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[CHURCH BELL RINglNG ]
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NARRATOR:
Our revels now are ended.
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These our actors, as I foretold you...
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... were all spirits
and are melted into air...
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...into thin air.
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And, like the baseless fabric
of this vision...
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... the cloud-capp 'd towers...
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... the gorgeous palaces...
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... the solemn temples...
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... the great globe itself...
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... ye all which it inherit...
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...shall dissolve...
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...and, like this insubstantial pageant
faded...
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...leave not a wisp behind.
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We are such stuff
as dreams are made on...
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...and our little life
is rounded with a sleep.
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Who's gonna say, ''Action''?
should I say it, or should you?
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-You wanna say it?
HADGE: You can say it.
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-I don't want to. Say it.
SPACEY: You say it.
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KIMBALL: And action!
-How do I look?
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I can't see anything.
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Are they out there?
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This is my entrance.
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Fuck.
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[GROWLS]
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MAN 1 :
I'm actually reading Richard III...
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. . .and I can't get on with it.
I've been reading it for six months.
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You want to do it
with your American accent?
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We're getting $40 a day
and all the doughnuts we can eat.
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Shakespeare? What the fuck
do you know about Shakespeare?
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Arise, fair sun. . .
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. . .and kill the envious moon.
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Like eager droppings into milk,
it doth posset and curd.
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Some are born great,
some achieve greatness. . .
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. . .and some have greatness
thrust upon them.
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MAN 2:
Intelligence is hooked with language.
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When we speak with no feeling,
we get nothing out of our society.
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We should speak like Shakespeare.
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We should introduce Shakespeare
into the academics.
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You know why? Because then
the kids would have feelings.
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PACINO: That's right.
-We have no feelings.
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That's why it's easy for us
to shoot each other.
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We don't feel for each other,
but if we were taught to feel. . .
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-. . .we wouldn't be so vioIent.
PACINO: Shakespeare helps us?
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He did more than help us.
He instructed us.
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PACINO:
Hi. You gonna see the play tonight?
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You're gonna see it, huh?
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hello.
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MAN 3: How much it cost?
PACINO: It's for free.
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-Okay, I'm going.
-Okay.
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MAN 4: Thanks a lot.
-Your first Shakespeare play?
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-Yeah.
-It'll be interesting. glve it a try.
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-I saw Hamlet recentIy.
-How did you feel about it?
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-Did you see it live? It what?
-It sucked.
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-It what?
-It sucked. I saw it live.
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-It sucked?
-Yeah.
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PACINO: Anything in Shakespeare that
made you think it's not cIose to you. . .
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-. . .or connected to you in any way?
-Yeah, it's boring.
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A bank in England uses
Shakespeare as. . . .
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Cover my account number.
See, it's a hoIogram.
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They use it as ID to prove
it's a real card.
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PACINO:
What do you think of Shakespeare?
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He's a great export.
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Who's moving in on Shakespeare?
The Japanese.
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Because they're kicking
the Americans' ass.
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And they're all interested
in Shakespeare.
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You know Shakespeare?
William Shakespeare?
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We're peddIing him on the streets.
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I remember our English teacher
sent us to see. . .
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. . .a IocaI coIIege production
of King Lear.
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I went with my glrIfriend. . .
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. . .and after about 1 0 minutes
of these people:
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[BABBLING ]
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They were doing this kind
of Shakespearean acting.
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I just tuned right out. We made out
in the back row and Ieft at intermission.
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I was brought up in a schooI. . .
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. . .where Shakespeare was taught
very kind of. . .
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. . .straightforwardIy and duIIy,
to be honest.
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We read it aloud and it made no sense,
because there was no connection made.
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My own experience. . .
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00:05:07,920 --> 00:05:12,232
. . .was in the fieIds in Michigan,
where I was raised on a farm. . .
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. . .and an uncIe, who was a Northern
guy, bIack Northern guy. . .
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. . .came out of the fieId one day
and started narrating. . .
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. . .Antony's speech, the funeraI oration.
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-From Shakespeare's Julius Caesar?
-Yeah. We'd heard stuff from the Bible. . .
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. . .but my first time as a kid,
I was hearing. . .
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. . .great words having great meaning.
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KIMBALL:
What brings us to Montreal?
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To Paris? To London?
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What takes us into dungeons,
to parapets--
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-To Japan next.
-To Japan, maybe, is a quest.
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PACINO:
It has always been a dream of mine...
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... to communicate how I feel
about Shakespeare to other people.
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So I asked my friend Frederic Kimball,
who is an actor and a writer...
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...and also our colleagues
Michael Hadge...
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...and James Bulleit, to join me.
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And by taking this one play,
Richard III. . .
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...analyzing it, approaching it
from different angles...
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...putting on costumes,
playing out scenes...
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00:06:13,040 --> 00:06:17,477
... we could communicate
both our passion for it...
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...our understanding
that we've come to...
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...and in doing that...
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...communicate a Shakespeare
that is about how we feel...
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...and how we think today. That's
the effort we're gonna glve it here.
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KIMBALL:
We've done Richard three times. Twice.
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You did it at the Studio, we've done it
in Boston and on Broadway.
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At Ieast, the head start is that
I've done it. You've done it.
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-But the problem, Frederic--
KIMBALL: The audience hasn't done it.
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-They haven't done it.
-It's a difficuIt play.
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PACINO: If someone were to ask you
about Richard III. . .
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. . .what would you remember about it?
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To be honest, I really don't remember
that much, if anything at all.
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PACINO: Did you know that Richard III
had a deformed arm and a deformed back?
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-No, I didn't.
PACINO: You didn't know that?
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The play, Richard III,
about the guy with the humpback?
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-No.
-You got me there.
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Mm-mm.
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PACINO: He was a humpback? ''A
horse. A horse. My kingdom for a horse''?
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-That comes from Richard III.
MAN 5: It does, yes.
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I mean, nobody knows
who Richard III is.
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-Nobody.
HADGE: It's a tough play to get.
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The reIationships between
those characters.
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-Who can keep it straight?
-well, I think the question is. . .
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. . .what is the understanding?
I mean, the understanding is. . . .
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It's a simpIy. . . . Can you
foIIow the story Iine and the plot?
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We've provided this kind of
docudrama-type thing. . .
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. . .to inform some of the scenes
so you know where you are.
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For instance, there's an early scene
with the queen...
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...and her brother and her two sons...
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... which is outside in an anteroom...
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. . .waiting for the king to call them in
because he is inside, sick.
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The queen is worried. She's afraid
the king will die, who is her husband.
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And when he dies, the only. . . .
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The only people Ieft to inherit the throne
are her two young sons. . .
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. . .by the king himseIf.
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She has two sons by a previous
marriage, which are in the scene.
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And she's afraid that the character I
play, Richard III of Gloucester. . .
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. . .is going to take hold
of the situation. . .
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. . .and somehow manipulate them
into thinking. . .
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. . .that they're, you know. . . .
That the kids are. . . .
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I'm confused just saying it.
I can imaglne how you must feel. . .
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. . .hearing me talk. It's confusing.
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I don't know why we even bother
doing this at all.
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But we'll glve it a little try.
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Let's see what we can come up with.
First of all, let's get a smaller. . . .
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Let's work out of a smaller book
than this. This is hard to carry.
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-Excuse me, but look at this. ''hello?''
-I think--
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''Yes. It's my entrance? Oh, I see. ''
149
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It's good sometimes that you open it,
and it is Richard, it's not Hamlet.
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Sometimes in Shakespeare,
there's a tendency. . .
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. . .to confuse the plays.
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The first act is about a sick king,
and everybody maneuvering. . .
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PACINO: Sure.
-. . .around. I wish that this play. . .
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. . .couId begln. . .
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. . .on the body. . . .
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On the sleeping king. . .
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-. . .Edward IV, your brother, in bed.
PACINO: Yeah.
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And it pans up and you are standing
over him, looking at him.
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Yeah.
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-Yes, but he's alive, the king is alive.
-Yes.
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I would prefer having him
off in the distance. I'd like--
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-Good. You can watch him.
PACINO: I'd like to waIk--
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00:10:01,360 --> 00:10:03,555
-Frederic? Can you get the other end?
KIMBALL: Yeah.
164
00:10:03,720 --> 00:10:05,392
I'd like-- Hi, how are you?
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Frederic and I decided to go
to The Cloisters...
166
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...a museum that has
a medieval setting...
167
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... which is good for us because the play
takes place in this period.
168
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We thought we'd rehearse
in this atmosphere.
169
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We're shooting him.
We're shooting him.
170
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I'll be with you in a minute,
if you can just wait for me out there.
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-So you're here.
-Okay. Okay.
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00:10:28,840 --> 00:10:31,070
-And here we are.
-Okay.
173
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Now, you're Richard's brother,
the sick king, and I'm Richard. Okay.
174
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Yes. I move this way,
and you foIIow me.
175
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-Now. . . .
-How exciting to start with ''now. ''
176
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You'd wake your audience up,
wouldn't you? ''Now! ''
177
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Now. . .
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. . .is the winter of our discontent. . .
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. . .made. . .
180
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. . .glorious summer. . .
181
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. . .by this sun of York.
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00:11:16,880 --> 00:11:18,279
KIMBALL:
It's a pun.
183
00:11:18,480 --> 00:11:21,597
The sun of York is the sun in the sky. . .
184
00:11:21,760 --> 00:11:24,672
. . .over the English countryside of York.
185
00:11:24,840 --> 00:11:30,198
York is aIso your family name,
and you are one of three sons of York.
186
00:11:30,680 --> 00:11:32,033
Let me say it again, then.
187
00:11:32,200 --> 00:11:33,599
Now. . .
188
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. . .is the winter of our discontent. . .
189
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. . .made glorious summer.
190
00:11:40,680 --> 00:11:45,071
PACINO: I said the opening speech
from Richard to a group of students. . .
191
00:11:45,280 --> 00:11:49,751
''Our discontent made glorious summer. ''
Anybody know what that means?
192
00:11:53,080 --> 00:11:57,198
. . .who were interested, because I meant
something, didn't know what I meant.
193
00:11:57,560 --> 00:12:00,711
''Now is the winter of our discontent. ''
What am I saying?
194
00:12:00,960 --> 00:12:03,997
He is referring to their part--
To the Wars of the Roses.
195
00:12:04,360 --> 00:12:06,749
Before the play Richard III starts. . .
196
00:12:06,920 --> 00:12:09,878
. . .we gotta know a little bit
about what happened before.
197
00:12:10,040 --> 00:12:13,157
What happened is, we've just been
through a civiI war. . .
198
00:12:13,320 --> 00:12:15,072
. . .called the War of the Roses. . .
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00:12:15,560 --> 00:12:16,788
[SWORDS CLANglNG ]
200
00:12:16,960 --> 00:12:21,351
. . .in which the Lancasters
and the Yorks cIashed.
201
00:12:21,520 --> 00:12:22,555
[HORSE NEIGHS]
202
00:12:22,720 --> 00:12:24,153
Two rival families,
and the Yorks won.
203
00:12:24,320 --> 00:12:28,393
They beat the Lancasters, and they're
now in power. Richard is a York.
204
00:12:28,560 --> 00:12:31,870
PACINO:
My brother Edward is the king now.
205
00:12:32,040 --> 00:12:33,871
And my brother Clarence...
206
00:12:34,040 --> 00:12:36,793
. . .is not the king,
and me, I'm not the king.
207
00:12:36,960 --> 00:12:39,269
I wanna be the king. It's that simpIe.
208
00:12:39,440 --> 00:12:42,034
Key word, cIearIy, is--
209
00:12:42,200 --> 00:12:44,714
Right from the start, is ''discontent. ''
210
00:12:44,880 --> 00:12:49,874
So Richard, in the very opening scene
of the play, tells us...
211
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...just how badly he feels
about the peacetime world...
212
00:12:53,440 --> 00:12:56,955
...he finds himself in
and what he intends to do about it.
213
00:12:57,120 --> 00:13:03,036
Now is the winter of our discontent
made glorious summer. . .
214
00:13:03,800 --> 00:13:08,191
. . .by this sun of York.
215
00:13:08,400 --> 00:13:11,756
And all the clouds
that lour'd on our house. . .
216
00:13:11,920 --> 00:13:15,390
. . .in the deep bosom
of the ocean buried.
217
00:13:15,760 --> 00:13:19,116
Part of the trouble is
that the Wars of the Roses. . .
218
00:13:19,280 --> 00:13:22,272
. . .the wars for the crown,
are now over. . .
219
00:13:22,440 --> 00:13:25,557
. . .because the crown has been won
by the Yorks. . .
220
00:13:25,720 --> 00:13:28,188
. . .which means
that they can stop fighting.
221
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Now are our brows. . .
222
00:13:32,120 --> 00:13:35,669
. . .bound with victorious wreaths.
223
00:13:35,840 --> 00:13:38,434
Our bruised arms
hung up for monuments.
224
00:13:38,600 --> 00:13:41,751
Our stern alarum changed
to merry meetings.
225
00:13:41,920 --> 00:13:44,992
What do they do
when the fighting stops?
226
00:13:45,680 --> 00:13:48,148
Grim-visaged war. . .
227
00:13:48,320 --> 00:13:50,914
. . .hath smooth'd his wrinkled front.
228
00:13:51,080 --> 00:13:53,719
And now, instead of mounting
barbed steeds. . .
229
00:13:53,880 --> 00:13:57,509
. . .to fright the souls
of fearful adversaries, he capers. . .
230
00:13:57,680 --> 00:14:00,433
. . .nimbly in a lady's chamber. . .
231
00:14:00,600 --> 00:14:03,592
. . .to the lascivious pleasings of a lute.
232
00:14:03,760 --> 00:14:05,398
FEMALE SCHOLAR:
And you see lovemaking...
233
00:14:05,600 --> 00:14:08,160
. . .and relations with the other gender. . .
234
00:14:08,320 --> 00:14:12,359
. . .as what you translate
your male aggressions into.
235
00:14:12,520 --> 00:14:14,988
But Richard III has a little problem here.
236
00:14:15,800 --> 00:14:17,870
But I. . .
237
00:14:20,320 --> 00:14:24,108
. . .that am not shaped
for sportive tricks. . .
238
00:14:24,280 --> 00:14:26,510
. . .nor made to court. . .
239
00:14:26,680 --> 00:14:30,036
. . .an amorous looking-glass.
240
00:14:30,240 --> 00:14:32,993
I, that am curtail'd
of this fair proportion. . .
241
00:14:33,160 --> 00:14:36,630
. . .cheated of feature
by dissembling nature, deformed.
242
00:14:36,800 --> 00:14:38,756
-Deformed.
-He was a hunchback.
243
00:14:38,920 --> 00:14:40,672
PACINO:
Deformed. Deformed.
244
00:14:44,560 --> 00:14:46,551
Unfinish'd. . .
245
00:14:46,880 --> 00:14:49,519
. . .sent before my time
into this breathing world. . .
246
00:14:49,680 --> 00:14:51,113
. . .scarce half made up. . .
247
00:14:51,280 --> 00:14:53,748
. . .and that so lamely
and unfashionable. . .
248
00:14:53,920 --> 00:14:58,994
. . .that dogs bark at me
as I halt by them.
249
00:14:59,160 --> 00:15:02,755
Why, I, in this weak piping
time of peace. . .
250
00:15:02,920 --> 00:15:06,117
. . .have no delight
to pass away the time. . .
251
00:15:06,280 --> 00:15:10,068
. . .unless to see my shadow in the sun. . .
