A Midsummer Night's Dream

Love makes fools of us all.

6.4
19991h 56m

Production

Logo for Taurus Film
Logo for Fox Searchlight Pictures
Logo for Regency Enterprises

The lovely Hermia is to wed Demetrius, but she truly cares for Lysander. Hermia's friend, Helena, is in love with Demetrius, while other romantic entanglements abound in the woods, with married fairy rulers Titania and Oberon toying with various lovers and each other.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: A Midsummer Night's Dream (1999) Trailer

A Midsummer Night's Dream (1999) Trailer

Cast

Photo of Dominic West

Dominic West

Lysander

Photo of Kevin Kline

Kevin Kline

Nick Bottom

Photo of Roger Rees

Roger Rees

Peter Quince

Photo of Max Wright

Max Wright

Robin Starveling

Photo of Bill Irwin

Bill Irwin

Tom Snout

Photo of Sam Rockwell

Sam Rockwell

Francis Flute

Photo of John Sessions

John Sessions

Philostrate

Photo of Roberta Galli

Roberta Galli

Fury - Fairyworld

Photo of Aldo Marinucci

Aldo Marinucci

Satyr Musician - Fairyworld

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

This is my favourite Shakespeare story, full of mischief and mayhem, comedy and even a good bit of lust mixed in with the true love. This, however, is a really pedestrian adaptation that doesn't measure (for measure) up at all. The all important character of "Puck" is really quite underplayed by Stanley Tucci and Kevin Klein's "Bottom" comes across better suited for a pantomime performance of this tale of the ultimate love triangle. If you don't know the story: "Hermia" (Anna Friel) is in love with "Lysander" (Dominic West) but her father (Bernard Hill) wants her to marry "Demetrius" (Christian Bale). In the end they have to go before the Duke (David Strathairn) who says either marry as you're bid or prepare to die! Bent on escaping, they all end up in the forest and under a magical spell from "Puck" that throws all of their order into chaos and leaves us with some colourful and entertaining scenarios as the poor old Duke attends to his own impending nuptials whilst unsure of who actually loves whom! The problem with the casting here is that they all seem a little overwhelmed by the language. It does stick to the traditional dialogue, and I couldn't help but wonder if maybe the stars were just too in awe of what they were acting and so nothing really comes across as very natural or engaging to watch. It looks good, there is a fine score mixing the classical with a Simon Boswell original but sadly the comedy doesn't work so well and the whole thing underperforms this magical and whimsical story. Nothing special here, sorry.

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