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  • Directed, produced by, and starring Kenneth Branagh, All Is True is a pleasant enough film obviously born from great reverence, and, unsurprisingly, brilliantly acted, but is also a curiously formless piece of work, clumsily episodic in structure, and relatively free of conflict, focusing instead on non-incident and trees silhouetted against picturesque sunsets. By the very nature of the years during which it takes place (1613-1616), Ben Elton's screenplay is full of interpolations and suppositions, some of which are interesting, but many of which don't work. There's a much better film hidden in the contours of All Is True, a darker story examining Shakespeare's psychology; his inability to process the death of his son Hamnet, his guilt over the fact that he put his career ahead of his family, his possible misogyny, his obsession with his legacy. These issues are in the background, but they are not the focus, and whilst All Is True is perfectly fine, it's also perfectly forgettable.

    Possibly a palette-cleanser for Branagh, allowing him to return to the familiarity of Shakespeare, after several years working on relatively impersonal projects, and with two blockbusters on the way, All Is True begins on June 29, 1613, as Shakespeare (Branagh) watches the Globe Theatre burn to the ground, after a canon misfired during a performance of All Is True. Devastated, Shakespeare retires and returns home to Stratford. Coldly received by his wife Anne (Judi Dench) and youngest daughter, Judith (a superb Kathryn Wilder), he gets a slightly better welcome from his eldest, Susanna (Lydia Wilson). Still mourning the death of Judith's twin, Hamnet (Sam Ellis), his only son, who died from plague aged 11 in 1596, Shakespeare decides to grow a garden to honour his memory. However, he must also try to deal with Judith's hatred for him, stemming from her conviction that he believes the wrong twin died.

    The first thing to note about All Is True is how full of references it is to both Shakespeare's plays and incidents (or rumoured incidents) from his life. The idea that Shakespeare retired after the Globe fire is not original to the film, but was first hypothesised by Nicholas Rowe in 1709. Also, as the film shows, when a local man named John Lane (Sean Foley) accused Susanna of adultery, she and her puritan husband John Hall (Hadley Fraser) sued for slander. Also true is that in 1616, shortly after he married Judith, Thomas Quiney (Jack Colgrave Hirst) was charged with "carnal copulation". Admitting to the charge, he was fined five shillings, and Shakespeare altered his will so as to safeguard Judith's entitlements. A third example is a running joke concerning the matrimonial bed. When Shakespeare returns to Stratford, Anne sees him more as a guest, and so assigns him the best bed, as was customary for visitors, whilst she takes the second-best bed. Over the course of the film, he continually tries to work his way back into her good graces (i.e. back into her bed). Famously, Shakespeare left Anne "my second best bed" in his will, something which has caused debate amongst scholars.

    Elsewhere, there are references to Titus Andronicus (Shakespeare scares Lane from testifying against Susanna by threatening to tell the Moorish actor who played Aaron, and who is in love with Susanna, about Lane's accusations); The Merry Wives of Windsor (the composition of which Anne points out was what Shakespeare did to avoid dealing with the death of Hamnet); Macbeth ("I once uprooted an entire wood and moved it across a stage to Dunsinane"); The Winter's Tale (Shakespeare mentions that Ben Jonson "laughs at me because I speak no Greek and don't care whether Bohemia has a coast"); the legend that Shakespeare was caught poaching deer from Thomas Lucy's land (during an argument, Shakespeare tells Lucy, "I wish I had poached your bloody deer" - although, in reality, Lucy died in 1600); Robert Greene's contemptuous reference to Shakespeare as, amongst other things, an "upstart crow"; and Richard Burbage ("a brilliant lunatic actor"). I'm also fairly sure Branagh quotes himself at one point; arriving back at Stratford, a shot from inside the Shakespeare house shows the door opening and Shakespeare standing in the doorway, heavily silhouetted against the light, which is exactly how we first see Henry in Branagh's Henry V (1989).