252
00:15:11,760 --> 00:15:14,991
. . .and descant upon
mine own deformity.
253
00:15:15,160 --> 00:15:18,516
Shakespeare has exaggerated
his deformity. . .
254
00:15:18,680 --> 00:15:21,990
. . .in order to body forth dramatically. . .
255
00:15:22,160 --> 00:15:25,630
. . .visually, metaphorically. . .
256
00:15:26,160 --> 00:15:28,071
. . .the corruption of his mind.
257
00:15:28,320 --> 00:15:30,117
Therefore. . .
258
00:15:30,920 --> 00:15:32,797
. . .since I cannot prove a lover. . .
259
00:15:32,960 --> 00:15:35,713
. . .to entertain these fair
well-spoken days. . .
260
00:15:35,880 --> 00:15:38,030
. . .I am determined to prove a villain. . .
261
00:15:38,200 --> 00:15:41,954
. . .and to hate the idle pleasures
of these days.
262
00:15:42,160 --> 00:15:44,071
Richard's always saying:
263
00:15:44,240 --> 00:15:48,028
''Here's the situation and what I'll do.
Watch this. '' Then he does it.
264
00:15:48,200 --> 00:15:49,633
Then they leave, he says:
265
00:15:49,800 --> 00:15:52,598
''Wasn't that good, or what?
Did you see? This is fun. ''
266
00:15:53,200 --> 00:15:55,668
Plots have I laid. . .
267
00:15:55,840 --> 00:15:57,637
. . .inductions dangerous. . .
268
00:15:57,840 --> 00:16:01,116
. . .to set my brother Clarence
and the king. . .
269
00:16:01,280 --> 00:16:03,510
. . .in deadly hate
the one against the other.
270
00:16:03,680 --> 00:16:05,796
And if King Edward be as true. . .
271
00:16:05,960 --> 00:16:10,317
. . .and just as I am subtle,
false and treacherous. . .
272
00:16:10,600 --> 00:16:14,513
. . .this day should Clarence
be mew'd up. . .
273
00:16:15,280 --> 00:16:16,918
. . .about a prophecy. . .
274
00:16:17,080 --> 00:16:22,598
. . .that says that G of Edward's heirs
the murderer shall be.
275
00:16:22,800 --> 00:16:25,268
It's, ''This day should Clarence be
mew'd up. . .
276
00:16:25,440 --> 00:16:28,034
. . .about a prophecy which says that G
of Edward's heirs. ''
277
00:16:28,200 --> 00:16:29,189
[PHONE RINGS]
278
00:16:29,360 --> 00:16:31,920
KIMBALL: Right.
-By ''G,'' what does that mean?
279
00:16:32,120 --> 00:16:34,918
-Yes?
-Clarence. . . .
280
00:16:35,080 --> 00:16:37,196
George, Duke of Clarence.
281
00:16:37,360 --> 00:16:40,079
-His first name is really George.
PACINO: Whose first name?
282
00:16:40,240 --> 00:16:42,231
Clarence's.
That's why he's called ''G. ''
283
00:16:42,400 --> 00:16:44,789
PACINO: Yeah.
KIMBALL: I suggest you change it to ''C. ''
284
00:16:44,960 --> 00:16:49,556
''This day should Clarence be mew'd up
about a prophecy which says that. . .
285
00:16:49,720 --> 00:16:54,555
. . .C of Edward's heirs
the murderer shall be. ''
286
00:16:54,960 --> 00:16:59,988
C of Edward's heirs
the murderer shall be.
287
00:17:00,200 --> 00:17:04,910
Dive, thoughts, down to my soul.
Here Clarence comes.
288
00:17:05,120 --> 00:17:06,348
Cut.
289
00:17:06,680 --> 00:17:09,990
What we gotta do, what we should do,
is get actors in here. . .
290
00:17:10,160 --> 00:17:12,879
. . .not audition them,
just get them in. . .
291
00:17:13,040 --> 00:17:16,635
...and let them just sit around,
just see and read.
292
00:17:16,800 --> 00:17:20,873
We'll have different people read
different roles. Hopefully somehow...
293
00:17:21,080 --> 00:17:23,230
. . .the role and the actor will merge.
294
00:17:23,400 --> 00:17:26,995
The actor will find the role.
An actor will read one part. . .
295
00:17:27,160 --> 00:17:30,755
...another actor reads another.
Hopefully, the casting will get done.
296
00:17:32,920 --> 00:17:34,751
PACINO:
Who 's got Dorset?
297
00:17:35,600 --> 00:17:37,556
Who's got Dorset?
How about Lord Grey?
298
00:17:37,720 --> 00:17:39,312
Richard will read Dorset.
299
00:17:39,520 --> 00:17:43,354
-He's gonna do Buckingham.
-I thought Jim would do it.
300
00:17:43,520 --> 00:17:45,511
PACINO: He's doing Catesby.
-What do I read?
301
00:17:45,800 --> 00:17:47,756
KIMBALL:
Dorset and Grey are the same people.
302
00:17:47,920 --> 00:17:50,559
PACINO: Dorset and Grey are the same--?
KIMBALL: Yes.
303
00:17:50,720 --> 00:17:52,836
You two guys better sit on each other.
304
00:17:54,560 --> 00:17:56,755
We used two actors in the same part.
305
00:17:58,040 --> 00:18:03,319
It'll take us four weeks of rehearsal
to figure out what parts we're playing.
306
00:18:04,120 --> 00:18:08,352
In more modern plays, we feel that
we understand it. It's there for us.
307
00:18:08,520 --> 00:18:12,832
But in Shakespeare, you have
an entire company on the stage. . .
308
00:18:13,000 --> 00:18:17,835
. . .good actors not knowing where
they're going. Where they are!
309
00:18:18,440 --> 00:18:21,193
[MUSIC PLAYING ]
310
00:18:23,440 --> 00:18:26,273
PACINO: As Americans, what is that. . .?
That thing. . .
311
00:18:26,440 --> 00:18:28,590
. . .that gets between us
and Shakespeare?
312
00:18:28,760 --> 00:18:33,754
That makes some of our best actors
just stop when it comes to Shakespeare?
313
00:18:33,960 --> 00:18:36,713
The problem with being
an American in Shakespeare. . .
314
00:18:36,880 --> 00:18:40,998
. . .is you approach it reverentially.
We have a feeling, I think. . .
315
00:18:41,160 --> 00:18:44,470
. . .of inferiority to the way
it has been done by the British.
316
00:18:45,040 --> 00:18:48,953
I think Americans
have been made to feel inhiblted. . .
317
00:18:49,800 --> 00:18:53,110
...because they've been told so long
by their critics...
318
00:18:53,280 --> 00:18:55,635
...by their scholars and commentators...
319
00:18:55,800 --> 00:18:57,791
... that they cannot do Shakespeare.
320
00:18:58,080 --> 00:19:02,073
Therefore they think they can't,
and you become totally self-conscious.
321
00:19:02,240 --> 00:19:05,118
American actors are not self-conscious.
322
00:19:05,280 --> 00:19:07,669
But they are when it comes
to Shakespeare.
323
00:19:07,840 --> 00:19:12,152
Because they've been told they can't
do it, and they foolishly believed that.
324
00:19:13,040 --> 00:19:17,352
Perhaps they don't go to picture galleries
and read books as much as we do.
325
00:19:17,520 --> 00:19:21,479
I think it's the effect
of how everyone looked and behaved. . .
326
00:19:21,640 --> 00:19:25,030
. . .that one got a sort of Elizabethan
feeling of period.
327
00:19:25,240 --> 00:19:27,595
Experienced classical actors. . .
328
00:19:27,760 --> 00:19:31,833
. . .have a few things that
they can use at a moment's notice.
329
00:19:32,000 --> 00:19:34,719
The understanding of iambic
pentameter, for one thing.
330
00:19:34,880 --> 00:19:37,110
PACINO:
Everybody says, ''lambic pentameter. ''
331
00:19:38,960 --> 00:19:40,757
What is that supposed to mean?
332
00:19:40,960 --> 00:19:43,793
Some say there are no rules.
I say there are rules. . .
333
00:19:43,960 --> 00:19:46,758
. . .like the iambic pentameter,
that must be learned. . .
334
00:19:46,920 --> 00:19:48,956
. . .and can be rejected once learned.
335
00:19:49,160 --> 00:19:52,914
''Pentameter'' means ''meter,''
and ''pen,'' meaning ''five. ''
336
00:19:53,080 --> 00:19:55,036
So there's five beats.
337
00:19:55,240 --> 00:19:57,356
Which, at its worst, sounds only like:
338
00:19:57,520 --> 00:20:00,990
''Why, so. Now have I done
a good day's work. ''
339
00:20:01,160 --> 00:20:03,037
De-da de-da de-da de-da de-da.
340
00:20:03,240 --> 00:20:05,356
And iambic is where the accent goes.
341
00:20:05,560 --> 00:20:07,869
That's de-tum de-tum de-tum de-tum.
342
00:20:08,080 --> 00:20:11,789
And five of them:
Da-da da-da da-da da-da da-da.
343
00:20:11,960 --> 00:20:16,112
Make a pentameter line, five iambs.
344
00:20:16,280 --> 00:20:20,671
An iamb is like an anteater.
345
00:20:20,840 --> 00:20:25,356
Very high in the back
and very short, little front legs. Da-da!
346
00:20:27,000 --> 00:20:32,154
Shakespeare's poetry and his iambics. . .
347
00:20:32,320 --> 00:20:35,949
. . .floated and descended
through the pentameter of the soul.
348
00:20:36,120 --> 00:20:41,319
And it's the soul, the spirit of real,
concrete people going through hell. . .
349
00:20:41,480 --> 00:20:45,109
. . .and sometimes moments of great. . .
350
00:20:45,880 --> 00:20:48,758
. . .achievement and joy.
351
00:20:48,920 --> 00:20:51,388
That is the pentameter
you must focus on. . .
352
00:20:51,560 --> 00:20:54,552
. . .and should you find that reality. . .
353
00:20:55,480 --> 00:20:58,472
...all the iambics will fall into place.
354
00:20:59,120 --> 00:21:04,274
Dive, thoughts, down to my soul.
Here Clarence comes.
355
00:21:04,960 --> 00:21:06,791
Brother, good day.
356
00:21:06,960 --> 00:21:10,077
What means this armed guard
that waits upon your grace?
357
00:21:10,240 --> 00:21:13,437
His majesty tendering my safety,
hath appointed this conduct. . .
358
00:21:13,600 --> 00:21:15,113
. . .to convey me to the Tower.
359
00:21:15,320 --> 00:21:18,630
-Upon what cause?
-Because my name is George.
360
00:21:19,040 --> 00:21:20,393
Clarence. . .
361
00:21:21,320 --> 00:21:23,231
. . .what is the matter? May I know?
362
00:21:23,400 --> 00:21:28,190
Yea, Richard, as I know. But I protest
as yet I do not. But, as I can learn. . .
363
00:21:28,360 --> 00:21:30,794
. . .he hearkens
after prophecies and dreams.
364
00:21:31,000 --> 00:21:33,514
And from the cross-row
plucks the letter G.
365
00:21:33,720 --> 00:21:36,393
And says a wizard told him that by G. . .
366
00:21:36,560 --> 00:21:38,790
. . .his children disinherited should be.
367
00:21:38,960 --> 00:21:43,192
And, for my name of George beglns with
G, it follows in his thought that I am he.
368
00:21:43,560 --> 00:21:47,633
These, as I learn,
and such like toys as these. . .
369
00:21:47,800 --> 00:21:49,870
. . .have moved his highness
to commit me now.
370
00:21:50,040 --> 00:21:53,032
Why, so it is,
when men are ruled by women.
371
00:21:53,200 --> 00:21:56,237
'Tis not the king that sends you
to the Tower, Clarence.
372
00:21:56,400 --> 00:22:00,916
'Tis my Lady Grey his wife, 'tis she
that tempts him to this extremity.
373
00:22:01,080 --> 00:22:04,072
We are not safe, Clarence.
We are not safe.
374
00:22:04,240 --> 00:22:06,959
PACINO: Now, if Richard's
brother Edward was king, right?
375
00:22:07,120 --> 00:22:08,553
And then he dies...
376
00:22:08,720 --> 00:22:11,234
. . .Clarence, his other brother,
is next in line.
377
00:22:11,400 --> 00:22:13,914
No, the kids were next in line.
378
00:22:14,080 --> 00:22:16,116
After the king's kids came Clarence.
379
00:22:16,280 --> 00:22:20,910
So Richard figures, ''I get rid of Clarence,
then work out getting rid of the kids. ''
380
00:22:21,120 --> 00:22:24,430
Meantime, this deep disgrace
in brotherhood. . .
381
00:22:24,600 --> 00:22:26,238
. . .touches me. . .
382
00:22:26,400 --> 00:22:28,960
. . .deeper than you can imaglne.
383
00:22:29,520 --> 00:22:33,274
-I know it pleaseth neither of us well.
-Your imprisonment shall not be long.
384
00:22:33,440 --> 00:22:38,070
I will deliver you, else lie for you.
Meantime, have patience.
385
00:22:38,240 --> 00:22:40,515
GUARD 1 : It's time, my lord.
-I must perforce.
386
00:22:40,680 --> 00:22:42,591
BALDWIN: Must.
-Farewell.
387
00:22:42,760 --> 00:22:45,797
PACINO: It looks like Richard's plan
is really starting to work.
388
00:22:45,960 --> 00:22:48,349
He got the king to put Clarence
in the Tower...
389
00:22:48,520 --> 00:22:50,988
...by poisoning the king's mind
against him.
390
00:22:51,160 --> 00:22:56,029
So now he's got one brother locked up,
the other brother, who 's king, is sick.
391
00:22:56,200 --> 00:22:58,634
So he's in good shape.
He can move around.
392
00:22:58,800 --> 00:23:00,870
He can maneuver. He's got room.
393
00:23:01,040 --> 00:23:02,712
Go. . .
394
00:23:04,040 --> 00:23:07,396
. . .tread the path
thou shalt ne'er return.
395
00:23:08,160 --> 00:23:11,516
Simple, plain Clarence!
396
00:23:12,600 --> 00:23:15,034
I do love thee so. . .
397
00:23:15,200 --> 00:23:19,512
. . .that I shall shortly send
thy soul to heaven.
398
00:23:20,320 --> 00:23:23,756
GUARD 1 : Prisoner approaching.
GUARD 2: Prisoner Hastings exeunt.
399
00:23:23,920 --> 00:23:27,469
Who is this?
The new-deliver'd Hastings?
400
00:23:28,240 --> 00:23:32,711
-Good time of day unto my gracious lord!
-As much unto my good lord Hastings.
401
00:23:32,880 --> 00:23:35,440
Well are you welcome to this open air.
402
00:23:35,600 --> 00:23:37,830
How hath your lordship
brook'd imprisonment?
403
00:23:38,000 --> 00:23:40,639
With patience, noble lord,
as prisoners must.
404
00:23:41,080 --> 00:23:42,877
You can do something
from Shakespeare. . .
405
00:23:43,040 --> 00:23:45,395
-. . .think that you're feeling it or whatever.
HARRIS: Mm-hm.
406
00:23:45,560 --> 00:23:48,313
You love it.
You think you're communicating it.
407
00:23:48,520 --> 00:23:51,876
And the person you said it to
has not understood a word you said.
408
00:23:52,040 --> 00:23:53,632
You can't believe they didn't.
409
00:23:53,920 --> 00:23:57,151
''Thoust'' and, you know. . .
