Nonfiction
eVideo
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1 online resource (streaming video file) (117 minutes): digital, .flv file, sound
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The crowning achievement of Orson Welles’s extraordinary film career,Chimes at Midnightwas the culmination of the filmmaker’s lifelong obsession with Shakespeare’s ultimate rapscallion, Sir John Falstaff. Usually a comic supporting figure, Falstaff—the loyal, often soused friend of King Henry IV’s wayward son Prince Hal—here becomes the focus: a robustly funny and ultimately tragic screen antihero played by Welles with looming, lumbering grace. Integrating elements from bothHenry IVplays as well asRichard II, Henry V,andThe Merry Wives of Windsor,Welles created a gritty and unorthodox Shakespeare film, one that he intended, he said, as “a lament . . . for the death of Merrie England.” Poetic, philosophical, and visceral—with a kinetic centerpiece battle sequence that rivals anything else in the director’s body of work—Chimes at Midnightis as monumental as the figure at its heart
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Film
Originally produced by Criterion Collection/Janus Films in 1966
Mode of access: World Wide Web
In English