    A critical scene, and easily the best in the film, involves Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton (Ian McKellen) visiting Stratford. Discussing his identity as the "fair youth" to whom Shakespeare addresses the first 126 sonnets, Southampton points out, "it was only flattery of course". When Shakespeare responds, "except, I spoke from deep within my heart", Southampton dismisses him, "well, I was younger then. Younger and prettier". Shakespeare then quotes in its entirety Sonnet 29, with Branagh reading it as an agonised ode to an impossible love. He then alludes to the fact he'd always hoped Southampton may have one day reciprocated his love, to which Southampton reacts sternly, telling him, "you forget yourself, Will, it is not your place to love me". Getting up to leave, Southampton then also recites Sonnet 29, with McKellen's intonation changing it into a celebration of the power of art to transcend such foolish distractions as love. It's a beautifully shot, incredibly well acted, and nuanced scene that, if it accomplishes nothing, serves to remind us just what talented actors can do when reciting the exact same text.

    One of the film's main themes is, of course, family, with Elton's script focusing on how resentful Anne and especially Judith have become of Shakespeare. We don't know a great deal about the real Judith, so much of Elton's characterisation is speculative. The film's Judith is essentially a protofeminist, a brilliant, complex, and acerbic woman railing against the narrow-minded patriarchy her father endorses. The likelihood of this being the case is slim at best, but Wilder is excellent in the part and makes Judith much more believable than the character has any right to be. Where Elton is more successful, and on firmer factual ground, is that Shakespeare's interest in his daughters' marriages revolves primarily (if not exclusively) around whether they can give him male grandchildren, now that Hamnet can't carry on the family name. The film acknowledges that Shakespeare was a neglectful father and husband, and never fully gets behind him as he defends himself by citing the cultivation of his genius, pointing out that his talents made the family very wealthy, and thus he should be excused. However, by the end, even he doesn't believe this himself, coming to understand the price his family paid for his greatness.

    However, there are some considerable problems. First and foremost is the script, which has a strangely formless structure, derived from an extremely episodic organisational principal, with scene after scene addressing one and only one issue at a time, ensuring each issue is cleared before moving onto the next. Scenes often involve the characters saying only what is necessary to get to the next scene, with little room to breathe, almost as if we're watching a "previously on" montage of a TV show. Because of this, when we do get scenes that are given a bit of time, such as the Southampton scene, they stick out, stylistically detached from the surrounding material.

    Another issue with the script is its use of 21st-century gender politics. The question the film raises is an interesting one - was Shakespeare so ensconced in patriarchal thinking that the lack of a male heir blinded him to the fact that one of his daughters may have had the ability to carry on his poetic legacy, if not his name. With every woman around Shakespeare a protofeminist, each of them more progressive (in the modern sense of the term) than him, the film builds to the moment when he comes to see they were right all along, scolding himself for his short-sightedness and boldly embracing the idea of gender equality. It's a poor attempt to graft contemporary ideology onto an epoch that simply had different beliefs. It's one thing to say Shakespeare may have been in been in favour of the female parts being played by women. It's one thing to say that The Taming of the Shrew may have been written to satirise and mock misogynistic attitudes rather than endorse them. It's something else entirely to say that Shakespeare, by the end of his life, was a feminist, and would eagerly have burnt his bra.

    The casting is also problematic. Now, don't get me wrong, I love Dench and McKellen as much as the next man, but that doesn't change the fact that they are both badly miscast. Both play their characters as elderly, but in 1613-1616, Anne (played by the 84-year-old Dench) was 57-60, and Southampton (played by the 79-year-old McKellen) was only 40-43. Additionally, Anne was six years older than Shakespeare, but Dench is 26 years older than Branagh, and it shows, serving only to distract from the content.