410
00:23:57,320 --> 00:24:03,077
. . .just the way it's worded,
that confuses the people of, you know. . .
411
00:24:03,240 --> 00:24:04,673
. . .this time period.
412
00:24:04,880 --> 00:24:07,553
HADGE: Shakespeare used a lot
of fancy words. You know?
413
00:24:07,720 --> 00:24:10,393
And it's hard to understand,
to grasp them.
414
00:24:10,560 --> 00:24:14,348
They're not fancy words.
That's where we get confused.
415
00:24:14,520 --> 00:24:18,069
But they're poetry. It's hard
to grab hold of some rap slang too.
416
00:24:18,480 --> 00:24:22,268
It's hard to get hold of it until your ear
gets tuned. You have to tune up.
417
00:24:22,480 --> 00:24:24,948
In a contemporary play, someone says:
418
00:24:25,120 --> 00:24:28,476
''Hey, you. Go over there,
get that thing and bring it to me. ''
419
00:24:28,640 --> 00:24:31,154
That would be the line.
Shakespeare says it:
420
00:24:31,320 --> 00:24:33,754
''Be Mercury, set feathers to thy heels. . .
421
00:24:33,920 --> 00:24:37,276
. . .and fly like thought
from them to me again. ''
422
00:24:38,720 --> 00:24:41,393
The King is weak and sickly. . .
423
00:24:41,560 --> 00:24:45,872
-. . .and his physicians fear him mightily.
-By Saint John, that news is bad indeed.
424
00:24:46,040 --> 00:24:48,508
O, he hath kept an evil diet long.
425
00:24:48,680 --> 00:24:51,558
You shouldn't have to understand
every single word.
426
00:24:51,720 --> 00:24:55,429
Why? Do you understand every. . .?
I mean, it's not important.
427
00:24:55,920 --> 00:24:58,798
It doesn 't matter.
As long as you get the glst of it.
428
00:24:58,960 --> 00:25:00,473
Just trust it. You'll get it.
429
00:25:00,640 --> 00:25:03,108
ALLEN:
And if he were dead. . .
430
00:25:03,880 --> 00:25:05,950
. . .what would betide on me?
431
00:25:06,120 --> 00:25:08,350
No other harm but loss of such a lord.
432
00:25:08,520 --> 00:25:12,229
The loss of such a lord
includes all harm.
433
00:25:12,400 --> 00:25:16,598
They're trying to soothe her
because she is an hysteric.
434
00:25:16,800 --> 00:25:20,679
-She is way out of control.
ALLEN: But does that weaken. . .
435
00:25:20,840 --> 00:25:23,070
. . .the reality of what's happening?
436
00:25:23,240 --> 00:25:25,515
KIMBALL: It strengthens
the incompetence of others--
437
00:25:25,680 --> 00:25:27,875
But why should they be incompetent?
438
00:25:28,040 --> 00:25:30,838
-Why make them weaker?
KIMBALL: Because they went to Ludlow. . .
439
00:25:31,000 --> 00:25:33,753
. . .with little train
and got their heads cut off.
440
00:25:33,920 --> 00:25:38,630
But then it's no great deed on his part
if you make them weak.
441
00:25:38,840 --> 00:25:40,990
PACINO: They're not weak.
ALLEN: They're not weak. . .
442
00:25:41,160 --> 00:25:43,720
. . .nor do I think that they're stupid.
I think--
443
00:25:43,880 --> 00:25:47,634
By diminishing their importance,
you diminish his actions.
444
00:25:47,800 --> 00:25:51,713
-It's bound to happen.
-It's a very human, familiar thing to say:
445
00:25:51,920 --> 00:25:54,832
''Calm down. It will be all right. ''
But underneath it. . .
446
00:25:55,000 --> 00:25:58,515
. . .they know what the scoop is, and I
keep throwing back at them:
447
00:25:58,680 --> 00:26:01,911
''Stop! You know damn well
what's going on. ''
448
00:26:02,400 --> 00:26:05,039
And that's why I'm hysterical.
You know it.
449
00:26:05,240 --> 00:26:06,958
If he dies, that's it.
450
00:26:07,160 --> 00:26:09,993
PACINO: Let's start the scene.
-Have patience, madam.
451
00:26:10,160 --> 00:26:13,835
There's no doubt his majesty
will soon recover his accustom'd heaIth.
452
00:26:14,000 --> 00:26:16,594
In that you brook it ill,
it makes him worse.
453
00:26:16,760 --> 00:26:18,512
Therefore, for God's sake,
entertain good comfort.
454
00:26:18,680 --> 00:26:20,875
And cheer his grace
with quick and merry--
455
00:26:21,040 --> 00:26:25,795
And that's the way
you want me to behave, is that it?
456
00:26:26,760 --> 00:26:31,038
If he were dead,
what would betide on me?
457
00:26:31,200 --> 00:26:33,589
No other harm, Mother,
but loss of such a lord.
458
00:26:33,760 --> 00:26:36,479
The loss of such a lord. . .
459
00:26:36,640 --> 00:26:39,074
. . .includes all harm.
460
00:26:39,240 --> 00:26:41,800
The heavens have bless'd you
with a goodIy son. . .
461
00:26:41,960 --> 00:26:47,114
-. . .to be your comforter when he's gone.
-Ah, he is young.
462
00:26:47,880 --> 00:26:54,274
His minority is put into the trust
of Richard Gloucester.
463
00:26:55,360 --> 00:26:58,272
A man that loves not me. . .
464
00:26:58,440 --> 00:27:00,590
. . .nor none of you.
465
00:27:00,800 --> 00:27:03,189
PACINO:
We gotta come up with ideas, direction.
466
00:27:03,360 --> 00:27:06,875
KIMBALL: We need a pIan.
-We've got to start writing prefaces. . .
467
00:27:07,040 --> 00:27:10,635
. . .or, like, a Iist that says,
''Today we'll do these scenes.
468
00:27:10,800 --> 00:27:14,349
I want you to talk about Lady Anne
and what happens to her. ''
469
00:27:14,560 --> 00:27:16,755
PACINO: How are you?
How you doing?
470
00:27:16,920 --> 00:27:18,956
PACINO:
How do you feel about Shakespeare?
471
00:27:19,120 --> 00:27:21,031
KIMBALL: This feels good.
PACINO: That's good.
472
00:27:22,080 --> 00:27:25,197
[SPEAKING IN ITALIAN]
473
00:27:30,720 --> 00:27:33,518
PACINO: William Shakespeare?
-William Shakespeare, right.
474
00:27:33,680 --> 00:27:35,796
-Do you like him?
MAN 6: Of course.
475
00:27:35,960 --> 00:27:37,791
Did you ever see Shakespeare?
476
00:27:37,960 --> 00:27:40,235
-I never studied.
-You've never seen?
477
00:27:40,400 --> 00:27:42,630
Never seen the show,
but you still like him?
478
00:27:42,800 --> 00:27:44,791
MAN 6: Sometimes I see
something good on TV.
479
00:27:44,960 --> 00:27:46,359
-Oh, TV.
-I like it.
480
00:27:46,520 --> 00:27:48,636
PACINO: But Shakespeare, you don't see?
MAN 6: No.
481
00:27:48,800 --> 00:27:51,712
-That's too bad.
-There's no Shakespeare on TV.
482
00:27:51,880 --> 00:27:53,871
No. PerfectIy fine.
Sometimes it comes on.
483
00:27:54,040 --> 00:27:56,634
''To be or not to be.
That is the question,'' right?
484
00:27:56,800 --> 00:27:59,268
-Right.
-That is the question.
485
00:27:59,640 --> 00:28:03,155
PACINO: They do me wrong,
and I will not endure it.
486
00:28:04,440 --> 00:28:07,318
I fear our happiness is at its height.
487
00:28:07,520 --> 00:28:10,876
Who is it that compIains
unto the king. . .
488
00:28:11,400 --> 00:28:14,358
. . .that I, forsooth, am stern,
and love them not?
489
00:28:14,960 --> 00:28:17,110
Because I cannot fIatter. . .
490
00:28:17,280 --> 00:28:20,352
. . .look fair, smile in men's faces. . .
491
00:28:20,520 --> 00:28:24,433
. . .deceive, cog, duck with French nods
and apish courtesy. . .
492
00:28:24,600 --> 00:28:27,478
. . .I must be heId a rancorous enemy.
493
00:28:27,640 --> 00:28:29,870
The world they live in...
494
00:28:30,040 --> 00:28:34,431
. . .the world they exist in
is privy to these kinds of--
495
00:28:34,600 --> 00:28:39,037
-Is internecine family quarreI.
PACINO: That's right.
496
00:28:39,200 --> 00:28:43,398
They are cIawing at each other
for the throne.
497
00:28:43,560 --> 00:28:48,076
Brother Gloucester,
we know your meaning.
498
00:28:48,400 --> 00:28:52,678
You envy my advancement
and my friends' .
499
00:28:53,120 --> 00:28:57,910
God grant we may never
have need of you!
500
00:28:58,080 --> 00:29:02,631
Meantime, God grants
that I have need of you.
501
00:29:03,440 --> 00:29:06,557
Our brother is imprison'd
by your means. . .
502
00:29:06,800 --> 00:29:08,358
. . .myself disgraced. . .
503
00:29:08,560 --> 00:29:10,471
. . .the nobility of the house
held in contempt. . .
504
00:29:10,640 --> 00:29:13,950
. . .while great promotions
are daily glven to ennoble those. . .
505
00:29:14,120 --> 00:29:16,998
. . .that scarce, some two days since,
were worth a noble.
506
00:29:17,160 --> 00:29:21,551
By Him that raised me
to this careful height. . .
507
00:29:21,720 --> 00:29:25,315
. . .from that contented hap
which I enjoy'd. . .
508
00:29:25,480 --> 00:29:31,157
. . .I never did incense his majesty
against the Duke of Clarence.
509
00:29:31,360 --> 00:29:35,956
You're gonna say you are not the mean
of my Lord Hastings' late imprisonment?
510
00:29:36,120 --> 00:29:38,509
You see? Richard's stirring the pot.
511
00:29:38,800 --> 00:29:41,917
The king is dying,
so he's fearful and paranoid...
512
00:29:42,080 --> 00:29:44,196
...and sending people to jail.
513
00:29:44,360 --> 00:29:47,830
This is a situation Richard loves.
He can use the fear...
514
00:29:48,000 --> 00:29:51,436
... the turmoil to his advantage.
He knows they hate each other.
515
00:29:51,600 --> 00:29:54,433
He'll use their hatred
to manipulate them.
516
00:29:54,640 --> 00:29:56,870
You know, to divide, then conquer.
517
00:29:57,040 --> 00:29:59,679
My Lord of Gloucester,
I have too long borne. . .
518
00:29:59,840 --> 00:30:02,752
. . .these blunt upbraidings
and these bitter scoffs.
519
00:30:02,920 --> 00:30:06,515
By heaven, I will acquaint his majesty
of these gross taunts.
520
00:30:07,000 --> 00:30:10,310
-I'd rather be a country servant--
PACINO: What!
521
00:30:10,480 --> 00:30:12,710
Threat you me with telling of the king?
522
00:30:12,880 --> 00:30:14,996
tell him, and spare not.
523
00:30:15,560 --> 00:30:18,358
Let me put it in your minds,
if you forget. . .
524
00:30:18,520 --> 00:30:20,636
. . .what you are ere this,
and what you are.
525
00:30:20,800 --> 00:30:23,997
Withal, what I have been,
and what I am.
526
00:30:24,200 --> 00:30:27,636
A murderous villain,
and so still thou art.
527
00:30:28,000 --> 00:30:29,956
PACINO:
well, it is a complicated play too.
528
00:30:30,120 --> 00:30:35,478
All those relationships and the wives,
the Queen Margaret stuff is difficult.
529
00:30:35,640 --> 00:30:38,473
Hear me, you wrangling pirates,
that fall out. . .
530
00:30:38,640 --> 00:30:42,110
. . .in sharing that which
you have pill'd from me!
531
00:30:43,720 --> 00:30:45,711
PACINO: Margaret was the queen
before the war.
532
00:30:45,880 --> 00:30:49,156
She was a Lancaster,
and she was dethroned by the Yorks.
533
00:30:49,320 --> 00:30:52,551
She's a ghost of the past,
haunting the Yorks with her curses.
534
00:30:52,720 --> 00:30:54,756
A husband and a son. . . .
535
00:30:54,920 --> 00:30:59,038
Don't you think she rants and raves
around the castle like this a lot?
536
00:30:59,200 --> 00:31:00,519
PARSONS: No!
ALLEN: No?
537
00:31:00,680 --> 00:31:04,719
I don't think so.
I think she just comes in this day. . .
538
00:31:04,880 --> 00:31:07,235
. . .because it's a crisis time.
She feels it.
539
00:31:07,720 --> 00:31:11,315
glve way, dull clouds,
to my quick curses!
540
00:31:11,480 --> 00:31:13,118
It's primordial.
541
00:31:13,280 --> 00:31:16,989
She brings that kind of music
into this experience.
542
00:31:17,160 --> 00:31:19,390
Poor painted queen.
543
00:31:19,960 --> 00:31:23,839
The day will come that thou shalt wish
for me to help thee. . .
544
00:31:24,040 --> 00:31:27,271
. . .curse this poisonous
bunchback'd toad.
545
00:31:27,760 --> 00:31:30,354
LINDFORS: Reading this play,
as I take word by word...
546
00:31:30,880 --> 00:31:32,916
. . .everything she says happens.
547
00:31:33,600 --> 00:31:36,398
Beware of yonder dog! Look.
548
00:31:36,560 --> 00:31:39,233
Have not to do with him,
beware of him.
549
00:31:39,400 --> 00:31:42,472
Sin, death, and hell
have set their marks on him. . .
550
00:31:42,640 --> 00:31:46,315
. . .and all their messengers
await on him.
551
00:31:46,480 --> 00:31:49,517
PACINO: Thou hateful wither'd hag,
have done thy charm.
552
00:31:49,680 --> 00:31:51,671
And leave out thee?
553
00:31:51,840 --> 00:31:56,197
Stay, dog, for thou shalt hear me.
554
00:31:56,360 --> 00:32:01,434
The worm of conscience
still begnaw thy soul.
555
00:32:01,600 --> 00:32:07,869
Thou elvish-mark'd, abortive,
rooting hog.
556
00:32:08,040 --> 00:32:13,512
Live each of you
the subjects to his hate. . .
557
00:32:14,280 --> 00:32:20,037
. . .and he to yours,
and all of you to God's!
558
00:32:20,480 --> 00:32:22,471
We don't say a word. We let her go.
559
00:32:22,680 --> 00:32:25,752
REDGRAVE: The music....
Literally, I mean the music...
560
00:32:25,920 --> 00:32:29,071
...and the thoughts and the concepts...
561
00:32:29,240 --> 00:32:33,358
...and the feelings have not been
divorced from the words.
562
00:32:33,560 --> 00:32:38,270
In England, you've had centuries in
which word has been totally divorced...
563
00:32:38,480 --> 00:32:42,075
. . .from truth, and that's a problem
for us actors.
564
00:32:42,280 --> 00:32:45,556
If we think words are things
and have no feelings in words. . .
565
00:32:45,720 --> 00:32:48,518
. . .then we say things to each other
that mean nothing.
566
00:32:48,680 --> 00:32:52,719
But if we felt what we said,
we'd say less and mean more.
567
00:32:52,880 --> 00:32:54,632
Spare some change?
568
00:32:57,760 --> 00:33:01,469
It'd be interesting to see where he. . . .
