| Release Date: |
Oct 2011 |
| Genre: |
Drama / Thriller |
| Awards: |
Nominated for Oscar. Another 3 nominations |
| Cast: |
Jamie Campbell Bower (Young Oxford), Rhys Ifans (Edward de Vere), David Thewlis (William Cecil), Joely Richardson (Princess Elizabeth Tudor), Derek Jacobi (Prologue), Vanessa Redgrave (Queen Elizabeth I), Xavier Samuel (Henry Wriothesley), Rafe Spall (William Shakespeare), Vicky Krieps (Bessie), Edward Hogg (Robert Cecil), Mark Rylance (Gloucester), Tom Wlaschiha (Captain of the Guard), Ned Dennehy (Interrogator), Tony Way (Thomas Nashe), Sebastian Armesto (Ben Jonson), Paula Schramm (Bridget de Vere), Henry Lloyd-Hughes (Bear Baiter), Julian Bleach (Sir Richard Pole), Amy Kwolek (Young Anne de Vere), Sebastian Reid (Essex), Robert Emms (Thomas Dekker), Alex Hassell (Spencer), John Keogh (Philip Henslowe), Anna Altmann (Lady Cecil), Isaiah Michalski (Robert Cecil), Trystan Gravelle (Christopher Marlow), Michael S. Ruscheinsky (Elizabeth's Personal Guard), Alexander Yassin (Javanese Nobleman), Luke Thomas Taylor (Boy Oxford), Antje Thiele (Lady de Vere), Mike Maas (Betting Man), Martina Ysker (Young Lady in Waiting), Patrick Diemling (Oxford's Apprentice), Claudia Funke (Young Lady in Waiting), Ulrike Brandt (Robert Cecil's Wife), Carsten Berger (Lord of Court), Andreas Frakowiak (Nobleman with feathered Hat), Elisabeth Milarch (Dancing Lady), Dennis Oestreich (Angry young man in theatre), Joachim Paul Assböck (Prison Guard (uncredited)), Oliver Kube (Stage Player (uncredited)), Hendrik Maaß (Young Lord Of Court (uncredited)), Gesche Picolin (Lady-in-waiting (uncredited)) |
Anonymous is a political thriller which also involves the question of who actually wrote the plays of William Shakespeare. It follows Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford (Rhys Ifans), and is set against the backdrop of the succession of Queen Elizabeth I (Vanessa Redgrave) and the Essex Rebellion against her. Director Roland Emmerich says of the film: Its an historical thriller because its about who will succeed Queen Elizabeth and the struggle of the people who want to have a hand in it. Its the Tudors on one side and the Cecils on the other, and in between [the two] is the Queen. Through that story we tell how the plays written by the Earl of Oxford ended up labelled William Shakespeare. and: [F]or me there was an incredible script that I bought eight years ago. It was [initially] called Soul of the Age which pretty much is the heart of the movie still. Its three characters. Its like Ben Jonson, who was a playwright then. William Shakespeare who was an actor. Its like the 17th Earl of Oxford who is the true author of all these plays. We see how, through these three people, it happens that all of these plays get credited to Shakespeare. I kind of found it as too much like Amadeus to me. It was about jealousy, about genius against end, so I proposed to make this a movie about political things, which is about succession. Succession, the monarchy, was absolute monarchy, and the most important political thing was who would be the next King. Then we incorporated that idea into that story line. It has all the elements of a Shakespeare play. Its about Kings, Queens, and Princes. Its about illegitimate children, its about incest, its about all of these elements which Shakespeare plays have. And its overall a tragedy. That was the way and Im really excited to make this movie. The film not only makes the case for the unorthodox Oxfordian theory that Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford wrote Shakespeares works. It also espouses the extremely fringe Prince Tudor theory as well that de Vere was the illegitimate son of Queen Elizabeth I. In the most extreme variants of the Prince Tudor theory, Edward de Vere became the queens lover as an adult, thus siring his own brother/son, Henry Wriothesley, the 3rd Earl of Southampton, who is believed to be the Fair Youth of the Sonnets and the sonnets dedicatee. This is depicted in Anonymous. [Movie data provided by OMDB]
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