    As a Kenneth Branagh fan (and a fan of Ben Elton's wonderfully irreverent comedy Upstart Crow (2016)), I was disappointed with All Is True. Equal parts sullen and playful, Branagh's Shakespeare is both an extraordinary genius, not of the ilk of everyday mundanity, and a man who lives in the world and must deal with its absurdities. The film tries to strike a balance between a laid-back and wistful story about a retired writer, and a study of filial grief, with the dawning realisation that much of that grief could have been avoided. Some elements unquestionably work; the Southampton scene, Shakespeare's struggle to reconcile his genius with the personal cost of that genius for both himself and others, Judith's resentment of Hamnet. But a lot doesn't work. It's an inoffensive and perfectly fine film, but given the director and the subject, it could, and should, have been so much better.
  • There are so many mysteries in history, things we'll never know for sure. For instance, everything about Shakespeare is slightly mysterious. This movie focus on his last years and it is based on the very few written documents regarding Shakespeare's family and affairs. This script, based on those few, arid legal documents is pure speculation, but loving speculation from someone who admires Shakespeare a good deal.

    We can travel back in time and watch what could have been the final part of Shakespeare's life, back home. Played by Kenneth himself, Will is a slightly disappointed man, who at first does not find much comfort in his family. His wife Anne is resentful, his spinster daughter Judith even more so. Married daughter Susanna is also unhappy, but most of all Will is grieving for the loss of his only son, Hamnet. Allegedly struck down at 11 by the plague over 10 years earlier, Hamnet used to send poems to his father.

    Will believes his son to have had a great literary talent and that makes him ever more disconsolate by his premature departure. Judith, being Hamnet's twin sister thinks her father would have preferred her to die and she's obviously hurt. However, there is a secret waiting to be told, which will contribute to give Will the closure he so much needs.

    A word about the actors: Branagh is excellent as Shakespeare, definitely not recognizable as himself, but Judi Dench, playing wife Anne is too old for the part. As mentioned by many, Anne was only a few years older than William, but in this movie she could be his mother. Beautifully shot in the English countryside, the movie has an artistic quality to it, an atmospheric melancholic feeling that will be appreciate by many, but definitely not a movie for the masses.
  • A rather melancholy account of Shakespeare's declining years in Stratford, though there are a few more cheerful moments to lighten the gloom. Shakespeare comes home to stay after having been mostly absent in London for the past twenty years, still brooding over the death of his son Hamnet, and is given a moderate welcome by his wife Anne (the ever reliable Judi Dench) and his two daughters. There are some amusing references to the 'second best bed' (which Shakespeare famously left his wife in his will) and a rather unlikely plot about some poetry which may or may not have been written by the long dead Hamnet. Meanwhile his daughters have their own problems. It is all a bit sad and slow, but with some pleasant touches that make it worth watching.
  • I appreciated this thoughtful film, and Branagh did a marvelous job helming it while also portraying Shakespeare. Another reviewer scoffed at the historical inaccuracy due to the real-life age difference between Branagh and Dench. This chronology was not distracting to me, because both actors gave convincing portrayals. Costumes and set design were outstanding. The gorgeous English countryside stood in as another character, of sorts. During the pre-release screening (USA), the director revealed a fascinating fact: several of the interior scenes were lit by candles, absent of any set lights. I was taken by Branagh's passionate and studied approach to Shakespeare, and this film is a fine example.
  • mgumsley7 January 2021
    Branagh seemed stuck with inertia in this period piece as he seemed to consider every sentence before speaking.. However, the rest of the cast were not so dumbstruck and if anything this little tale served to ensure that Shakespeare was first a man of his time and not just a playwrght. Excellent production, but this was rather slow and plodding but was well served by some fine cameos, particularly from Judi Dench and Ian McKellen.
  • muamba_eats_toast9 February 2019
    The film for large parts is not all that memorable but never the less enjoyable at the same times. At times it is witty, others heartwarming and other times ventures into the darkness of loss and emotional rifts in a family all in a rather understated manner. Yes I may well not remember much about it come the end of the year but for a low budget drama it is excellently acted and very enjoyable indeed without being particularly spectacular.
  • Given his continued fame as the greatest playwright who ever lived, you'd be surprised at just how few films there are out there that detail the personal life of William Shakespeare. Of course, a key reason for that is that there just isn't all that much on record about his private life.