569
00:33:01,640 --> 00:33:04,279
-Is that possibly. . .?
-Where Shakespeare was born.
570
00:33:04,440 --> 00:33:07,273
PACINO: I think that's Shakespeare
up there in the window.
571
00:33:07,480 --> 00:33:09,994
Knock first. Knock, Frederic.
572
00:33:12,520 --> 00:33:15,114
PACINO: hello. Frederic, you've. . . .
KIMBALL: Okay.
573
00:33:15,280 --> 00:33:19,273
-Where was William Shakespeare born?
-There's the bed of birth.
574
00:33:19,640 --> 00:33:23,394
KIMBALL: You gotta be kidding.
-I wouldn't kid about a thing like that.
575
00:33:23,560 --> 00:33:25,232
It's too late.
576
00:33:26,320 --> 00:33:28,197
It's a very, very small bed.
577
00:33:28,400 --> 00:33:31,551
I was expecting to have an epiphany. . .
578
00:33:32,040 --> 00:33:35,316
. . .an outpouring of the soul
upon seeing--
579
00:33:35,480 --> 00:33:37,914
-Go out and come in again.
-Where he was born.
580
00:33:38,080 --> 00:33:40,958
If you're really an actor, you can come
back and have an epiphany. I did.
581
00:33:41,120 --> 00:33:42,109
[SIREN WAILING ]
582
00:33:42,280 --> 00:33:43,713
-only--
-Did you have one?
583
00:33:43,880 --> 00:33:47,111
-I did not see it.
-I'm not showing it. It's an inner one.
584
00:33:47,280 --> 00:33:48,759
We're not alone.
585
00:33:49,080 --> 00:33:52,072
-Every once in a while--
-There's a fire truck out there.
586
00:33:52,240 --> 00:33:55,471
-I think we tripped an alarm.
-We should pause and think--
587
00:33:55,640 --> 00:33:58,757
You talked too loud
and it set off an alarm.
588
00:33:58,920 --> 00:34:02,595
MAN 7: Fire alarm. I got the fire officer.
KIMBALL: We set it off.
589
00:34:02,760 --> 00:34:06,230
PACINO: There's a fireman. Oh, yes.
-hello.
590
00:34:06,400 --> 00:34:09,995
Unfortunately, the sensor head is here.
There.
591
00:34:10,160 --> 00:34:12,230
That's going to be the problem.
592
00:34:13,200 --> 00:34:16,476
Yeah? What is it? Is it. . .?
593
00:34:16,640 --> 00:34:18,232
That's a real bummer.
594
00:34:18,400 --> 00:34:20,834
We come 6000 miles to see
where he was born. . . .
595
00:34:21,000 --> 00:34:24,595
FEMALE SCHOLAR:
It's the greatest period in British arts.
596
00:34:24,800 --> 00:34:28,270
This extraordinary development
and maturing and death of drama.
597
00:34:28,440 --> 00:34:30,396
In 20 years, Shakespeare's over.
598
00:34:30,560 --> 00:34:32,516
You have our greatest drama.
599
00:34:32,680 --> 00:34:34,750
And Shakespeare learns incredibly fast.
600
00:34:34,920 --> 00:34:39,675
Already, in this very early play,
he's thinking about people as actors. . .
601
00:34:39,840 --> 00:34:41,353
. . .and about the stage.
602
00:34:41,520 --> 00:34:44,592
And the imaglnation as a bit of life.
603
00:34:46,560 --> 00:34:50,269
Hey, Jimmy?
How's the sandwich?
604
00:34:51,880 --> 00:34:55,589
We're gonna bite the bullet
and do Act 2 of the play.
605
00:34:55,760 --> 00:34:58,718
What we said was,
we're gonna shoot Richard's death. . .
606
00:34:58,880 --> 00:35:02,555
-. . .and murder of Clarence, and that's it.
-No, the king makes peace.
607
00:35:02,720 --> 00:35:05,792
What are you saying?
We got an end of a movie to shoot.
608
00:35:05,960 --> 00:35:09,350
''My horse--'' ''A horse. A horse.
My kingdom for a horse. ''
609
00:35:09,520 --> 00:35:12,671
Fellas, the cops are here.
Police say we need a permit.
610
00:35:12,840 --> 00:35:14,717
You said you'd take care of things.
611
00:35:14,880 --> 00:35:17,872
What, I need--?
Why do I need a permit?
612
00:35:18,040 --> 00:35:20,349
We have to glve up a meal like this?
613
00:35:20,520 --> 00:35:23,671
OFFICER:
You have to go, guys. You have to go.
614
00:35:25,080 --> 00:35:27,071
PACINO:
Hope you like turkey.
615
00:35:28,320 --> 00:35:30,675
So, we are gonna get. . .
616
00:35:30,840 --> 00:35:33,070
. . .a young Lady Anne.
617
00:35:33,440 --> 00:35:35,112
I want somebody very young.
618
00:35:35,320 --> 00:35:36,833
KIMBALL:
Very young. How young?
619
00:35:37,000 --> 00:35:38,592
As young as you can get. . .
620
00:35:38,760 --> 00:35:41,911
. . .and be able to do Shakespeare
and understand the scenes.
621
00:35:42,120 --> 00:35:44,475
Someone young enough to believe. . .
622
00:35:44,920 --> 00:35:46,194
. . .in Richard's rap.
623
00:35:46,400 --> 00:35:49,836
KIMBALL: The problem is, we need
someone who can speak the part. . .
624
00:35:50,000 --> 00:35:52,639
. . .which is why you always have
an older actress. . .
625
00:35:52,800 --> 00:35:55,837
-. . .because it takes maturity.
-You know, we don't need--
626
00:35:56,000 --> 00:35:58,275
The problem of projecting the role. . .
627
00:35:58,440 --> 00:36:03,753
. . .because it's a film, so we won't have
the need for the actor to project.
628
00:36:03,920 --> 00:36:06,992
-We need a film actress.
-Great, great.
629
00:36:07,160 --> 00:36:09,469
Someone like. . . .
630
00:36:11,200 --> 00:36:12,838
We'll think of someone.
631
00:36:13,000 --> 00:36:14,672
well. . . .
632
00:36:18,600 --> 00:36:21,398
PACINO:
I will marry the beautiful Lady Anne.
633
00:36:22,000 --> 00:36:26,869
What though I kill'd her husband
and his father?
634
00:36:27,960 --> 00:36:30,997
The readiest way to make
the wench amends. . .
635
00:36:31,160 --> 00:36:33,628
. . .is to become her husband
and her father.
636
00:36:35,640 --> 00:36:39,679
SCHOLAR 3: This language is
the language of thoughts.
637
00:36:39,840 --> 00:36:42,274
To do this in the theater,
you must speak loud.
638
00:36:42,440 --> 00:36:46,592
There are very few actors who can
speak loud and still be truthful.
639
00:36:46,760 --> 00:36:48,352
That's the actor's problem.
640
00:36:48,520 --> 00:36:52,115
Every actor knows the quieter he is,
the closer he can be to himself.
641
00:36:52,280 --> 00:36:54,316
When you play Shakespeare. . .
642
00:36:54,480 --> 00:36:56,277
. . .in close-up, in a film. . .
643
00:36:56,440 --> 00:36:59,512
. . .and have a mike
and can really speak the verse. . .
644
00:36:59,960 --> 00:37:03,873
...as quietly as this, you are not going
against the nature of verse.
645
00:37:04,040 --> 00:37:08,591
You're going in the right direction
because you're allowing the verse. . .
646
00:37:08,760 --> 00:37:12,958
. . .to be a man speaking his inner world.
647
00:37:15,240 --> 00:37:16,639
RYDER:
Set down. . .
648
00:37:16,800 --> 00:37:19,234
. . .set down your honourable load. . .
649
00:37:22,840 --> 00:37:26,389
. . .if honour may be shrouded in a hearse.
650
00:37:28,360 --> 00:37:33,070
PACINO: Was ever woman
in this humour woo'd?
651
00:37:34,400 --> 00:37:38,598
Was ever woman in this humour won?
652
00:37:43,440 --> 00:37:44,839
I'll have her.
653
00:37:45,240 --> 00:37:48,835
I'll have her.
But I will not keep her long.
654
00:37:49,280 --> 00:37:51,714
He says he'll have her. . .
655
00:37:51,880 --> 00:37:55,589
-. . .but he will not keep her long.
HADGE: You're asking why he wants her?
656
00:37:55,760 --> 00:37:58,991
well, I think it's cIear,
he's out to get this glrI.
657
00:37:59,760 --> 00:38:02,797
To take her. . .
658
00:38:03,520 --> 00:38:06,080
. . .in her heart's extremest hate.
659
00:38:06,240 --> 00:38:07,559
[PACINO GROANS]
660
00:38:08,120 --> 00:38:11,476
He's killed her husband
in the civiI war.
661
00:38:11,640 --> 00:38:14,598
Tears in her eyes!
662
00:38:15,000 --> 00:38:17,434
And murdered her father-in-Iaw.
663
00:38:17,640 --> 00:38:20,598
The bIeeding witness of my hatred by.
664
00:38:22,120 --> 00:38:23,439
He's out to get her.
665
00:38:23,640 --> 00:38:25,278
To win her!
666
00:38:27,320 --> 00:38:28,753
Ha.
667
00:38:29,840 --> 00:38:33,435
I pour the helpless baIm
of my poor eyes.
668
00:38:33,600 --> 00:38:36,751
Her mourning is genuine
because she loved--
669
00:38:36,920 --> 00:38:40,833
KIMBALL: She goes out on the street, and
is it an accident that she meets Richard. . .
670
00:38:41,000 --> 00:38:45,596
. . .the man who killed this man
and her husband?
671
00:38:45,760 --> 00:38:48,877
Is it not possible that if--?
Did she have any idea. . .
672
00:38:49,040 --> 00:38:51,349
. . .that if she went out with a corpse. . .
673
00:38:51,520 --> 00:38:53,954
. . .making stops--?
You don't like that?
674
00:38:54,120 --> 00:38:57,669
Does anybody have a better thing
than Frederic on this?
675
00:38:57,840 --> 00:39:00,798
You just said that we didn't
answer the question. . .
676
00:39:00,960 --> 00:39:03,474
-. . .that what was--
PACINO: Did that upset you?
677
00:39:03,640 --> 00:39:05,551
No. Then what did you say?
678
00:39:05,720 --> 00:39:08,109
You said you were gonna find
a schoIar. . .
679
00:39:08,280 --> 00:39:11,397
. . .who'd speak directIy into the camera
and expIain. . .
680
00:39:11,760 --> 00:39:14,149
. . .what really happened
with Richard and Anne.
681
00:39:14,600 --> 00:39:18,559
And I am telling you that
that is absoIuteIy ridicuIous.
682
00:39:18,720 --> 00:39:21,518
You know more about Richard III...
683
00:39:21,680 --> 00:39:24,399
. . .than any fucking schoIar
at CoIumbia or Harvard.
684
00:39:24,560 --> 00:39:26,471
PACINO: Fred.
-This is ridicuIous!
685
00:39:26,640 --> 00:39:30,189
You are making this documentary
to show that actors. . .
686
00:39:30,360 --> 00:39:34,319
. . .truIy are the possessors
of a tradition. . .
687
00:39:34,480 --> 00:39:38,029
. . .the proud inheritors
of the understanding of Shakespeare.
688
00:39:38,200 --> 00:39:43,718
Then you turn around and say,
''I'm gonna get a schoIar to expIain it. ''
689
00:39:43,880 --> 00:39:47,509
-This is ridicuIous!
PACINO: I hereby knight you, Frederic.
690
00:39:48,080 --> 00:39:50,674
-Ph.D.
PACINO: Ph.D. of the realm.
691
00:39:50,840 --> 00:39:55,072
-Oh, God. RidicuIous.
-No, but the point is this, Frederic.
692
00:39:55,600 --> 00:39:58,592
A person has an opinion.
It's only an opinion.
693
00:39:58,760 --> 00:40:02,116
-It's never a question of right or wrong.
-There's no right or wrong.
694
00:40:02,280 --> 00:40:07,434
It's an opinion. And a schoIar
has a right to an opinion as any of us.
695
00:40:07,600 --> 00:40:11,752
But why does he get to speak
directIy to the camera?
696
00:40:11,960 --> 00:40:15,509
I don't really know why
he needed to marry her, historically.
697
00:40:15,720 --> 00:40:17,517
I simpIy don't know.
698
00:40:17,680 --> 00:40:19,193
Um, it's. . . .
699
00:40:21,880 --> 00:40:24,474
PACINO:
Stay, you that bear the corse.
700
00:40:25,240 --> 00:40:26,639
Set it down.
701
00:40:26,800 --> 00:40:28,950
Villains, set down the corse.
702
00:40:29,200 --> 00:40:32,556
Or, by Saint PauI,
I'll make a corse of him that disobeys.
703
00:40:33,040 --> 00:40:35,793
My lord, stand back,
and let the coffin pass.
704
00:40:36,000 --> 00:40:37,274
Unmanner'd dog!
705
00:40:37,480 --> 00:40:40,313
Stand thou, when I command.
Advance thy haIbert. . .
706
00:40:40,520 --> 00:40:44,274
. . .higher than my breast, or, by
Saint PauI, I'll strike thee to my foot.
707
00:40:44,680 --> 00:40:48,150
Spurn upon thee, beggar,
for thy boIdness.
708
00:40:48,320 --> 00:40:50,151
Richard needs Anne...
709
00:40:50,360 --> 00:40:53,193
...because he wants to be king.
So he needs a queen.
710
00:40:53,400 --> 00:40:55,038
Anne is perfect for the job.
711
00:40:55,200 --> 00:40:57,077
Also, she needs protection.
712
00:40:57,240 --> 00:41:00,869
Because she was on the losing side
of the War of the Roses.
713
00:41:01,040 --> 00:41:04,237
She's young, she has no husband.
Basically, she has no future.
714
00:41:04,400 --> 00:41:06,789
For Richard, she's someone
who 'd represent...
715
00:41:06,960 --> 00:41:09,793
... the other side,
the Lancasters coming to his side.
716
00:41:09,960 --> 00:41:14,158
It says to the public that Anne has
forglven him for killing her husband...
717
00:41:14,320 --> 00:41:16,993
... therefore exonerating him
from his crime.
718
00:41:17,160 --> 00:41:19,515
And thou unfit for any place but hell.
719
00:41:19,680 --> 00:41:22,717
Yes, one place else. . .
720
00:41:24,000 --> 00:41:25,831
. . .if you'll hear me name it.
721
00:41:27,600 --> 00:41:29,955
Some dungeon.
722
00:41:31,000 --> 00:41:32,558
Your bed-chamber.
723
00:41:39,840 --> 00:41:41,671
I'll have her.
724
00:41:42,600 --> 00:41:44,113
Gentle Lady Anne. . .
725
00:41:44,280 --> 00:41:46,953
. . .to leave this keen encounter
of our wits. . .
726
00:41:47,120 --> 00:41:50,192
. . .and to fall something
into a slower method. . .
727
00:41:51,840 --> 00:41:56,675
. . .was not the causer of the timeless
deaths of these two men. . .
728
00:41:56,880 --> 00:42:01,715
. . .Henry and Edward,
as blameful as the executioner?
729
00:42:01,920 --> 00:42:04,309
Thou was the cause,
and the accursed effect.
730
00:42:04,480 --> 00:42:09,076
Thy beauty was the cause
of that effect.
731
00:42:11,480 --> 00:42:13,357
Thy beauty.
