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Prospero's Books

  • 19911991
  • RR
  • 2h 4m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
6.5K
YOUR RATING
John Gielgud, Isabelle Pasco, Mark Rylance, and Michael Clark in Prospero's Books (1991)
The magician Prospero attempts to stop his daughter's affair with an enemy.
Play trailer1:14
1 Video
30 Photos
DramaFantasy
The magician Prospero attempts to stop his daughter's affair with an enemy.The magician Prospero attempts to stop his daughter's affair with an enemy.The magician Prospero attempts to stop his daughter's affair with an enemy.
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
6.5K
YOUR RATING
    • Peter Greenaway
    • William Shakespeare(play "The Tempest")
    • Peter Greenaway
  • Stars
    • John Gielgud
    • Michael Clark
    • Michel Blanc
    • Peter Greenaway
    • William Shakespeare(play "The Tempest")
    • Peter Greenaway
  • Stars
    • John Gielgud
    • Michael Clark
    • Michel Blanc
  • See production, box office & company info
    • 86User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See more at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:14
    Watch Trailer

    Photos30

    Prospero's Books (1991)
    John Gielgud in Prospero's Books (1991)
    John Gielgud in Prospero's Books (1991)
    John Gielgud in Prospero's Books (1991)
    Isabelle Pasco in Prospero's Books (1991)
    Prospero's Books (1991)
    John Gielgud in Prospero's Books (1991)
    Prospero's Books (1991)
    John Gielgud and Isabelle Pasco in Prospero's Books (1991)
    Pierre Bokma in Prospero's Books (1991)
    Ute Lemper in Prospero's Books (1991)
    John Gielgud in Prospero's Books (1991)

    Top cast

    Edit
    John Gielgud
    John Gielgud
    • Prospero
    Michael Clark
    • Caliban
    Michel Blanc
    Michel Blanc
    • Alonso
    Erland Josephson
    Erland Josephson
    • Gonzalo
    Isabelle Pasco
    Isabelle Pasco
    • Miranda
    Tom Bell
    Tom Bell
    • Antonio
    Kenneth Cranham
    Kenneth Cranham
    • Sebastian
    Mark Rylance
    Mark Rylance
    • Ferdinand
    Gerard Thoolen
    Gerard Thoolen
    • Adrian
    Pierre Bokma
    Pierre Bokma
    • Francisco
    Jim van der Woude
    • Trinculo
    Michiel Romeyn
    Michiel Romeyn
    • Stephano
    Orpheo
    • Ariel
    Paul Russell
    • Ariel
    James Thierrée
    • Ariel
    • (as James Thiérrée)
    Emil Wolk
    • Ariel
    Marie Angel
    • Iris
    Ute Lemper
    Ute Lemper
    • Ceres
      • Peter Greenaway
      • William Shakespeare(play "The Tempest")
      • Peter Greenaway
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Prospero was Sir John Gielgud's favorite stage role and he had attempted to mount a movie of Shakespeare's "The Tempest" for decades, contacting Orson Welles, Akira Kurosawa, and Ingmar Bergman about directing, and Welles and Albert Finney about playing Caliban. The version with Welles directing and playing Caliban was in preparation until the financial failure of Welles' and Gielgud's movie of Falstaff (1966) forced the project to fall through, where it laid dormant until Gielgud finally convinced Peter Greenaway to make this version.
    • Alternate versions
      The German DVD version has two title cards before the opening credits explaining prior events and the premise of the film.
    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: Paradise/Livin' Large/The Fisher King/The Indian Runner (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      Prospero's Magic
      Written by Michael Nyman

    User reviews86

    Review
    Review
    Featured review
    A Masterful Film about the Limits of Film
    I'm attracted to competence, and especially when the vision is unusual and moving. But I love self-referential art, in this case a movie that includes as part (in fact the center) of its message some perspective on what the movie is all about.

    This film is one of my most valued experiences, and here, I'll just write about the self-reference. For this, you have to know the context of the play itself. `The Tempest' was written at the end of Shakespeare's career. Earlier, he had composed some of the richest drama that may ever be created. In so doing, the technique -- at least in the great plays -- was to grapple with great forces and ideas and project then into stories. The theatric convention of the days was one of sparse presentation: few props, sets, costumes.

    But towards the end of Shakespeare's life, the conventions changed. Ben Jonson and Inigo Jones had introduced the notion of lush, magical special effects, and even popularized productions that consisted of nothing at all but the effects themselves. Shakespeare's prior efforts were deep structures which use the sparse conventions of the theater, without undue obfuscation from those. But here he was asked to produce, even compete, using techniques whose very nature is to distract. So he wrote a play ABOUT visual effects that obfuscate and manipulate, while USING visual effects to the same end.

    But there's a deeper irony. Some think Prospero was modeled after John Dee, but this is likely not so, Instead the model was Magus Thomas Harriot who actually did visit the New World and report strange happenings. (In the winter of 1585, he wintered with Algonquian priests probably on, certainly near the land I'm writing from.) Harriot was the age's greatest scientist, but we hardly know him because he never wrote any books as he was under constant examination for heresy. There's lots to his story, all which Shakespeare would have known and partly lived, and the notion of Prospero's Books would have been especially rich at the time of writing.

    Cinema is a medium which is all effects, nothing but illusion, and thus is nearly impossible to use as a lens for true visions of the world. So here we have Greenaway's film in which illusion is the point of the immensely clever theatric notion of Prospero's Books. The books are both the illusions and the distorted lens, and turned here into a means to make a film purely about what it means to be a film, and to do so with specific reference to Shakespeare's structure about the similar problem in the effect-laden theater. Moreover, Shakespeare's reference is to Harriot's earlier, similar conundrum between the motions of the great world and the imperfect lens of logic that is required to capture some image of those laws in books.

    It's all so well conceived. I'll let others comment on the execution, which seems masterful to me. This film will live very long, and you will be less impoverished by seeing/experiencing it.
    helpful•51
    21
    • tedg
    • Apr 30, 2000

    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 30, 1991 (United Kingdom)
      • United Kingdom
      • Netherlands
      • France
      • Italy
      • Japan
    • Official sites
      • AlloFlix
      • Official site
      • English
    • Also known as
    • Filming locations
      • Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands
    • Production companies
      • Allarts
      • Cinéa
      • Caméra One
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Technical specs

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    • 2 hours 4 minutes
      • Color

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    John Gielgud, Isabelle Pasco, Mark Rylance, and Michael Clark in Prospero's Books (1991)
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