    And that's where films like All Is True come in. Taking some bold historical interpretations from the information available, the film comes up with an engrossing and emotionally riveting story, with an intimacy that makes for enthralling watching throughout, although its credentials as a historical piece are a little undermined by the fact that its story should be taken with rather a large pinch of salt.

    But historical accuracy doesn't always have to tell the whole story, and when it comes to the plot at hand, All Is True does a rather good job at making it an engrossing watch, particularly as it centres on the unexpected domestic turbulence of the Shakespeare household upon his final return from London.

    Proving an intriguing character study that opens up differing perspectives on Shakespeare as a man, the film manages to give an intimate and deep portrayal of the great writer's inner psyche, and whether or not it matches with the reality of history, it makes for fascinating viewing, with strong drama pulsating right the way through the film.

    Kenneth Branagh's performance as Shakespeare is great, and he gives a measured and impressively down-to-earth portrayal of a historical figure that most of us - who know next to nothing about Shakespeare (myself included) - would expect to be something different. In that, while the film does look at the nature and importance of his great body of work, he's actually a very likable and engrossing lead for the story at hand.

    So, as an intimate personal drama, All Is True does a pretty good job, but there's of course the overhanging question of its historical accuracy. Of course, as I said earlier, a good drama is still a good drama whether or not it tells a historically perfect story, but there is something to be said about a film that feels like it's masquerading as an entirely accurate account of a fairly unprovable period of history.

    In comparison to something like The Eagle Has Landed, which is a great deal of fun even though you know it's not real history, All Is True deliberately gives off the air of a standard historical biopic, even though a large proportion of its history is made through interpretation. Of course, it's fair to say that other portrayals of Shakespeare on film should be subject to the same criticism considering how little is known about his private life, but there is something a little underwhelming and disappointing when you watch a film that seems like true history, but in all truth most likely is not.

    That's not to say it's an entirely falsified piece, and the core, factual information of Shakespeare's family life is there in plain sight, but when it comes to some of the story's more outlandish historical interpretations, it's something to bear in mind if you're looking to watch the film as an educational piece as well as a dramatic one.

    Finally, while the movie does do a good job at providing intimate and engrossing emotional drama throughout, it just misses out on an extra level of depth in its portrayal of the last days of the great Shakespeare. In comparison to Mr. Holmes, which details the years of an aged Sherlock Holmes, All Is True doesn't quite have that fleeting elegance that suits its story so well, and that occasionally comes back to bite the film when it's really trying to hit home with its core emotion.

    Overall, All Is True is an engrossing personal drama, with strong and intimate emotion throughout that tells a fascinating dramatic story, furthered by an excellent lead performance from Kenneth Branagh. Its historical accuracy is certainly debatable, something that occasionally proves frustrating when looking for real emotional power, but it doesn't take away from an enthralling drama at the centre.
  • Superb actors, beautifully shot in places, but the script is one of the most embarrassingly hackneyed pieces of writing for film imaginable. It has all the subtlety of something from the Horrible Histories team with none of the jokes. It reminded me most of a French and Saunders movie skit. An opportunity missed.
  • It has been years since a Kenneth Branagh film made me feel something in the way this does. His Hollywood success has also been accompanied by a change in directorial style and a change in his focus on storytelling ... but this film returns to what made him so great early on ... a passion for the subject material. The end result is a period film that feels actually of the period, while also fully modern. Every frame of film is like a historical painting. And the story and characters are fully expressed. Slow, patient, sad, and beautiful - this is a wonderful film with wonderful writing, acting and directing. The pacing and editing is deliberate. What some critics have considered to be slow or meandering I would call the story taking it's time and earning it's value. Highly recommended.
  • Sony Classics' All Is True will mostly command the interest of older art house film connoisseurs, but at least this crowd will respect Kenneth Branagh's directorial effort. His domestic drama is a respectable take on William Shakespeare's final years.

    This isn't Branagh's first Shakespeare telling, so it's fair to say he probably knows more than you and me about the man and his work. He's directed five other films based on plays and also acted in each one of them. Little is known about who the English language's greatest dramatist really was. This film is more based on speculations about the final three years of the iconic writer's life.

