Dream time
Michael Hoffman's Midsummer magic
by Jeffrey Gantz
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM. Directed by Michael Hoffman, from his adaptation of the play by William
Shakespeare. With Kevin Kline, Stanley Tucci, Michelle Pfeiffer, Rupert
Everett, Calista Flockhart, Anna Friel, Dominic West, Christian Bale, Sophie
Marceau, David Strathairn, and Bernard Hill. A Fox Searchlight Pictures
release. At the Avon, the Harbour Mall, and the Showcase Cinema (North Attleboro only).
Fans of Shakespeare in Love who shared that Alsatian's dismay at having
no part in "Romeo and Ethel, the Pirate's Daughter" can rest easy: Michael
Hoffman's adaptation of A Midsummer Night's Dream gives Robin
Starveling's dog ample opportunity to shine in the rustics' production of
"Pyramus and Thisby." The rest of us can bask in a largely American production
that proves we Yanks can turn out Bardic cinema on a par with Kenneth Branagh's
Much Ado About Nothing and Trevor Nunn's Twelfth Night. Set in
the mythical Tuscan hill town of Monte Athena (Shakespeare's original took
place in Athens) at the turn of the century, this Dream has the feel of
Branagh's Much Ado and, with its canny use of Italian opera, a pair of
Tuscan-set E.M. Forster adaptations, the Merchant Ivory A Room with a
View and Charles Sturridge's Where Angels Fear To Tread. But it has
a directness and frankness all its own, plus superb acting that makes
Shakespeare look and sound as natural as situation comedy.
From the start Hoffman plunges us into the preparations for the wedding of
Duke Theseus (David Strathairn) and Hippolyta (Sophie Marceau): fountains are
cleaned, flowers gathered, and the mouthwatering fruits of Tuscan cuisine
spread on outdoor tables. There's magic in the air, too, in the fireflies and
butterflies that alert us the fairy world is never far away. Inside, however,
all is not well: Athenian citizen Egeus (Bernard Hill) is incensed that his
daughter Hermia (Anna Friel) prefers Lysander (Dominic West) to the man he's
chosen for her, Demetrius (Christian Bale), and before Duke Theseus he's
begging "the ancient privilege of Athens," the right to do with her as he
pleases. (Shakespeare has in mind here and in Dream's contemporary,
Romeo and Juliet, not ancient Athens but 1590s London, where the right
of fathers to choose their daughters' husbands was a hot topic.) Theseus
reluctantly acknowledges Egeus's right, whereupon Hippolyta leaves the room in
a huff. Lysander and Hermia take their bicycles and flee to the Athenian wood,
followed closely by Demetrius and his ex-flame Helena (Calista Flockhart), who
loves him still.
Yes, bicycles -- one of Hoffman's inventions for reminding us this tale is
timeless. Puck (Stanley Tucci) may be able to "put a girdle round the earth/In
forty minutes," but he finds it more convenient to get about the Athenian wood
on Lysander's bike. While the quartet of would-be lovers are stumbling through
the misty but gloriously real forest (credit cinematographer Oliver Stapleton),
fairy rulers Oberon (Rupert Everett) and Titania (Michelle Pfeiffer) are having
their own falling out, over a changeling pageboy they both covet. And back in
Athens -- er, Monte Athena -- a sextet of tradesmen led by weaver and ham actor
Nick Bottom (Kevin Kline) dream of presenting their amateur theatrical,
"Pyramus and Thisby," at the duke's wedding.
Hoffman grounds all this foolishness in a soundtrack that includes
Mendelssohn's familiar Overture and Wedding March but also the brindisi
(the toasting exchange between Violetta and Alfredo) from Verdi's La
traviata, "Casta diva" from Bellini's Norma, and, as a theme for
Bottom and Titania, the Intermezzo from Mascagni's Cavalleria rusticana,
which elevates the weaver (who has a nagging wife in this version!) from rustic
clown to romantic dreamer. Kevin Kline is Mr. EveryItalian, eager to play all
the roles, to be the star -- and when Bottom gets his chance, with Titania and
on stage, he delivers. Hoffman also elicits sublime performances from Stanley
Tucci as a world-weary but still curious Puck (watch for the "Oh no" look on
his face when Oberon vows to "torment" Titania) and Calista Flockhart (who was
a legitimate theater talent before she became Ally McBeal) as a flaky,
fluttery, totally personalized Helena. Anna Friel's Hermia is more generic
(imagine Helena Bonham Carter here), but give both ladies credit for keeping
their pentameter pristine even while mud wrestling. The boys, Dominic West and
Christian Bale, are very serious, as is Rupert Everett's Oberon; you could ask
for a moonbeam's breadth more humor.
You could also conjure a more effusive Titania than Michelle Pfeiffer's
nonetheless lovely, sly fairy queen. Hoffman decided not to double-cast
Theseus/Oberon and Hippolyta/Titania, affording four small roles instead of two
meaty ones. And at two hours, this Dream loses some of its poetry, with
cuts that are subtle but significant. Against that there's Hoffman's gorgeous
detail: a most Italian Puck promising to put that girdle round the earth
after 40 minutes; the unheard exchange between Hippolyta and Theseus
that sways him in the lovers' favor and restores him to hers; Bottom looking at
the fireflies and wistfully trying to recall his dream; Puck turning up during
Helena's first speech and again at the end as a workman with a broom, making
you wonder whether it really was all a dream. Hoffman, like Shakespeare, sees
magic everywhere; what's more, he knows how to put it on screen.
|