Based on the award-winning play of the same name and directed by the author, this film focuses on two minor characters from Shakespeare's "Hamlet" and explores their interaction with the play's characters and events.
This is a perfect movie. Everything about it is absolutely brilliant. Tom Stoppard took his stage play and transitioned it flawlessly to the silver screen without losing any of the play's original punch and hilarity. I love this movie.
The actors are all cast perfectly. Tim Roth and Gary Oldman are charming, adorable, clueless and tragic all at once as Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, childhood friends of Hamlet who seem to remember nothing of themselves and are trapped in the web that is Shakespeare's "Hamlet." Their chemistry is sparkling and without it, the movie would be boring as so much of the text is dialogue between the two best friends. Richard Dreyfuss is also magnificent, which surprised me as I'd only seen him in "Jaws," "Close Encounters," and "What About Bob?" He is simultaneously hilarious and menacing as the Lead Player, the head of the troupe responsible for the play that convinced Hamlet his uncle had indeed murdered the king. Throughout the film, you get the sinister feeling that Dreyfuss knows what's going on somehow, and one scene in particular where the actors put on a play for the castle's servants, your suspicions are confirmed but never explained.
The whole look of the film - sets, scene transitions, camera work - is so layered and adds so much to the movie, I was in awe of Stoppard's pure genius. The movie almost looks like a theater stage where our heroes wander about, sometimes going in circles no matter how hard they try to get somewhere else. The characters from "Hamlet," Claudius, Gertrude, etc, all overact as if they were on stage, but still maintain enough subtleness that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern do blend into the tapestry.
When you see this movie, prepare to think. Prepare to think about it for a very long time. It's been a few days since I've seen it and I still have occasional dreams about it and still get super excited whenever it crosses my mind. I feel like there's still so much that the movie is trying to teach me. That's the sign of a perfect movie. This is that movie.