    The Globe Theater burned down, after being in business for 14 years, during a performance of All Is True - the original title of a play believed to have been written by Shakespeare and John Fletcher that a decade later was renamed Henry VIII. Our well known playwright feels defeated by the destruction of his theater and retreats to rejoin his wife and two daughters, who he has barely seen in the last 20 years.

    A lot of exposition, with scene after scene devoted to one subject at a time. We see William doing some gardening and thinking about his late son Hamnet, who died at age 11 about a decade earlier. His wife (Judi Dench) thinks his sudden arrival disrupts their peaceful life. And we also get to see the true intentions of some angry, radical Puritans. They accuse William's daughter Susanna (Lydia Wilson) of being unfaithful to her husband John (Hadley Fraser). Then there's Will's unmarried illiterate younger daughter Judith (Kathryn Wilder), who has always believed her father had rather seen her die than her twin brother.

    Drama unfolds within the Shakespeare household, with enough resentment throughout the family to keep the story going for another hour. Anne has lived so many years without her husband, that she doesn't really wants him around anymore. His daughters are struggling with what's going on in their lives and also the things that happened in the past run parallel with William's pain in his heart, dying to know the truth about his son's death.

    The entire story is pretty straight forward without any sense of complexity. The only problem this film clearly has is the casting of Dame Judi Dench in the role of Anne Hathaway. It's well known that pregnant Hathaway was a few years older than Shakespeare, when they got married. But Dench and Branagh's age difference is a bit of a stretch - she could easily play his mother and she's usually a lot stronger and commanding in her roles, here she lacks any presence. Branagh on the other hand looks like the man himself, sloping nose, moustache, beard and receding hairline. He's not making the story just about himself to show how well an actor he is, but his directorial efforts should definitely be applauded. You can tell he knows the value of a strong supporting cast. Wilson and Wilder both are great in their roles as Shakespeare's daughters, but it's Wilder who is the true scene stealer and I truly want to see her in more period pieces in the near future.

    Many of the brighter daylight scenes reminded me of paintings from this time period, changing into different styles with the amount of light that seeps through the cracks of the doors and even when there's barely any light to see anything it's still mesmerising. Everything has an artistic flare that makes All Is True a true visual accomplishment. If only the story was as remarkable, I would still remember it a few days from now.
  • Kenneth Branagh's All is True earned an extra two stars from me for its sublime recitation - twice - of Shakespeare's own Sonnet No. 29, and for showing beautiful scenery of the English countryside. But I have a better idea: Instead of wasting nearly two hours in front of your television (or even worse, paying to sit through this snooze fest of a film in a theater), simply google Shakespearean Sonnet 29 and English Countryside, Images.

    As Shakespeare himself forewarned in Richard II: "I wasted time, and now doth time waste me." The Bard might very well have been referring to watching All is True.
  • This was beautiful in many ways. Lovely photography and music by Patrick Doyle. Well acted of course by Kenneth Branagh and Judy Dench. A very nice screenplay by Ben Elton who is more famous for his comedy writing. He also wrote the wonderful TV series "Upstart Crow" which is a funny view of Shakespeare. This film is much more serious. I don't understand why this film has such a low IMDB rating.
  • douglasneilson24211 February 2019
    Claustrophobic melodrama with candlelit interiors, huge close-ups and cameras mounted on floor. Director must have seen "The Favourite" just before he started this. Exteriors are signaled by flying leaves. Kenneth Brannagh dominates as Lead, Producer & Director. Judy Dench adds a Warwickshire accent to her Philomena, but the showstopper is Ian Mackellan as Gandalf in a blond wig, who is in it for 10 minutes. It's not terrible, but Ben Elton forgot to put in some jokes (despite the trailer suggesting it was a comedy).
  • It's curious that we have a movie about William Shakespeare bearing a name like All Is True when the largest portion of it may well not be. But of course, how could any of this be known when it all took place so very long ago and, so little survives or had been recorded about the famous Bard. Writer Ben Elton has donned both his creative hats for this concoction - that of total fictional fabrication and 'what we think to know' presumptions.