732
00:42:14,600 --> 00:42:18,275
That did haunt me in my sleep. . .
733
00:42:18,480 --> 00:42:21,631
. . .to undertake the death
of all the world. . .
734
00:42:22,320 --> 00:42:27,519
. . .that I might live one hour
in your sweet bosom.
735
00:42:29,800 --> 00:42:33,236
Teach not thy lip such scorn.
736
00:42:34,520 --> 00:42:38,479
It was made for kissing, lady. . .
737
00:42:39,360 --> 00:42:43,035
. . .not for such contempt.
738
00:42:54,080 --> 00:42:58,153
If thy revengeful heart cannot forglve. . .
739
00:42:58,320 --> 00:43:00,436
. . .lo, here. Here. . .
740
00:43:02,800 --> 00:43:06,873
. . .I lend thee this sharp-pointed dagger.
741
00:43:09,040 --> 00:43:12,271
If thou wish to hide in this true breast.
742
00:43:12,520 --> 00:43:16,229
And let forth the soul
that adoreth thee. . .
743
00:43:16,440 --> 00:43:18,795
. . .I lay it naked to the deadly stroke. . .
744
00:43:18,960 --> 00:43:22,475
. . .and I humbly beg the death
upon my knee.
745
00:43:26,320 --> 00:43:30,711
Nay, do not pause.
For I did kill King Henry. . .
746
00:43:30,880 --> 00:43:36,079
. . .but 'twas thy beauty
that provoked me.
747
00:43:36,240 --> 00:43:39,118
Nay, now dispatch.
'Twas I stabbed Edward. . .
748
00:43:39,280 --> 00:43:43,159
. . .but 'twas thy heavenly face
that set me on.
749
00:43:53,920 --> 00:43:57,708
Take up the sword again,
or take up me.
750
00:43:57,880 --> 00:44:01,190
Though I wish thy death,
I will not be thy executioner.
751
00:44:02,480 --> 00:44:04,755
Bid me kill myself. I will do it.
752
00:44:04,920 --> 00:44:08,276
-I have already.
-That was in thy rage.
753
00:44:09,080 --> 00:44:10,718
Speak it again. . .
754
00:44:12,440 --> 00:44:17,036
. . .and, even with the word,
this hand. . .
755
00:44:17,200 --> 00:44:20,033
. . .which, for thy love,
did kill thy love. . .
756
00:44:20,200 --> 00:44:24,910
. . .will, for thy love, kill a far truer love.
757
00:44:27,280 --> 00:44:33,628
-I would I knew thy heart.
-My heart is figured in my tongue.
758
00:44:38,080 --> 00:44:41,311
well, put up your sword.
759
00:44:41,480 --> 00:44:45,473
Say, then, my peace is made.
760
00:44:52,000 --> 00:44:54,434
That shalt thou know hereafter.
761
00:44:55,000 --> 00:44:57,036
[METAL CLATTERS]
762
00:44:57,480 --> 00:44:58,799
Shall I live in hope?
763
00:44:59,880 --> 00:45:01,950
All men, I hope, live so.
764
00:45:14,480 --> 00:45:17,597
Vouchsafe to wear this ring.
765
00:45:20,480 --> 00:45:22,675
To take is not to glve.
766
00:45:26,560 --> 00:45:31,031
Look, how my ring
encompasseth thy finger.
767
00:45:31,560 --> 00:45:33,357
Even so. . .
768
00:45:34,080 --> 00:45:38,676
. . .thy breast encIoseth my poor heart.
769
00:45:39,880 --> 00:45:42,758
Wear both of them. . .
770
00:45:42,920 --> 00:45:45,992
. . .for both of them are thine.
771
00:45:47,680 --> 00:45:50,353
Leave these sad designs. . .
772
00:45:50,560 --> 00:45:54,519
. . .to him that hath most cause
to be a mourner.
773
00:45:59,920 --> 00:46:02,593
With all of my heart. . .
774
00:46:06,760 --> 00:46:11,311
. . .and much it joys me too,
to see you have become so penitent.
775
00:46:11,480 --> 00:46:13,391
Ha!
776
00:46:19,120 --> 00:46:21,554
-Tressel and Berkeley.
TRESSEL & BERKELEY: Yes, madam.
777
00:46:21,720 --> 00:46:23,597
RYDER:
Go along with me.
778
00:46:32,400 --> 00:46:34,630
Bid me farewell.
779
00:46:47,160 --> 00:46:51,517
Since you teach me
how to flatter you. . .
780
00:46:53,000 --> 00:46:56,470
. . .imaglne that I will say
farewell again.
781
00:47:06,800 --> 00:47:12,591
PACINO: Was ever woman
in this humour woo'd?
782
00:47:15,360 --> 00:47:18,716
Was ever woman in this humour won?
783
00:47:23,240 --> 00:47:25,196
I'll have her.
784
00:47:29,680 --> 00:47:31,796
[LAUGHING ]
785
00:47:39,680 --> 00:47:44,356
But I will not keep her long!
786
00:47:50,760 --> 00:47:53,877
HADGE: We'll never finish this movie.
-It's got to be what it is.
787
00:47:54,040 --> 00:47:56,952
How much more will we shoot?
It's a movie about a play.
788
00:47:57,160 --> 00:48:00,994
We're making a documentary about
making Shakespeare accessible to people.
789
00:48:01,160 --> 00:48:03,230
Those people, the people in the street.
790
00:48:03,400 --> 00:48:07,279
They're not gonna get Richard III.
I can't even get it, it's too complicated.
791
00:48:07,480 --> 00:48:11,109
Then why is it Shakespeare's
most popular play?
792
00:48:11,280 --> 00:48:13,748
-Wait, what did you say?
-Who says it's popular?
793
00:48:13,920 --> 00:48:16,559
It is! It's performed more than Hamlet.
794
00:48:16,720 --> 00:48:17,994
So what?
795
00:48:20,000 --> 00:48:22,992
I run before my horse to market.
796
00:48:23,160 --> 00:48:26,709
Clarence still lives and breathes.
797
00:48:27,720 --> 00:48:30,598
Edward still reigns.
798
00:48:31,560 --> 00:48:33,391
When they are gone. . .
799
00:48:33,560 --> 00:48:36,552
. . .then must I count my gains.
800
00:48:39,840 --> 00:48:41,592
[DOOR SLAMS]
801
00:48:43,600 --> 00:48:46,717
PACINO:
But, soft! Here come my executioners.
802
00:48:47,160 --> 00:48:49,071
Are you going to dispatch this thing?
803
00:48:49,240 --> 00:48:51,595
We are, my lord.
Come to have the warrant. . .
804
00:48:51,760 --> 00:48:53,716
. . .that we may be admitted
to where he is.
805
00:48:53,880 --> 00:48:57,555
well thought upon.
I have it here about me.
806
00:48:57,760 --> 00:49:01,548
But, sirs, be sudden in your execution.
807
00:49:01,760 --> 00:49:05,070
Do not hear him plead.
For Clarence is well-spoken. . .
808
00:49:05,240 --> 00:49:07,959
. . .and may move your hearts to pity
if you mark him.
809
00:49:08,240 --> 00:49:11,391
Be assured we go to use our hands. . .
810
00:49:11,560 --> 00:49:14,233
-. . .not our tongues.
PACINO: I like you, lads.
811
00:49:14,960 --> 00:49:16,598
About your business straight.
812
00:49:17,600 --> 00:49:18,999
We will, my noble lord.
813
00:49:19,200 --> 00:49:20,633
Go, go, dispatch.
814
00:49:26,440 --> 00:49:29,159
KIMBALL:
Here's a place for the Clarence scene.
815
00:49:30,080 --> 00:49:32,753
Just get Clarence very tight. . .
816
00:49:32,920 --> 00:49:37,118
. . .in here, and you have all of the dead
pigeon feathers. . .
817
00:49:37,280 --> 00:49:39,714
. . .and the guano and the texture. . .
818
00:49:39,920 --> 00:49:41,831
. . .of the wall.
819
00:49:42,000 --> 00:49:44,719
Just imaglne you're close in.
820
00:49:53,040 --> 00:49:54,951
PACINO:
It doesn't work.
821
00:49:55,120 --> 00:49:59,193
It's not just the pigeon stuff.
It doesn't work. It has no sense of--
822
00:49:59,360 --> 00:50:02,796
-What are you--? When--?
KIMBALL: No enclosure.
823
00:50:02,960 --> 00:50:04,598
Frederic, it's pointless.
824
00:50:04,880 --> 00:50:07,997
HADGE: For God's sakes, it's a prison.
-We need a place. . .
825
00:50:08,160 --> 00:50:12,073
. . .where Clarence
is being held prisoner.
826
00:50:12,240 --> 00:50:14,276
It's gotta be a. . . . It's a prison.
827
00:50:14,440 --> 00:50:16,670
Aha. See the tower?
828
00:50:16,840 --> 00:50:20,150
It's going to be in the chamber. . .
829
00:50:20,320 --> 00:50:24,711
. . .where the bell ringlng unit is.
It's a really beautiful space.
830
00:50:24,880 --> 00:50:30,193
It's got this shaft of white light
coming down from the top.
831
00:50:30,360 --> 00:50:32,430
JIM:
That's where we'd place that.
832
00:50:32,600 --> 00:50:34,318
This is nice. Nice light.
833
00:50:37,880 --> 00:50:40,110
GUILFO YLE:
Shall we stab him as he sleeps?
834
00:50:40,880 --> 00:50:43,917
MACVITTIE: No. He'll say it was
done cowardly, when he wakes.
835
00:50:44,080 --> 00:50:47,470
GUILFO YLE: He shall never wake
until the great judgment-day.
836
00:50:47,640 --> 00:50:51,519
Faith, certain dregs of conscience
are here within me.
837
00:50:53,120 --> 00:50:56,032
Remember our reward,
when the deed is done.
838
00:50:56,200 --> 00:50:58,839
-Come, he dies.
-Where's thy conscience now?
839
00:50:59,000 --> 00:51:00,274
In the Duke of Gloucester's purse.
840
00:51:00,440 --> 00:51:02,874
When he opens his purse
to glve us thy reward. . .
841
00:51:03,040 --> 00:51:05,429
-. . .thy conscience flies out.
-'Tis no matter.
842
00:51:05,600 --> 00:51:08,797
-Few or none entertain it.
-What if it come to thee again?
843
00:51:10,120 --> 00:51:11,519
I'll not meddle with it.
844
00:51:11,680 --> 00:51:13,830
It makes a man a coward.
845
00:51:14,000 --> 00:51:18,949
A man cannot steal, but it accuseth him.
A man cannot lie, but it cheques him.
846
00:51:19,120 --> 00:51:21,475
A man cannot lie
with his neighbor's wife. . .
847
00:51:21,640 --> 00:51:23,437
. . .but it detects him.
848
00:51:24,080 --> 00:51:27,038
And any man that means to live well. . .
849
00:51:27,200 --> 00:51:31,955
. . .endeavors to trust to himself
and live without it.
850
00:51:32,440 --> 00:51:33,919
Come. . .
851
00:51:34,080 --> 00:51:35,832
. . .shall we fall to work?
852
00:51:40,600 --> 00:51:45,390
PACINO: While this is going on with
Clarence, his brother is in the castle...
853
00:51:45,560 --> 00:51:47,357
... trying to make peace.
854
00:51:47,520 --> 00:51:50,034
KIMBALL: They've been summoned
for the atonement meeting.
855
00:51:50,200 --> 00:51:53,192
That's why everybody
is in the castle.
856
00:51:53,400 --> 00:51:56,119
The making peace.
857
00:51:56,280 --> 00:52:00,637
The king's family
are in incredible conflict.
858
00:52:00,840 --> 00:52:04,879
He dares not die until he knows they
won't pull the whole thing apart. . .
859
00:52:05,040 --> 00:52:07,952
. . .as soon as he's dead.
860
00:52:11,960 --> 00:52:16,033
I every day expect an embassage
from my Redeemer to redeem me hence.
861
00:52:16,200 --> 00:52:19,795
PACINO: The king wants this peace to
happen because he wants to make sure...
862
00:52:20,000 --> 00:52:23,197
... that after he's gone
his children will continue the reign.
863
00:52:23,560 --> 00:52:26,791
He and his wife must hope. . .
864
00:52:26,960 --> 00:52:31,590
. . .that they will.
We know that you have another agenda.
865
00:52:36,880 --> 00:52:38,916
Strike!
866
00:52:42,160 --> 00:52:43,912
No, we'll reason with him first.
867
00:52:49,000 --> 00:52:51,673
Where art thou, keeper?
glve me a cup of wine.
868
00:52:51,840 --> 00:52:54,479
You shall have wine enough,
my lord. . .
869
00:52:54,640 --> 00:52:56,551
. . .anon.
870
00:53:03,000 --> 00:53:04,638
In God's name, what art thou?
871
00:53:04,960 --> 00:53:06,996
A man. . .
872
00:53:07,160 --> 00:53:08,798
. . .as you are.
873
00:53:10,880 --> 00:53:15,112
-But not, as I am, royal.
-Nor you, as we are, loyal.
874
00:53:15,280 --> 00:53:18,033
Who sent you hither?
Wherefore do you come?
875
00:53:18,240 --> 00:53:19,958
To. . . .
876
00:53:21,000 --> 00:53:22,718
To. . . .
877
00:53:23,600 --> 00:53:24,953
-To murder me?
-Ay.
878
00:53:25,160 --> 00:53:26,752
Ay.
879
00:53:31,360 --> 00:53:33,430
Wherein, my friends,
have I offended you?
880
00:53:33,600 --> 00:53:35,750
Offended us you have not. . .
881
00:53:35,920 --> 00:53:38,036
. . .but the king.
882
00:53:38,200 --> 00:53:40,873
I shall be reconciled to him again.
883
00:53:41,040 --> 00:53:42,393
GUILFO YLE:
Never, my lord.
884
00:53:42,600 --> 00:53:44,272
Therefore. . .
885
00:53:45,520 --> 00:53:46,999
. . .prepare to die.
886
00:53:49,680 --> 00:53:50,954
Hastings.
887
00:53:51,520 --> 00:53:54,956
Rivers, take each other's hand.
888
00:53:55,440 --> 00:53:57,032
Dissemble not your hatred. . .
889
00:53:57,920 --> 00:54:00,036
. . .swear your love.
890
00:54:00,880 --> 00:54:02,598
So prosper I. . .
891
00:54:02,760 --> 00:54:05,149
. . .as I swear perfect love!
892
00:54:05,760 --> 00:54:07,876
And so swear I.
893
00:54:11,520 --> 00:54:14,751
Madam, yourself is not
exempt from this.
894
00:54:15,640 --> 00:54:18,074
Wife, love Lord Hastings. . .
895
00:54:18,240 --> 00:54:20,470
. . .let him kiss your hand.
896
00:54:20,760 --> 00:54:23,320
ALLEN:
There, Hastings.
897
00:54:24,200 --> 00:54:27,829
I never more shall remember
our former hatred. . .
898
00:54:28,000 --> 00:54:30,673
. . .so thrive I and mine.
899
00:54:31,520 --> 00:54:33,317
LINDFORS:
Do they really believe all this?
900
00:54:33,640 --> 00:54:36,871
Do they really believe it when you say,
''Take their hand''?
901
00:54:37,040 --> 00:54:38,996
PACINO: It's a vow.
KIMBALL: A solemn vow.
902
00:54:39,200 --> 00:54:41,156
In this time, that's a solemn thing.
903
00:54:41,360 --> 00:54:46,798
only people who want to go to hell
would make vows and not keep them.
