(Which was original
title of Shakespeare’s last play “Henry VIII”, co-opted, ironically, as the
title of this Shakespearian “biopic”, starring and directed by Kenneth Branagh.)
Reading Bill Bryson’s biography of William Shakespeare, I
learned that, in his will, Shakespeare left his widowed wife the family’s
“second-best bed.” (Though it did not
say whom the family’s best bed went
to.)
I also learned that, earlier in life, Shakespeare penned a
book of love sonnets, dedicated to “W.H.”, who is believed to have been William
Herbert, the Earl of Pembroke, leading to suspicions of clandestine “guy-guy”
shenanigans.
Both of those interesting factoids, and the mystery of how such
an untutored fellow could know so much about so much, appear in Kenneth
Branagh’s film All Is True, making me
wonder, as I inevitably do about films “based on actual events”, how much of
the movie is true and how much is manipulatively contrived.
Unfortunately, while seeing the movie, I did not have an
accredited Shakespeare-ologist along to help distinguish the factual wheat from
the fictional chaff. So I am stuck with
not knowing.
Okay. So there’s that, influencing my response to the
movie.
And there is the teasing
title, All Is True, “playing” me right from the get-go. The
film opens with a famous portrait of Shakespeare, which I learned from Bryson’s
biography may not actually have been Shakespeare. We then see Kenneth Branagh, made up exactly
like the portrait. So there’s this actor,
uncannily resembling a portrait of Shakespeare, which may in fact have been
somebody else.
On top of all that, All
Is True, originally released in late 2018 in hopes of some Oscar nominations, a strategy garnering,
let me look……………………………….
… no Oscar nominations…
was playing at our local Santa Monica theater to, including
myself and my spousal companion,
…. seven audience members.
So there is that issue
as well. You know the infectious “buzz”
you sense before the start of an acclaimed and popular hit movie?
In this case, it was exactly the opposite.
“You are not going to like this. Nobody else does.”
So there you have it.
A cinematic “biopic”, whose existence as a “genre” reflexively revolts
me, a provocative title daring me to guess how much of the picture is true, and
a thunderous snubbing by the moviegoing public at large.
Those were the obstacles I faced, encountering All Is True.
And yet I loved it.
Surprise!
I’m a contradictory galoot, aren’t I?
Beautiful English settings, magical lakes and woodlands –
possibly inspiring Shakespeare’s frequent “forest” motifs, though ignorance
impedes me from further comparisons.
(And, in fact, the one I impulsively offered could easily be wrong.)
And then there’s the story:
A man, plying his trade in big-city London, retires to his ancestral
village, hoping to reconnect with the family he virtually abandoned for twenty
years, writing those plays.
A decent fellow, the guy depicted in this movie. Minimally “puffed up” from being the greatest
playwright of his time. He’s just trying
to fit in, humbly starting a garden. Though
the process is rough – he’s a writer, not
a tiller of the soil; a man can’t be everything
– his horticultural forays are not nearly
as punishing as the rocky reception experienced at home. As in,
“We hate you, William ‘smarty-pants’ Shakespeare!”
Then there are the dark family secrets, leaked out, one
after another. Although our protagonist did
no deliberate harm, the peripheral
harm requires ultimate acknowledging, past-due amends needing healingly to be
made. Fortunately, all’s well that ends
well. (I wish that was mine. It’s so deliciously a propos.)
Cliché moments? There
are admittedly too many. Like the staged
scene where Shakespeare drenches the town snob in cascading accomplishments. Added to such unlikely interludes are questionable
anecdotes, one, concerning the quill-sharpening penknife Shakespeare intended
to “gift” his son but didn’t, the son dying while Will was in London. That one’s conveniently suspect to me. And conspicuously “artsy”, as well.
But who knows? Maybe
someone chronicled the “knife story” four hundred years ago, and it fell fortuitously
into the screenwriter’s hands.
Yeah, that didn’t
happen.
All in all, All Is
True – a tastefully sweet movie in a beautiful locale.
As the revered “Cookie Monster” famously sang, in an
alphabetical context,
That’s good enough for me.
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