    Director/actor Kenneth Branagh while wanting to accurately transcribe the times may have forgotten that it's also important to entertain his audience and allow them to enjoy the visual treats of sets, costumes, and creating a mood via creative lighting. His sets are so gloomily lit there's a tenancy to lull the viewer to sleep. A particularly slow pace could even leave some reaching for the 2 x times remote. This need not have been - broad subjects such as this, set in dark times, under other great lighting/cameramen have allowed us to be transported back to bygone candle/gaslight days by using deep blacks and well-lit subjects that allowed viewers to feel the era and enjoy the rich moods simultaneously. For an artificial interpretation of reality, a thinking audience will forgive any production that considers their visual appreciation over sombre moods.

    Modern liberties seem to have been catered for by suggesting that Will's Sonnets may have been written for another bloke - in this case the Earle of Southampton. Not sure where Elton came up with this suggestion as there doesn't appear all that much documentation to build on that assumption. We learn that Mr Shakespeare did not attend University, somewhat proving that a University degree can't always account for intelligence, and that his wife Anne was illiterate. There are other family intrigues to offer personal interest but what promised to be an enlightening experience comes across as a tad too heavy-handed and at times inaccessible.

    Performances are good but still remains for dedicated Shakespeare followers only, and some won't even last the distance - it's not that its overlong, just takes it's time telling its (largely fabricated) story.
  • First, its special beauty has as source the status of hommage to William Shakespeare by Kenneth Branagh. If you do not ignore the great adaptations of the plays by Branagh, you understand why "All Is True" is a real special film. Second - for splendid photography . And for magnificent portrait of Anne Hathaway by Dame Judy Dench. And for the moments when the Shakespeare resemblance becomes almost...magic. And the music, off course. And the delicate use of themes.

    Sins ? For me , it seems too...didactic. You know the life, you know the plays, you do not forget the verses. And you need a Shakespeare alive, of small gestures, not a package of explanations. I feel the meetings with the Earl of Southampton and Ben Jonson not real inspired used. Cliches, again and again, parts of lessons and something who you know deserves be better.

    But, I admitt, I love it. For beauty, with so many faces and sources. And, off course, for "sins". And my old admiration for Kenneth Brannagh is more significant at the end of this film.
  • kosmasp5 August 2021
    How good do you know your Shakespeare? And you know the rumors that existed or surrounded him and his work(s)? Quite the bleak look back with an extraordinary cast (especially in the main roles). And while the focus lies on William S., we get to see those close to him and their own issues.

    Of course you may disagree with what is being shown and depicted here. But you can't deny the fascination with (allegedly?) one of the greatest writers of our history. So while not definitive, this is an interesting watch to say the least.
  • I thought Kenneth Branagh was excellent in the role of Will and it was interesting to find a film based upon Shakespeare's real life, but the plot was incredibly boring. Watchable, pleasant but sadly I felt a little let down.
  • Allittlelateto the show here - But a few observations:

    First, I'm a novice Shakespeare fan - read several books in my teens. Limited to movies in these days. Like some of his stuff, hate some of it.

    Second observation - sometimes I like to read a few 1 star reviews. Ever notice how people who absolutely abhor a movie elaborate on it in lengthy reviews?

    Anyway - most of the few I bothered to read were up-in-atms about the title vs the actual story portrayed. Apparently they all missed the short scene where a young fellow comes to William and asks about writing. Wills line here usesthe title of the movie - in essence, paraphrasing, he tells the young man, 'If you write what you know and feel, then all is true.' So I believe the title reflects that philosophical ideology - why then so cut-&-dried would any viewer assume 'this whole movie story is supposed to true.' ...?

    Thirdly, I enjoyed the movie overall and caught much more humour than hard-core Shakespeareans claimed and musr have missed, but I also agree it was a bit more dramatic than expected.

    Another observation - I too agreed Dame Judy seemed too old to play the wife - but since most of the characters ages are askew - so what? (I think it came across like a stage play filmed) I think the film cast is cream-of-the-crop adored. So whatever.

