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Oscar®Oscar® Nominee for Best Costume Design

The Tempest

MPA Rating: PG-13-Rating (MPA) for some nudity, suggestive content and scary images.
Moral Rating: not reviewed
Moviemaking Quality:
Primary Audience: Adults Teens
Genre: Fantasy Comedy Romance Drama Adaptation
Length: 1 hr. 50 min.
Year of Release: 2010
USA Release: December 10, 2010 (limited)
DVD: September 13, 2011
Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures)click photos to ENLARGE Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures) Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures) Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures) Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures) Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures) Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures) Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures) Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures) Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures)
Relevant Issues
Copyright, Touchstone Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures)
Featuring Russell Brand (Trinculo)
Helen Mirren (Prospera)
Alan Cumming (Sebastian)
Alfred Molina (Stephano)
Djimon Hounsou (Caliban)
Chris Cooper (Antonio)
Ben Whishaw (Ariel)
David Strathairn (Alonso)
Felicity Jones (Miranda)
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Director ulie Taymor — “Across the Universe,” “Frida,” “Titus”
Producer Touchstone Pictures, Miramax Films, Chartoff Productions, TalkStory Productions, Ron Bozman, Beaux Carson, Robert Chartoff, John C. Ching, Lynn Hendee, Rohit Khattar, Deborah Y. Lau, Jason K. Lau, Phyllis LaVoie, Greg Strasburg, Julia Taylor-Stanley, Julie Taymor
Distributor
Distributor: Touchstone Pictures (a division of Disney). Trademark logo.
Touchstone Pictures
, a division of Walt Disney Studios

Here’s what the distributor says about their film: “In Julie Taymor’s version of ‘The Tempest,’ the gender of Prospero has been switched to female (Prospera). Going back to the 16th or 17th century, women practicing the magical arts of alchemy were often convicted of witchcraft. In Taymor’s version, Prospera is usurped by her brother and sent off with her four-year daughter on a ship. She ends up on an island; it’s a tabula rasa: no society, so the mother figure becomes a father figure to Miranda. This leads to the power struggle and balance between Caliban and Prospera; a struggle not about brawn, but about intellect.

Shakespeare’s play mixes romance with fraternal politics and the supernatural. As revised for the screen, it centers around Prospera, her daughter Miranda (Jones) and a shipwrecked crew full of Prospera’s enemies. The island’s other inhabitants include Hounsou as the deformed slave Caliban and Wishaw as the airy spirit Ariel.

On the ship are rising comedy star Brand, playing Trinculo, a jester; David Strathairn, as Alonso, the King of Naples; and Molina as the drunken butler Stephano. Tom Conti plays Gonzalo, a royal adviser and old ally of Prospera’s.”

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Movie Critics
“…As if it were not disappointing enough to produce an intellectually undernourished version of Shakespeare’s late romance, helmer Julie Taymor has gone one better by crafting a ‘Tempest’ so kitschy, yet curiously drab and banal, that even supporters may hope she’ll break her staff and drown her book. …”
Leslie Felperin, Variety
“…It is, by turns, a great and awful film. …”
Mick LaSalle, San Francisco Chronicle
“…the film simply doesn’t come together fluidly. …”
Claudia Puig, USA Today
“…a surprisingly unengaging and charmless fantasy…”
Lou Lumenick, New York Post
“…fizzles to a disappointing drizzle. …”
Matt Stevens, E!
“…Winds of change for sake of change… The best sequences in ‘Tempest’ are all quiet, not that there are many of them. …lacks the go-for-broke lunacy of the best gonzo Shakespeare…”
Ty Burr, The Boston Globe
“…theatrically ambitious, musically busy, and in the end cinematically inert…” [B-]
Lisa Schwarzbaumm, Entertainment Weekly

“…In this noisy, stormy adaptation, an energetic and for the most part excellent cast marshals considerable resources of wit, discipline and timing in a struggle against the hectic inventiveness that is, characteristically for Ms. Taymor, either the vehicle for interesting theatrical ideas or a sign of their absence. …”
A.O. Scott, The New York Times

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