904
00:54:48,000 --> 00:54:50,230
If you are hired for meed. . .
905
00:54:50,400 --> 00:54:54,234
. . .go back again, and I will send you
to my brother Richard. . .
906
00:54:54,400 --> 00:54:56,789
. . .who shall reward you better
for my life. . .
907
00:54:57,280 --> 00:54:59,510
. . .than Edward will
for tidings of my death.
908
00:55:00,280 --> 00:55:05,354
Come, you deceive yourself. 'Tis he
that sends us to destroy you here.
909
00:55:08,640 --> 00:55:10,676
It cannot be. . .
910
00:55:11,760 --> 00:55:14,638
. . .for he bewept my fortune. . .
911
00:55:14,800 --> 00:55:17,872
...and swore, with sobs,
that he would labor my delivery.
912
00:55:18,040 --> 00:55:20,031
PACINO: Touches me deeper
than you can imaglne.
913
00:55:20,520 --> 00:55:22,112
MACVITTIE:
So he doth. . .
914
00:55:22,280 --> 00:55:26,114
. . .when he delivers you from this earth's
thraldom to the joys of heaven.
915
00:55:26,600 --> 00:55:28,477
GUILFO YLE:
Make peace with God. . .
916
00:55:29,040 --> 00:55:31,679
. . .for you must die, my lord.
917
00:55:33,200 --> 00:55:35,350
Have you that holy feeling
in your soul. . .
918
00:55:35,520 --> 00:55:38,432
. . .to counsel me to make my peace
with God?
919
00:55:39,880 --> 00:55:43,111
And are you yet to your own souls. . .
920
00:55:43,560 --> 00:55:47,553
. . .so blind, that you wilt war with God
by murdering me?
921
00:55:51,760 --> 00:55:53,273
O sirs. . .
922
00:55:53,440 --> 00:55:57,274
. . .consider, those that set you on
to do this deed. . .
923
00:55:58,200 --> 00:56:01,272
. . .will hate you for the deed.
924
00:56:04,320 --> 00:56:05,719
What shall we do?
925
00:56:07,240 --> 00:56:08,958
Relent. . .
926
00:56:09,160 --> 00:56:11,355
. . .and save your souls.
927
00:56:12,520 --> 00:56:15,159
Relent! No. 'Tis cowardly and womanish.
928
00:56:15,520 --> 00:56:19,115
Not to relent is brutish. . .
929
00:56:19,280 --> 00:56:21,316
. . .savage. . .
930
00:56:22,160 --> 00:56:24,230
. . .devilish.
931
00:56:26,160 --> 00:56:27,434
My friend. . .
932
00:56:27,920 --> 00:56:30,753
. . .I spy some pity in thy looks.
933
00:56:31,880 --> 00:56:36,829
O, if thine eye be not a flatterer, come
thou on my side, and entreat for me. . .
934
00:56:37,000 --> 00:56:40,993
. . .as you would beg,
were you in my distress.
935
00:56:41,720 --> 00:56:46,157
A begglng prince
what beggar pities not?
936
00:56:52,600 --> 00:56:54,033
Look behind you, my lord.
937
00:57:19,720 --> 00:57:22,393
Is Clarence dead?
938
00:57:23,520 --> 00:57:25,795
The order was reversed.
939
00:57:26,400 --> 00:57:30,678
But he, poor man,
by your first order died.
940
00:57:34,840 --> 00:57:37,957
YULIN: Have I a tongue to doom
my brother's death?
941
00:57:38,120 --> 00:57:39,633
My brother killed no man.
942
00:57:39,800 --> 00:57:42,075
His fault was thought. . .
943
00:57:42,240 --> 00:57:44,754
. . .and yet his punishment
was bitter death.
944
00:57:46,440 --> 00:57:48,590
Who sued to me for him?
945
00:57:48,760 --> 00:57:53,117
Who kneel'd at my feet,
and in my wrath, bid me be advised?
946
00:57:54,400 --> 00:57:56,675
Who spoke of brotherhood?
947
00:57:56,840 --> 00:57:59,434
Who spoke of love?
948
00:58:01,280 --> 00:58:02,759
The proudest of you all. . .
949
00:58:02,920 --> 00:58:05,957
. . .have been beholding to him
in his life.
950
00:58:06,120 --> 00:58:11,956
Yet not one of you
would once beg for his life.
951
00:58:12,120 --> 00:58:16,750
O God, I fear thy justice
will take hold on me, and you. . .
952
00:58:16,920 --> 00:58:20,276
. . .and mine, and yours for this!
953
00:58:21,360 --> 00:58:25,672
Come, Hastings, help me to my closet.
954
00:58:50,320 --> 00:58:52,788
WOMAN 1 : What is it in theater?
Why do we want to do it?
955
00:58:53,000 --> 00:58:56,754
We want to do theater
because of that personal presence.
956
00:58:56,920 --> 00:59:01,391
West Germany gave a billion dollars
a year to the arts.
957
00:59:01,600 --> 00:59:05,832
I gave up a TV movie in France
to do Richard III in milwaukee.
958
00:59:06,120 --> 00:59:09,999
I was talking to my teacher,
and she said, ''You will benefit. ''
959
00:59:10,680 --> 00:59:13,752
Kevin Costner did that TV show.
960
00:59:13,920 --> 00:59:17,674
-You lost out. Look at his career.
-He's afraid to do Shakespeare.
961
00:59:17,840 --> 00:59:19,751
No, he's in the other room practicing.
962
00:59:26,440 --> 00:59:29,671
PACINO: The Anointed Shakespeare.
WOMAN 2: ''Annotated. ''
963
00:59:29,840 --> 00:59:31,796
It's got beautiful pictures.
964
00:59:32,080 --> 00:59:33,877
It's got beautiful pictures.
965
00:59:34,040 --> 00:59:36,918
That's what I like about Shakespeare,
the pictures.
966
00:59:48,840 --> 00:59:51,638
HADGE:
He's dead. Okay.
967
00:59:52,520 --> 00:59:54,192
Okay.
968
00:59:58,040 --> 01:00:00,918
well, what are we gonna do?
969
01:00:01,080 --> 01:00:03,196
-Okay.
-I like it.
970
01:00:03,800 --> 01:00:05,199
What next?
971
01:00:05,360 --> 01:00:07,112
What do you mean, you like it?
972
01:00:12,840 --> 01:00:15,559
MAN 8: What time is it?
MAN 9: 3:30.
973
01:00:15,720 --> 01:00:17,836
MAN 8:
What are they doing, do you know?
974
01:00:18,000 --> 01:00:21,390
MAN 9: Freddie said something
about burying the king.
975
01:00:21,560 --> 01:00:22,959
MAN 8:
Is that in the play?
976
01:00:29,160 --> 01:00:31,196
[CHURCH BELL RINglNG ]
977
01:00:31,360 --> 01:00:33,316
[WOMAN CRYING ]
978
01:00:39,880 --> 01:00:43,395
PACINO: Here it goes. This is it.
KIMBALL: This is the crunch.
979
01:00:43,560 --> 01:00:47,838
PACINO: Now we can say Richard
is the most powerful man at this point...
980
01:00:49,680 --> 01:00:50,954
. . .alive.
981
01:00:51,120 --> 01:00:55,591
all of us have cause to wall
the dimming of our shining star.
982
01:00:55,760 --> 01:00:57,432
KIMBALL:
The crisis is...
983
01:00:57,640 --> 01:01:02,077
. . .are they going to live by the words
that they spoke to the king. . .
984
01:01:02,280 --> 01:01:05,511
...or are they not?
Is the peace going to hold?
985
01:01:05,680 --> 01:01:08,399
I hope the king made peace
with all of us. . .
986
01:01:08,560 --> 01:01:12,872
. . .and that compact is firm
and true in me.
987
01:01:13,040 --> 01:01:15,600
-And so in me.
-And so say I.
988
01:01:15,960 --> 01:01:17,518
Then go we to determine. . .
989
01:01:17,680 --> 01:01:20,194
. . .who they shall be
that shall post to Ludlow.
990
01:01:20,400 --> 01:01:23,836
Who is going to go to Ludlow
to get the young prince. . .
991
01:01:24,000 --> 01:01:26,594
. . .and bring him back to be king?
992
01:01:27,360 --> 01:01:28,918
Who 's gonna do it?
993
01:01:29,400 --> 01:01:32,710
And Buckingham says,
''Whoever does do it...
994
01:01:33,760 --> 01:01:35,193
. . .we go along too. ''
995
01:01:35,600 --> 01:01:39,070
SPACEY: Whoever journeys to the Prince,
let not us two stay at home.
996
01:01:39,240 --> 01:01:43,153
Buckingham decides politically
to align himself with Richard.
997
01:01:43,360 --> 01:01:45,635
He does everything for him
in order to. . .
998
01:01:45,800 --> 01:01:48,678
. . .help him, obviously wanting
to help himself.
999
01:01:49,160 --> 01:01:51,037
When I am king. . .
1000
01:01:51,840 --> 01:01:54,479
. . .claim thou of me
the earldom of Hereford. . .
1001
01:01:54,640 --> 01:01:57,359
. . .and the moveables whereof
the king my brother was possess'd.
1002
01:01:59,080 --> 01:02:01,514
SPACEY: Buckingham is like
the secretary of state.
1003
01:02:01,680 --> 01:02:05,593
Like the guys who did
the Iran-Contra stuff, the dirty work.
1004
01:02:05,760 --> 01:02:07,079
PACINO: Mm-hm.
-Propped up the king.
1005
01:02:07,240 --> 01:02:10,437
PACINO: Without Buckingham,
there's no Richard as king.
1006
01:02:10,600 --> 01:02:12,830
-Right. He couldn't do it alone.
-Mm-hm.
1007
01:02:13,000 --> 01:02:14,353
But then, they never can.
1008
01:02:14,520 --> 01:02:17,990
Shakespeare saw Richard Gloucester
and Buckingham as gangsters.
1009
01:02:18,160 --> 01:02:21,596
They were thugs.
High-class, upper-class thugs.
1010
01:02:21,760 --> 01:02:24,797
There's been no influence here,
has there? No influence.
1011
01:02:27,320 --> 01:02:29,117
ALLEN:
What is thy news?
1012
01:02:29,560 --> 01:02:32,632
Lord Rivers and Lord Grey
are sent to Pomfret. . .
1013
01:02:32,840 --> 01:02:34,956
...and with them Sir Thomas Vaughan...
1014
01:02:35,160 --> 01:02:36,957
...prisoners.
1015
01:02:37,160 --> 01:02:38,434
ALLEN:
Who hath committed them?
1016
01:02:38,600 --> 01:02:41,478
The mighty dukes
Gloucester and Buckingham.
1017
01:02:41,640 --> 01:02:43,039
You're a pretty smart guy.
1018
01:02:43,320 --> 01:02:44,753
I can see it.
1019
01:02:44,920 --> 01:02:46,990
I see the ruin of my house.
1020
01:02:47,200 --> 01:02:51,398
Insulting tyranny beglns to jet upon
the innocent and aweless throne.
1021
01:02:51,560 --> 01:02:53,357
I can see it. . .
1022
01:02:53,520 --> 01:02:56,432
. . .as in a map, the end of all.
1023
01:02:57,920 --> 01:03:01,549
PACINO: Now, Richard and Buckingham
have betrayed everybody.
1024
01:03:01,720 --> 01:03:04,996
They lied. They went to Ludlow
to pick up this prince.
1025
01:03:05,160 --> 01:03:06,957
They were supposed
to be peaceful.
1026
01:03:07,120 --> 01:03:10,476
They forced him out
from under his uncle's arms...
1027
01:03:10,640 --> 01:03:13,916
-...and they've stolen this kid.
KIMBALL: They're bringlng him back.
1028
01:03:14,080 --> 01:03:17,231
What they have really got there
is the throne of England...
1029
01:03:17,400 --> 01:03:19,038
-...in their arms.
PACINO: The future.
1030
01:03:19,200 --> 01:03:21,077
KIMBALL:
They've got it.
1031
01:03:21,240 --> 01:03:25,791
[PACINO & KIMBALL SING ''HE'S GOT
THE WHOLE WORLD IN HIS HANDS'']
1032
01:03:29,920 --> 01:03:33,196
PACINO:
Now is the winter of our discontent...
1033
01:03:33,640 --> 01:03:37,189
...made glorious summer...
1034
01:03:37,360 --> 01:03:41,558
...by this sun of York.
1035
01:03:41,720 --> 01:03:43,676
Welcome. . .
1036
01:03:43,840 --> 01:03:45,717
. . .to London.
1037
01:03:46,280 --> 01:03:48,350
CURATOR:
This is the first chance since 1 640s. . .
1038
01:03:50,520 --> 01:03:53,478
. . .to see the Globe Theatre.
This is where Shakespeare. . .
1039
01:03:53,640 --> 01:03:55,710
. . .wrote his plays, where he acted.
1040
01:03:55,880 --> 01:03:59,839
-Shakespeare owned it.
PACINO: So this is the spot?
1041
01:04:00,000 --> 01:04:02,389
If you stand in the middle of it,
what happens?
1042
01:04:02,560 --> 01:04:05,597
It's like a sounding board,
like a resonating chamber.
1043
01:04:05,760 --> 01:04:08,832
-You can hear the wonderful acoustics.
-I hear it already.
1044
01:04:09,200 --> 01:04:12,590
Now is the winter of our discontent. . .
1045
01:04:12,840 --> 01:04:15,434
. . .made glorious summer. . .
1046
01:04:17,360 --> 01:04:19,954
. . .by this sun of York.
1047
01:04:20,320 --> 01:04:23,949
And all the clouds
that lour'd on our house. . .
1048
01:04:24,120 --> 01:04:26,429
. . .in the deep bosom of the ocean. . . .
1049
01:04:26,600 --> 01:04:30,639
-Hi. Are you working on this?
-I am. I've been recording it since 1 980.
1050
01:04:30,840 --> 01:04:34,879
-You've been recording this since 1 980?
-Yeah. The whole shebang.
1051
01:04:35,040 --> 01:04:36,758
-Really?
-And who is this?
1052
01:04:36,920 --> 01:04:39,559
This is the son of one of the builders.
1053
01:04:40,000 --> 01:04:42,753
PACINO:
Welcome, sweet prince, to London.
1054
01:04:42,960 --> 01:04:45,190
My thoughts' sovereign.
1055
01:04:47,240 --> 01:04:49,435
The weary way
hath made you melancholy.
1056
01:04:49,600 --> 01:04:53,593
-I want more uncles here to welcome me.
-Sweet prince. . .
1057
01:04:54,200 --> 01:04:57,158
. . .those uncles which you want
were dangerous.
1058
01:04:57,320 --> 01:04:59,788
Your grace attended
to their sugar'd words. . .
1059
01:04:59,960 --> 01:05:02,155
. . .but look'd not on the poison
of their hearts.
1060
01:05:02,320 --> 01:05:04,311
God keep you from such false friends!
1061
01:05:04,480 --> 01:05:08,314
God keep me from false friends!
But they were none.
1062
01:05:11,680 --> 01:05:14,990
The mayor of London
comes to greet you.
1063
01:05:15,160 --> 01:05:18,914
Okay, now they got the kids. They got
the young prince who 'll be king.
1064
01:05:19,080 --> 01:05:22,277
-They got his brother.
KIMBALL: Richard has a happy family.
1065
01:05:22,440 --> 01:05:23,793
PACINO:
Yeah. Somebody's gotta go.
1066
01:05:23,960 --> 01:05:25,712
Will't please you pass along?