    I also think it's helpful being a novice, bc I could simply enjoy a movie without influence.

    So that may sound 'unlearned' & stupid to some, but think of the many young people who might watch this and simply be inspired to explore more Shakespeare.

    Finally, did anyone else think Branaugh looked like Ben Kingsley? 😅
  • John Madden's 1998 film "Shakespeare in Love" proposed a secret love affair as being the inspiration behind Shakespeare's most popular play, "Romeo and Juliet." The film's widespread success revealed the public's longing to find a real human being behind the name of the iconic poet and playwright who composed at least 37 plays, 154 sonnets, and five long narrative poems, but whose life story we know little about. Written by Ben Elton, the latest attempt to shed some light on the subject is Kenneth Branagh's All is True, a film that focuses on the poet's last years in Stratford-upon-Avon after his premature retirement in 1613. While it is a work of speculative fiction, by borrowing the mysterious alternative title of Shakespeare's "Henry VIII," Branagh implies (perhaps tongue-in-cheek) that the film reflects true events.

    All Is True opens as Shakespeare (Branagh), vowing to never write again after the Globe Theater burned to the ground in 1613, returns to his Stratford home after an absence of 21 years. From the outset, the feeling tone is one of wistful sadness enhanced by shots by cinematographer Zac Nicholson of autumn leaves drifting slowly to the ground. One almost expects to hear Frank Sinatra in the background singing "September Song." Taking a page from his most famous play "Hamlet," William is visited on his arrival by the ghost of his son Hamnet (Sam Ellis), who died at the age of 11 and who offers his father some of his poems to read. Saddled with a prosthetic nose and hairline, Branagh resembles a figure being geared for display at Madame Tussauds Wax Museum.

    Though historically not in evidence, Shakespeare is shown being welcomed by the townsfolk with a reverence usually reserved for the Archbishop of Canterbury. He is greeted coldly, however, by his wife Anne, played by the great Judi Dench ("Victoria and Abdul") and his daughter Judith (Kathryn Wilder), but with slightly less chill by daughter Susannah (Lydia Wilson). Accused by his wife of not mourning Hamnet at the time of his death, William insists that he did mourn Hamnet but Anne retorts, twisting the knife, "You mourn him now. At the time you wrote 'Merry Wives of Windsor'" (a farcical comedy). Judith's resentment is said to stem from her belief that her father thinks that "the wrong twin died," while Susanna cannot help but notice William's disdain for her marriage to local physician John Hall (Hadley Fraser), a man of strict Puritan leanings.

    Tormented by the death of his son whom he believed was a promising poet whose writing showed "wit and mischief," the film proceeds episodically through William's lonely planting of a garden in Hamnet's memory, his strained relationship with his wife Anne, and his conflicts with his two daughters. Shakespeare emphatically tells his younger daughter Judith that she should marry and provide him with a male heir. Though he rages that his talent made the family very wealthy and was not appreciated, he later begins to understand the price they paid for his genius. One of the film's high points is the exchange during an unlikely visit to Stratford by the prettified 3rd Earl of Southampton, played by the forty-years-too-old Ian McKellen ("Mr. Holmes").

    The Earl brings up his identity as the "fair youth" of Shakespeare's Sonnets, pointing out that "it was only flattery, of course," to which the Bard responds, "Except, I spoke from deep within my heart." "But I was so young and pretty, then," Southampton responds. When they take turns in reciting Shakespeare's immortal Sonnet 29, asserting the great author's tender feeling towards the Earl, we at last get a glimpse of Shakespeare's true greatness. While the film has considerable pleasures including striking performances by Dench and Branagh, basically, All is True exists primarily as a vehicle to promote the traditional view of Shakespeare's authorship, now coming under attack from various quarters, most prominently from the growing interest in other candidates.

