Movie Background
Movie Poster

Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead

Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, minor figures in Shakespeare's Hamlet, travel on the road to Elsinore Castle at the king of Denmark's command. They encounter a band of players before arriving, and learn they are needed to discern what troubles Prince Hamlet. Meanwhile, they ponder the meaning of their own existence.

Director(s)

Tom Stoppard

Zoran Blazevic

Zoran Budak

Peter Cotton

Dubravko Scherr

Bill Westley

Cast & Crew

Gary Oldman

Gary Oldman

Rosencrantz

Donald Sumpter

Donald Sumpter

Claudius

Iain Glen

Iain Glen

Hamlet

Tim Roth

Tim Roth

Guildenstern

Bill Westley

Bill Westley

-

Richard Dreyfuss

Richard Dreyfuss

The Player

Serge Soric

Serge Soric

Tragedian

Vili Matula

Vili Matula

Horatio

Zoran Budak

Zoran Budak

-

Tom Stoppard

Tom Stoppard

-

Ian Richardson

Ian Richardson

Polonius

Mladen Vasary

Mladen Vasary

Tragedian

Branko Završan

Branko Završan

Tragedian

Sven Medvešek

Sven Medvešek

Laertes

Joanna Roth

Joanna Roth

Ophelia

Joanna Miles

Joanna Miles

Gertrude

John Burgess

John Burgess

Ambassador from England

Livio Badurina

Livio Badurina

Tragedian (Alfred)

Tomislav Maretic

Tomislav Maretic

Tragedian

Mare Mlacnik

Mare Mlacnik

Tragedian

Željko Vukmirica

Željko Vukmirica

Tragedian

Ljubo Zečević

Ljubo Zečević

Osric

Zoran Blazevic

Zoran Blazevic

-

Peter Cotton

Peter Cotton

-

Dubravko Scherr

Dubravko Scherr

-

Details

GenresComedy, Drama
Runtime1h 57 mins
Released on08 Feb 1991
Languageen
Produced InUnited Kingdom
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Reviews

Filipe Manuel Neto

4/10

**Rosencrantz and Guildenstern must remain in the theater.** This film is perhaps the proof that not all successful plays are good enough to work in the cinema. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are two characters from “Hamlet”, by William Shakespeare, but it is difficult for anyone to remember them without being very knowledgeable about the literary work in question. They really barely matter to the action. Here, they are the main actors, and we are invited, in a way, to see things through their eyes. In theater, this is interesting. In the cinema, and for a general audience that doesn't know “Hamlet” so well, this doesn't seem like a good idea. Gary Oldman and Tim Roth brought the main roles to life with great panache and value, and the film ends up not being an absolute waste of time thanks to these two magnificent and valuable actors, full of talent. There is a high dose of “nonsense” in the dialogues between the two, and this can become tiring, but it generally works without surprising. The rest of the cast does not have such good material and opportunities to stand out, thus leaving the film somewhat devoid of good characters other than the protagonists. On a technical level, the emphasis is on the costumes and sets. I can't say that there is great historical rigor here: historically, Hamlet's life is located in Denmark in the Year One Thousand and what we see is Renaissance, much more suited to people and figures who would be contemporary with Shakespeare. But I didn't have any problems with that, and that's not even a problem because all of this is fiction and can be situated in time whenever you want. Much more difficult to bear is the slight feeling that we are watching a kind of recorded play instead of a film.

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