very human Pericles, while Juliet Stevenson brings subtle dignity to Thaisa and Amanda Redman radiates in charm as Marina. Annette Crosbie is memorably fiendish in a small role. Everybody does well here.
Concluding, very, very good with a lot of great things. One of the best of the series. 9/10
Pericles is one of four major plays that Shakespeare wrote at the end of his career. They are generally referred to as "Late Romances" or just "Romances." That's because they don't fit into any of the other standard classifications of Shakespeare's plays--tragedies, comedies, and histories. As a group, they share many qualities, such as shipwrecks or other dramatic events, and relationships between fathers and daughters. Frequently, the plot has a redemptive quality, and includes the reuniting of long-separated family members. The Romances often end in weddings--like the comedies--but before the weddings there are truly tragic events, comparable to those in the tragedies. Pericles fits this pattern very well.
In this version, as with all the BBC Shakespeare movies, we are given great performances by superb actors. We also see excellent costumes. The BBC often skimps on sets, but not so in Pericles. The sets are elegant, and this is no easy feat because Pericles moves--or is forced to move--from ancient city to ancient city throughout the play.
I highly recommend this movie, because it is well acted and very faithful to Shakespeare's text. We saw Pericles in 2015 in Stratford, Ontario. The Stratford Shakespeare Festival almost always does a fine job, and they did a fine job with Pericles. I've seen many of the BBC Shakespeare movies, and I can say that the BBC almost does a fine job, and they certainly gave us an outstanding version of Pericles.
The BBC movies were made for television, so they'll work fine on the small screen. If you love Shakespeare, seek out this film.
The play has a shocking opening. Pericles, Prince of Tyre,(Mike Gwilym)comes to woo King Antiochus' daughter. All her potential suitors must solve a riddle if they are to marry her and many have died at the attempt. Pericles guesses correctly but wishes he hadn't: the king and the daughter have an incestuous relationship. Tortured by the information, he goes on the run, but during a shipwreck he is washed upon a strange island in only his pants. Pericles encounters many more struggles along the way as he desperately tries to build a life like his former. His lost daughter Marina (Amanda Redman) also faces her struggles as she is captured and placed in a brothel. Can Pericles hope for a miracle and find her again? I've cut out some bits in my summary because I don't want to spoil the suspense. Sitting there watching it, you're sure that things can't get any worse for Pericles and then Shaky and co. (more on that in the final paragraph) hits you with another bit of drama. You completely have to suspend disbelief with Pericles but not in the way that you have to do in some of Shaky's more famous plays when he forces contrivances. The play has fairytale-like qualities as miracles occur and you desperately cross your fingers hoping that Pericles will be rewarded for his virtues. The narrator Gower is constantly telling us to suspend our disbelief and use our imaginations and if you do this, the low-budget set becomes islands, palaces, and brothels.
There is some comedy in the play. The man-and-wife brothel owners are hilariously grotesque- a bit like M. and Mme Thenardier in Les Miserables. Marina is a beautiful piece of goods but she refuses to give up her virginity. To make matters worse, she converts the men that come to see her so they never go back to the brothel again.
As for the playing, well it's hard to compare because you will never see Pericles performed again in your lifetime. It's a play that doesn't work as well on paper as some of the other plays do but comes to life beautifully in performance. Gwilym is a tortured but tough Pericles, taking the blows life deals him with strong virtue and courage. He speaks the lines nicely and very naturally, so we get the full meaning. Juliet Stevenson is lovely as Pericles' wife Thaisa and Patrick Allen as her father is jokey and doting; a complete contrast to John Woodvine's suitably creepy Antiochus. Amanda Redman (the lead in Silent Witness until the current trio took over and ex-head of Waterloo Road) is a charming virtuous Marina, showing the same strength as her father. We have some familiar faces from the BBC Shakespeare series: Clive Swift (from Henry IV) plays an apothecary and Patrick Ryecart (Romeo in the BBC Romeo and Juliet) plays Marina's suitor. Annette Crosbie makes a brief appearance as Marina's wicked adopted mother.
So, what's all this about Shaky and co? Well, Pericles is part of the Shakespeare Apocrypha: plays that are thought to be collaborations with Shakespeare. It's thought that Shaky wrote just over half of the play, probably the latter half, and the other half was done by some hack. Unfortunately this means that any discussion of the play has to mention the authorship issue, making people think that the play isn't "proper Shakespeare". It's as if your husband's cheated on you with some hussy. For my part, the play's episodic nature could indicate that it was a collaboration but I think it was one in which Shakespeare had the upper hand.
Despite all the fuss about the authors, Pericles is a very Shakespearean play. The father-daughter relationship is a recurring theme in Shakespeare and in this play, we get three strong but very different father-daughter relationships. It contains the miracle that categorises it amongst Shakespeare's romances and is similar in character to The Winter's Tale. Tempests, as in many Shakespeare plays, feature heavily here in a literal and symbolic sense. And it's got the low-life characters of brothels that we see in Jacobean Shakespeare. Even if Shaky didn't write all of it, this is Pure Shakespeare.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDirector David Hugh Jones used a lot of long shots in this episode to try to create the sense of a small person taking in a vast world.
- ConnexionsVersion of Pericles by Shakespeare on the Road (2016)
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- The Complete Dramatic Works of William Shakespeare: Pericles, Prince of Tyre
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