    Contrary to its perceived intention, however, the film is neither edifying nor convincing in its attempt to put a human face on a cipher who lacks history, personality, or indeed any semblance of a biography, and whose life story, as it has come down to us, has no connection to the many-faceted genius revealed in the plays and poems. Ignoring the fact that Shakespeare was a tax evader, money lender, profiteer, and grain hoarder, Branagh and Elton envision Shakespeare as a genius capable of any literary feat imaginable. In one scene, an aspiring writer asks the Bard how he accomplished what he did without any schooling past the age of 14, without traveling outside of England, or having ready access to the immense learning evident in the plays.

    The answer is right out of the Stratfordian playbook of miracles, "What I know . . . I have imagined," he says, asking us to accept that Shakespeare's knowledge of philosophy and astronomy, theology and the law, foreign languages, music, medicine, and court intrigue all came from his vivid imagination. In its attempt to make the implausible plausible, however, Branagh dumbs Shakespeare down enough to persuade us that he is just a "storyteller," an ordinary fellow after all, with domestic problems just like the rest of us. At one point, William proclaims with un-Shakespeare-like banality, "I've lived so long in imaginary worlds, I think I've lost sight of what is real." We might also say that is true of the traditional Shakespeare biography.
  • ben-8488413 August 2019
    A stunning slow paced beautifully shot movie. Ignore the bad reviews, take a breathe and enjoy the pace.
  • Here we are again. Let's take some real historical characters and rewrite their lives to fit with our modern day sensibilities. I'd rather 'fictionalised' characters were put into these stories but then, the audiences would have to think. Thinking is too hard, apparently. We instead have to be given a right thorough wash over with emote. There's only crying to be done with this rather morose film. We're missing all those other feelings that give us a nip. Marginal intellect engaged, hankies used, mood altered. I guess that will have to do.
  • The script attempts to address the many vexed questions of WS' last years; but does so with dubious success. The problem being, that it poses questions for which it does provide answers. There are some hugely successful scenes; the gallows speech of Aaron from 'Titus Andronicus" (particularly clever as Aaron brings forth a boy - which his speech shall save); the ticking off of his antagonists, and the sly 'second bed' MacGuffin. The Ian McKellen 'Dark Lady' scene seemed an excuse for a gratuitous cameo. It is almost as if the gods of Olympus had mounted a frame play, but chose the minor poet Metriótita to craft the script. The special effects scenes with Hamnet are poignant, yet lack the magical realism at which Shakespeare excelled. The pacing often dragged, and the garden metaphor - while apt - became tedious at times. Fab costumes and sets. Neighbor's dog should be nominated for a Woofie!
  • I don't understand all the hate!

    This film was a beautiful, low key escape to a time and place, green, lucious & less sensationalised.

    For what is was, it couldn't be better.
  • brockfal15 February 2021
    An interesting idea - what did Shakespeare do in retirement? Go home to Stratford and do some gardening perhaps? Well, a bit more than that, in fact, mostly confronting domestic issues, and memories. It's a thoughtful film, serious, sober, even likeable, but it's also unremarkable, despite the fine talent on show. It's clearly a labour of love, but somehow it fails to truly come alive.
  • Just because the writer and director are dealing with one of the most interesting, well loved and intriguing figures in English literature does not guarantee the end result will be a good film.

    The film is poorly written and directed. Extremely slow and boring, with only a few occasional sparks generated by the magic of Shakespeare's writing adapted into the dialogue.

    Branagh's performance is flat and uninspiring and brings no spark or insight into his portrayal of this wonderfully interesting literary genius. Judi Dench is badly miscast as Shakespeare's wife Anne Hathaway, 29 years older than Branagh compared to the 8 years difference between Shakespeare and his wife. Dench comes across more like his mother than his wife.

    Some adequate acting from the rest of the cast cannot save the film from disaster.

    Fans of Shakespeare will be disappointed, the frequent references to his work don't translate into something interesting as far as the film itself is concerned. Non fans of Shakespeare will just shake their head in disbelief as the pedestrian pace grinds on and on.

    The most disappointing film I have seen in a long time prompts me to warn others about this film. I found the film to be a complete failure and a torturous waste of 101 minutes of my life that I will never get back.
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