1067
01:05:25,880 --> 01:05:28,713
myself and Buckingham
entreat your mother to come. . .
1068
01:05:28,880 --> 01:05:30,552
. . .and welcome you at the Tower.
1069
01:05:30,720 --> 01:05:32,950
What, will you go unto the Tower,
my lord?
1070
01:05:33,160 --> 01:05:35,674
-What should you fear at the Tower?
-Nothing.
1071
01:05:35,880 --> 01:05:37,791
PACINO:
Why has he put them in the Tower?
1072
01:05:37,960 --> 01:05:39,109
He's going to kill them.
1073
01:05:39,280 --> 01:05:43,273
The Tower is where they execute. . . .
1074
01:05:43,440 --> 01:05:47,194
They chop people's heads off.
There are many rooms up there.
1075
01:05:47,360 --> 01:05:50,591
So it can also go for meetings
and different places.
1076
01:05:50,760 --> 01:05:53,354
But there is one specific spot
up there. . .
1077
01:05:53,520 --> 01:05:55,636
. . .where they. . . .
1078
01:05:55,800 --> 01:05:58,917
They do the. . . .
You know, do the thing.
1079
01:05:59,280 --> 01:06:01,396
The one person who is in line is a child.
1080
01:06:01,560 --> 01:06:04,950
What a wonderful opportunity
for all of us to get what we want.
1081
01:06:05,120 --> 01:06:07,759
-Of course.
-I'll basically be running the country.
1082
01:06:07,920 --> 01:06:10,309
PACINO: One person 's standing
in their way: Lord Hastings.
1083
01:06:11,960 --> 01:06:14,349
Hastings loves this kid, the prince.
1084
01:06:14,520 --> 01:06:16,670
He really wants him to be
the next king.
1085
01:06:16,840 --> 01:06:19,718
Though the kid's in the Tower,
he believes he will be.
1086
01:06:19,880 --> 01:06:21,518
KIMBALL: He's tough.
PACINO: Tough Guy Hastings.
1087
01:06:21,680 --> 01:06:23,989
He was the former king's
closest friend.
1088
01:06:24,160 --> 01:06:28,153
They even shared a mistress.
Mistress Shore. Who is she?
1089
01:06:28,320 --> 01:06:31,835
KIMBALL: She's Shakespeare's device
to connect Hastings and the king.
1090
01:06:32,000 --> 01:06:35,515
-They share the same woman.
PACINO: Good idea.
1091
01:06:36,240 --> 01:06:39,038
Hastings is a great threat
to Richard and Buckingham.
1092
01:06:39,200 --> 01:06:42,351
KIMBALL: He can stop them,
so they have to stop him.
1093
01:06:42,520 --> 01:06:44,670
SPACEY:
What shall we do. . .
1094
01:06:44,840 --> 01:06:48,958
. . .if we perceive Lord Hastings
will not yield to our complots?
1095
01:06:50,320 --> 01:06:52,436
Chop off his head.
1096
01:06:52,840 --> 01:06:55,559
CONWAY:
What are you talking about, Richard?
1097
01:06:55,760 --> 01:06:57,955
You mean Richard wear the crown?
1098
01:06:58,120 --> 01:07:00,839
BRYGGMAN:
I think it's the only way.
1099
01:07:01,480 --> 01:07:04,153
-Think about it.
-Let me tell you something.
1100
01:07:04,320 --> 01:07:06,470
I'll have this crown. . .
1101
01:07:06,640 --> 01:07:09,473
. . .this crown ripped off. . .
1102
01:07:09,640 --> 01:07:12,359
. . .and shoved into a cow's belly. . .
1103
01:07:12,520 --> 01:07:16,638
. . .before I would allow that scum
to defile the crown. . .
1104
01:07:16,800 --> 01:07:18,756
. . .by putting it on his head.
1105
01:07:18,920 --> 01:07:23,232
SCHOLAR 3: The text is only a means
of expressing what's behind the text.
1106
01:07:23,880 --> 01:07:28,590
If you get obsessed with the text. . . .
This is a barrier to American actors. . .
1107
01:07:28,760 --> 01:07:32,912
. . .who get obsessed with the British
way of regarding a text.
1108
01:07:33,080 --> 01:07:36,755
That isn't what matters. What matters
is that you have to penetrate. . .
1109
01:07:36,920 --> 01:07:39,354
. . .into what, at every moment,
it's about.
1110
01:07:39,560 --> 01:07:44,998
So at this point, Hastings does not
take the threat of Richard seriously?
1111
01:07:45,200 --> 01:07:46,713
KIMBALL:
Absolutely not.
1112
01:07:46,880 --> 01:07:49,633
Anything can go on.
You think that this guy. . .?
1113
01:07:49,800 --> 01:07:52,155
PACINO: So now we've got Stanley.
Lord Stanley.
1114
01:07:52,360 --> 01:07:55,477
He's a friend of Hastings
and he's trying to convince him...
1115
01:07:55,640 --> 01:07:59,633
... they should get out of the country
because Richard's planning a takeover.
1116
01:07:59,800 --> 01:08:02,109
Some treachery,
at the council meeting...
1117
01:08:03,720 --> 01:08:05,790
... to pick the prince's coronation date.
1118
01:08:05,960 --> 01:08:10,954
My noble lords. The cause why we are
met is, to determine of the coronation.
1119
01:08:11,120 --> 01:08:14,476
In God's name, speak.
When is the royaI day?
1120
01:08:14,640 --> 01:08:19,191
-Is all things ready for the royaI time?
-It is, and wants but nomination.
1121
01:08:19,360 --> 01:08:21,555
To-morrow, then, I judge a happy day.
1122
01:08:21,720 --> 01:08:25,076
Tomorrow has been prepared
as a great feast day. . .
1123
01:08:25,240 --> 01:08:29,791
. . .of coronation and requires only
that we at this tabIe say yes.
1124
01:08:30,000 --> 01:08:34,516
We think we have been brought together
just to rubber-stamp the prince.
1125
01:08:34,680 --> 01:08:36,955
PACINO: It's a fait accomplished,
the prince will be king.
1126
01:08:37,120 --> 01:08:39,270
They're just there to pick the date.
1127
01:08:39,440 --> 01:08:41,556
SPACEY:
Who knows Richard's mind in all this?
1128
01:08:41,720 --> 01:08:44,393
Who is the most inward
with the noble duke?
1129
01:08:45,280 --> 01:08:47,874
On the duke's behalf
I'll glve my voice. . .
1130
01:08:48,040 --> 01:08:51,589
. . .which, I presume,
he'll take in gentle part.
1131
01:08:51,760 --> 01:08:54,035
In happy time,
here comes the gentle duke.
1132
01:08:54,200 --> 01:08:56,998
My noble lords and cousins all,
good morrow.
1133
01:08:57,160 --> 01:08:59,515
I have been long a sleeper.
But I trust. . .
1134
01:08:59,680 --> 01:09:03,912
. . .my absence doth neglect no design,
which might have been concluded.
1135
01:09:04,080 --> 01:09:05,638
Had you not come, my lord. . .
1136
01:09:05,800 --> 01:09:08,473
. . .William Lord Hastings
had pronounced your part--
1137
01:09:08,680 --> 01:09:10,716
I mean, your voice. . .
1138
01:09:11,000 --> 01:09:12,558
. . .for crowning of the king.
1139
01:09:12,720 --> 01:09:14,233
PACINO:
Than no man might be bolder.
1140
01:09:14,440 --> 01:09:18,149
His lordship knows me well,
and loves me well. My lord of Ely!
1141
01:09:18,720 --> 01:09:20,551
When last I was in Holborn. . .
1142
01:09:20,720 --> 01:09:23,518
. . .I saw good strawberries
in your garden there. . .
1143
01:09:23,680 --> 01:09:25,830
. . .I do beseech you send
for some of them.
1144
01:09:26,000 --> 01:09:27,877
KIMBALL:
Marry, and will, my lord.
1145
01:09:28,040 --> 01:09:30,759
Cousin of Buckingham,
a word with you.
1146
01:09:31,920 --> 01:09:37,313
Remember we talked the other day
about a gathering of dons, in a way.
1147
01:09:38,040 --> 01:09:40,110
There's a lot of suspicion in this room.
1148
01:09:40,280 --> 01:09:42,874
I think there's a danger
to be in this room.
1149
01:09:43,040 --> 01:09:44,439
All of us in one spot.
1150
01:09:44,600 --> 01:09:47,876
And it's like somebody says,
''Just wait here, I'll be back. ''
1151
01:09:48,080 --> 01:09:53,074
Or, you know, ''Wait in this room--''
And it's been like, ''What's going on?''
1152
01:09:53,240 --> 01:09:56,198
PACINO: It's simple.
They have to cut out Hastings...
1153
01:09:56,360 --> 01:09:59,193
...and only Richard
has the power to do it.
1154
01:09:59,360 --> 01:10:01,828
He's royal, a York,
but he must move fast.
1155
01:10:02,000 --> 01:10:05,754
It's his last chance to stop Hastings
from making the prince king.
1156
01:10:05,920 --> 01:10:09,469
KIMBALL: They'll suck in Hastings
using his mistress, Jane Shore, as bait.
1157
01:10:09,640 --> 01:10:11,631
Provoke him to say the wrong thing.
1158
01:10:11,800 --> 01:10:15,759
PACINO: Then everyone has to make a
choice, either Richard or Hastings.
1159
01:10:16,720 --> 01:10:21,794
Where is my lord, the Duke of Gloucester?
I have sent for these strawberries.
1160
01:10:23,720 --> 01:10:27,315
His grace looks cheerfully
and smooth this morning.
1161
01:10:27,480 --> 01:10:29,869
There's some conceit
or other likes him well. . .
1162
01:10:30,040 --> 01:10:32,634
. . .with that he bids good morrow
with such spirit.
1163
01:10:33,040 --> 01:10:37,113
There's never a man in Christendom
can lesser hide his love or hate than he.
1164
01:10:37,280 --> 01:10:40,033
For by his face straight
shall you know his heart.
1165
01:10:40,440 --> 01:10:43,910
What of his heart perceive you
by any livelihood he show'd to-day?
1166
01:10:44,080 --> 01:10:47,072
Marry, that with no man here
he is offended.
1167
01:10:47,240 --> 01:10:50,357
For, if he were,
you'd seen it in his looks.
1168
01:10:58,920 --> 01:11:00,990
I pray you all. . .
1169
01:11:02,200 --> 01:11:04,156
. . .tell me what they deserve. . .
1170
01:11:04,680 --> 01:11:07,319
. . .that do conspire my death. . .
1171
01:11:08,120 --> 01:11:12,079
. . .with devilish plots
of damned witchcraft. . .
1172
01:11:12,240 --> 01:11:15,437
. . .and that have prevall'd
upon my body. . .
1173
01:11:15,600 --> 01:11:17,556
. . .with their hellish charms?
1174
01:11:20,440 --> 01:11:24,115
The tender love I bear your grace,
my lord, makes me most forward. . .
1175
01:11:24,280 --> 01:11:28,319
. . .in this princely presence to doom
the offenders, whosoe'er they be.
1176
01:11:28,520 --> 01:11:32,354
I say, my lord,
they have deserved death.
1177
01:11:34,600 --> 01:11:39,276
Then be your eyes
the witness of their ill.
1178
01:11:41,640 --> 01:11:43,232
Look. . .
1179
01:11:44,320 --> 01:11:46,993
. . .how I am bewitch'd.
1180
01:11:47,160 --> 01:11:49,720
Behold mine arm. . .
1181
01:11:49,880 --> 01:11:53,873
. . .like a blasted sapling, wither'd up.
1182
01:11:54,040 --> 01:11:57,396
And this is Edward's wife. . .
1183
01:11:58,480 --> 01:12:01,153
. . .that monstrous witch. . .
1184
01:12:01,320 --> 01:12:05,359
. . .consorted with the harlot
strumpet Shore. . .
1185
01:12:05,520 --> 01:12:07,590
. . .that by their witchcraft. . .
1186
01:12:08,000 --> 01:12:10,036
. . .thus have marked me.
1187
01:12:10,600 --> 01:12:13,876
-If they have done this deed--
-If!
1188
01:12:14,080 --> 01:12:15,957
If. . .
1189
01:12:16,160 --> 01:12:20,039
. . .thou protector of this
damned strumpet--
1190
01:12:20,200 --> 01:12:22,236
talkest thou to me of ''ifs''?
1191
01:12:25,920 --> 01:12:27,399
Off with his head!
1192
01:12:29,000 --> 01:12:31,036
Now, by Saint Paul. . .
1193
01:12:31,200 --> 01:12:34,431
. . .I swear, I will not dine
until I see the same.
1194
01:12:34,760 --> 01:12:37,320
Lovel and Ratcliffe,
look that it be done.
1195
01:12:37,480 --> 01:12:39,391
The rest, that love me. . .
1196
01:12:39,560 --> 01:12:43,030
. . .rise and follow me.
1197
01:12:48,320 --> 01:12:49,878
MAN 9:
Stan--
1198
01:12:51,200 --> 01:12:53,191
Stanley!
1199
01:12:57,200 --> 01:12:58,918
Stan--
1200
01:13:08,160 --> 01:13:11,357
Woe for England!
1201
01:13:11,520 --> 01:13:14,592
Not a whit for me.
1202
01:13:15,520 --> 01:13:18,592
For I, too fond,
might have prevented this.
1203
01:13:18,800 --> 01:13:20,279
Come, dispatch.
1204
01:13:20,440 --> 01:13:22,351
'Tis bootless to exclaim.
1205
01:13:22,520 --> 01:13:25,353
Bloody Richard!
1206
01:13:29,800 --> 01:13:31,836
PACINO:
Hastings was the fly in the ointment.
1207
01:13:32,000 --> 01:13:34,389
The path is clear
for Buckingham and Richard.
1208
01:13:34,560 --> 01:13:38,473
They got the inner circle. They've
intimidated all the dukes and earls.
1209
01:13:38,640 --> 01:13:40,198
So now...
1210
01:13:40,360 --> 01:13:43,113
...all that's left is winning the people.
1211
01:13:43,320 --> 01:13:46,869
SPACEY: Every time there's an election
in this country, whether for mayor...
1212
01:13:47,080 --> 01:13:48,911
...president or city council...
1213
01:13:49,080 --> 01:13:53,119
. . .the fact is people are tired of the way
it's been and want a change.
1214
01:13:54,000 --> 01:13:57,515
How now, how now,
what say the citizens?
1215
01:13:57,840 --> 01:14:00,877
Now, by the holy mother of our Lord,
the citizens are mum.
1216
01:14:01,040 --> 01:14:05,750
I expected them to be boisterous,
and that they would come and rally.
1217
01:14:06,160 --> 01:14:08,116
-Did they so?
-No. . .
1218
01:14:08,280 --> 01:14:10,350
. . .so God help me,
they spake not a word.
1219
01:14:10,520 --> 01:14:14,479
But, like dumb statues, stared each
other on, and look'd deadly pale.
1220
01:14:14,640 --> 01:14:16,198
And did they so?
1221
01:14:16,360 --> 01:14:18,191
No!
1222
01:14:18,680 --> 01:14:20,636
What, are you deaf?
1223
01:14:20,800 --> 01:14:22,711
I'm saying, whatever their reaction. . .
1224
01:14:22,880 --> 01:14:24,916
-. . .we had this plan.
-We still had it.
1225
01:14:25,080 --> 01:14:26,479
SPACEY:
So they're being told...
1226
01:14:26,640 --> 01:14:31,350
... that here, right before your eyes,
is the man who will make it better.
1227
01:14:31,560 --> 01:14:33,073
And, see. . .
1228
01:14:33,240 --> 01:14:36,596
. . .a book of prayer in his hand,
true ornaments. . .
1229
01:14:36,760 --> 01:14:38,557
. . .to know a holy man.
1230
01:14:38,760 --> 01:14:41,991
Irony is really only hypocrisy with style.
1231
01:14:42,480 --> 01:14:45,870
Here again, we love
Richard's irony, in a way.
1232
01:14:46,080 --> 01:14:50,437
We know he's as hard as nalls,
that he's only pretending to be religlous.
1233
01:14:51,080 --> 01:14:54,993
PACINO: They canvass like politicians.
Complete with lies and innuendo...
1234
01:14:55,160 --> 01:14:56,593
... they manage...
1235
01:14:56,760 --> 01:15:02,198
... to malign this young prince,
who is the rightful heir to the throne.
1236
01:15:03,000 --> 01:15:04,274
And they know it.
1237
01:15:04,440 --> 01:15:06,317
Infer the bastardy of Edward's children.
1238
01:15:06,480 --> 01:15:08,835
And they say he was a bastard...
1239
01:15:09,000 --> 01:15:11,036
... that his father was a bastard.
1240
01:15:11,240 --> 01:15:15,279
It's an act, and these people buy it.
It's a complete lie.
1241
01:15:15,440 --> 01:15:17,112
SPACEY:
We heartily solicit you...
1242
01:15:17,280 --> 01:15:20,192
. . .to take on the kingly government
of this your land. . .
1243
01:15:20,360 --> 01:15:25,036
. . .not as protector, steward, substitute,
or lowly factor for another's gain.
1244
01:15:25,240 --> 01:15:27,993
But as successively
from blood to blood. . .
1245
01:15:28,160 --> 01:15:31,038
. . .your right of birth,
your empery, your own.
1246
01:15:35,560 --> 01:15:38,836
Since you will buckle fortune
on my back. . .
1247
01:15:39,000 --> 01:15:43,039
. . .to bear her burden,
whether I will or no. . .
1248
01:15:44,560 --> 01:15:47,438
. . .I must have patience
to endure the load.
1249
01:15:47,760 --> 01:15:52,276
CROWD: Long live Richard,
England's worthy king!
1250
01:15:52,440 --> 01:15:54,396
Long live King Richard!
1251
01:15:54,560 --> 01:15:59,918
In the midst of these noble concepts,
these treaties and diplomatic pacts. . .
1252
01:16:00,080 --> 01:16:03,436
. . .he was saying
the truth beneath all this. . .
1253
01:16:03,600 --> 01:16:06,068
. . .is absolutely the opposite.
1254
01:16:06,240 --> 01:16:09,073
The truth is that those in power. . .
1255
01:16:09,240 --> 01:16:12,789
. . .have total contempt
for everything they promise. . .
1256
01:16:12,960 --> 01:16:14,871
. . .everything they pledge.
1257
01:16:15,040 --> 01:16:17,952
And that's what Shakespeare's
great play is about.
1258
01:16:18,160 --> 01:16:21,709
The reason why Shakespeare
is really important. . .
1259
01:16:21,880 --> 01:16:24,394
. . .is because, in the Talmudic theme. . . .
1260
01:16:24,560 --> 01:16:27,916
I've taken Lady Macbeth
and put her in a rock 'n' roll context.
1261
01:16:28,080 --> 01:16:29,752
She's singlng the blues.
1262
01:16:29,960 --> 01:16:32,758
--which is really a yin-yang or Chinese.
1263
01:16:32,960 --> 01:16:35,394
Hamlet's like every kid
who's freaked out. . .
1264
01:16:35,560 --> 01:16:37,391
. . .his mother, his father. . . .
1265
01:16:37,600 --> 01:16:42,116
The way to truly live is to hold
both points of view at the same time.
1266
01:16:42,320 --> 01:16:45,232
I have them singlng the blues,
doing the beat.
1267
01:16:45,400 --> 01:16:48,676
But an American audience
gets intimidated. They hear ''Hamlet. ''
1268
01:16:48,840 --> 01:16:50,114
They hear ''Shakespeare. ''
1269
01:16:50,560 --> 01:16:53,552
You must get me out of this.
1270
01:16:53,720 --> 01:16:55,870
Get me out of this documentary.
1271
01:16:56,040 --> 01:16:59,237
This idea was a bad idea.
It's gone too far.
1272
01:16:59,400 --> 01:17:03,439
-Take you away from all this?
-I wanna go. I wanna. . . .
1273
01:17:03,600 --> 01:17:04,999
I want to be the king.
1274
01:17:05,760 --> 01:17:09,639
I want to be king, Frederic.
Make me king.
1275
01:17:14,200 --> 01:17:18,273
CROWD: Long live Richard,
England's worthy king!
1276
01:17:18,440 --> 01:17:22,513
Long live Richard,
England's worthy king!
1277
01:17:22,680 --> 01:17:27,549
KIMBALL: As soon as he gets what
he wants, Lady Anne, the crown...
1278
01:17:27,760 --> 01:17:30,274
-. . .then the whole thing--
-The emptiness of it.
1279
01:17:30,440 --> 01:17:32,874
-Cousin of Buckingham!
-My gracious sovereign?
1280
01:17:33,040 --> 01:17:35,156
PACINO:
glve me thy hand.
1281
01:17:35,320 --> 01:17:40,348
Thus high, by thy advice
and thy assistance. . .
1282
01:17:40,520 --> 01:17:42,829
. . .is King Richard. . .
1283
01:17:43,840 --> 01:17:45,319
. . .seated.
1284
01:17:49,000 --> 01:17:52,879
But shall we wear
these glories for a day?
1285
01:17:53,040 --> 01:17:55,031
Or shall they last. . .
1286
01:17:55,200 --> 01:17:57,634
. . .and we rejoice in them?
1287
01:17:59,640 --> 01:18:02,950
Still they live and for ever
may they last!
1288
01:18:03,840 --> 01:18:05,398
Buckingham. . .
1289
01:18:05,560 --> 01:18:07,437
. . .now do I play the touch.
1290
01:18:08,040 --> 01:18:09,917
Young Edward lives.
1291
01:18:11,920 --> 01:18:14,673
Think now what I would speak.
1292
01:18:16,200 --> 01:18:17,918
Say on, my loving lord.
1293
01:18:18,560 --> 01:18:20,278
Shall I be plain?
1294
01:18:22,920 --> 01:18:24,990
I wish the bastards. . .
1295
01:18:25,160 --> 01:18:26,479
. . .dead.
1296
01:18:26,640 --> 01:18:30,713
Why is it necessary now to kill them?
You're king. What difference--?
1297
01:18:31,680 --> 01:18:34,513
-It's. . . .
-But as long as they live.
1298
01:18:35,000 --> 01:18:37,833
What sayest thou now?
1299
01:18:38,000 --> 01:18:41,037
Speak suddenly. Be brief.
1300
01:18:43,240 --> 01:18:45,959
Your grace may do his pleasure.
1301
01:18:48,560 --> 01:18:51,154
Thou art all ice. . .
1302
01:18:51,800 --> 01:18:53,438
. . .thy kindness freezeth.
1303
01:18:53,640 --> 01:18:55,596
FEMALE SCHOLAR:
Everybody may have a price...
1304
01:18:55,960 --> 01:18:59,635
. . .but for a lot of people,
there is a fundamental decency.
1305
01:18:59,800 --> 01:19:03,395
It takes a long time for them
to reach that point.
1306
01:19:03,560 --> 01:19:07,439
The action of the play,
the sense of exciting movement. . .
1307
01:19:07,600 --> 01:19:13,072
. . .is Richard's finding out the point
beyond which people won't go.
1308
01:19:13,240 --> 01:19:17,552
PACINO:
Say, then that I have thy consent. . .
1309
01:19:17,720 --> 01:19:19,597
. . .that they shall die?
1310
01:19:19,760 --> 01:19:21,478
It's an interesting question. . .
1311
01:19:21,640 --> 01:19:24,074
. . .about where Buckingham is--
1312
01:19:24,240 --> 01:19:28,313
How far he's willing to go,
where he's willing to draw the line.
1313
01:19:28,480 --> 01:19:31,870
It's as if everything Buckingham
does in the play. . .
1314
01:19:32,040 --> 01:19:34,952
. . .somehow manages
to keep the blood off his hands.
1315
01:19:36,080 --> 01:19:40,312
glve me some little breath,
some pause, dear my lord. . .
1316
01:19:40,480 --> 01:19:44,109
. . .before I speak positively in this.
1317
01:19:45,120 --> 01:19:48,908
I shall resolve you herein presently.
1318
01:19:50,160 --> 01:19:51,912
The king is angry.
1319
01:19:53,400 --> 01:19:56,551
None are for me. . .
1320
01:19:56,720 --> 01:20:01,111
. . .that look into me
with considerate eyes.
1321
01:20:01,280 --> 01:20:04,238
He is bound to be left alone. . .
1322
01:20:04,400 --> 01:20:07,756
. . .because nobody can love the king. . .
1323
01:20:07,920 --> 01:20:13,153
. . .beyond the degree of their own egoism
or their own goodness.
1324
01:20:13,320 --> 01:20:17,393
There will be a point.
He has reached Buckingham's point.
1325
01:20:17,560 --> 01:20:21,075
That deep-revolving. . .
1326
01:20:21,240 --> 01:20:23,754
. . .witty Buckingham. . .
1327
01:20:23,920 --> 01:20:26,912
. . .shall no longer be neighbor
to my counsels.
1328
01:20:27,120 --> 01:20:28,633
What?
1329
01:20:28,800 --> 01:20:33,476
Hath he held out with me
so long, untired. . .
1330
01:20:33,640 --> 01:20:37,076
. . .stops he now for breath?
1331
01:20:37,240 --> 01:20:38,639
well. . .
1332
01:20:38,800 --> 01:20:40,438
. . .so be it.
1333
01:20:41,400 --> 01:20:44,676
When he went away, did he agree
to do it, or was he gonna say:
1334
01:20:44,840 --> 01:20:46,990
''I can't, but glve me
what you promised''?
1335
01:20:47,200 --> 01:20:48,918
I think he's come back and says:
1336
01:20:49,080 --> 01:20:53,198
''Okay. We have to do it,
let's bite the bullet. Let's do it. ''
1337
01:20:53,360 --> 01:20:54,634
But he's too late.
1338
01:20:58,880 --> 01:21:01,997
My Lord, I have consider'd in my mind
the late request. . .
1339
01:21:02,160 --> 01:21:05,277
-. . .that you did sound me in.
-well, let that rest.
1340
01:21:05,440 --> 01:21:08,318
-Dorset is fled to Richmond.
SPACEY: I hear the news, my lord.
1341
01:21:08,520 --> 01:21:11,114
PACINO: Stanley.
BRYGGMAN: Yes, my sovereign?
1342
01:21:11,280 --> 01:21:14,556
PACINO:
Richmond is your wife's son. . .
1343
01:21:16,160 --> 01:21:18,276
. . .look to it.
1344
01:21:20,040 --> 01:21:21,996
My lord. . .
1345
01:21:22,160 --> 01:21:24,196
. . .I claim the glft. . .
1346
01:21:26,080 --> 01:21:27,593
. . .my due of promise. . .
1347
01:21:29,360 --> 01:21:33,831
. . .which your honor and your faith
is pawn'd.
1348
01:21:34,040 --> 01:21:37,919
The earldom of Hereford and moveables
which you promised I shall possess.
1349
01:21:38,120 --> 01:21:39,712
Stanley. . .
1350
01:21:40,400 --> 01:21:42,356
. . .look to your wife.
1351
01:21:42,520 --> 01:21:45,910
If she convey letters to Richmond,
you shall answer it.
1352
01:21:46,080 --> 01:21:48,435
What says your highness
to my high request?
1353
01:21:48,600 --> 01:21:52,718
I do remember me,
Henry the Sixth did prophesy. . .
1354
01:21:52,880 --> 01:21:59,194
. . .when Richmond was just a little boy
that Richmond would be king.
1355
01:21:59,920 --> 01:22:01,273
Perhaps.
1356
01:22:01,440 --> 01:22:03,874
-Perhaps--
-My lord! The earldom--
1357
01:22:04,040 --> 01:22:05,359
PACINO:
Richmond!
1358
01:22:05,520 --> 01:22:08,080
When last I was in Exeter. . .
1359
01:22:08,240 --> 01:22:12,438
. . .the mayor in courtesy
show'd me the castle there. . .
1360
01:22:12,600 --> 01:22:15,273
. . .and call'd it Rougemont.
1361
01:22:15,920 --> 01:22:17,194
[PACINO LAUGHS]
1362
01:22:17,360 --> 01:22:22,229
At which name I started,
because a bard of Ireland told me once. . .
1363
01:22:22,400 --> 01:22:26,313
. . .that I should not live long
after I saw Richmond.
1364
01:22:26,840 --> 01:22:30,719
-My Lord!
-Ay, what's o'clock?
1365
01:22:31,920 --> 01:22:35,833
I am thus bold to put your grace in mind
of what you promised me.
1366
01:22:36,000 --> 01:22:38,389
Ay, but what's o'clock?
1367
01:22:38,560 --> 01:22:40,915
Upon the stroke of ten.
1368
01:22:41,120 --> 01:22:43,076
-Let it strike.
SPACEY: Why let it strike?
1369
01:22:43,240 --> 01:22:44,559
Because. . .
1370
01:22:44,760 --> 01:22:46,910
. . .that, like a Jack. . .
1371
01:22:47,080 --> 01:22:51,073
. . .thou keep'st the stroke, tick-tock. . .
1372
01:22:51,240 --> 01:22:53,913
. . .betwixt your begglng. . .
1373
01:22:54,080 --> 01:22:55,991
. . .and my meditation.
1374
01:22:56,160 --> 01:22:58,833
Tick-tock.
1375
01:22:59,120 --> 01:23:01,315
I am not. . .
1376
01:23:01,480 --> 01:23:04,199
. . .in the glving vein to-day.
1377
01:23:06,880 --> 01:23:08,916
May it please your grace. . .
1378
01:23:09,080 --> 01:23:11,230
. . .to resolve me in my suit?
1379
01:23:11,400 --> 01:23:14,153
Thou troublest me.
1380
01:23:14,760 --> 01:23:16,478
I am not. . .
1381
01:23:16,640 --> 01:23:19,712
. . .in the vein.
1382
01:23:32,800 --> 01:23:37,078
Thou dost scorn me
for my gentle counsel?
1383
01:23:37,240 --> 01:23:39,800
And soothe the devil
that I warn thee from?
1384
01:23:39,960 --> 01:23:43,270
O, but remember this another day. . .
1385
01:23:43,440 --> 01:23:46,910
. . .when he shall split
thy very heart with sorrow. . .
1386
01:23:47,880 --> 01:23:49,791
. . .and say poor Margaret. . .
1387
01:23:50,760 --> 01:23:52,637
. . .was a prophetess!
1388
01:23:54,200 --> 01:23:56,509
And thus be it so?
1389
01:23:57,240 --> 01:24:01,597
Repays me my deep service
with such contempt. . .
1390
01:24:02,400 --> 01:24:05,358
. . .made I him king for this?
1391
01:24:05,520 --> 01:24:08,159
O, let me think on Hastings,
and be gone. . .
1392
01:24:08,320 --> 01:24:09,912
. . .to Brecknock. . .
1393
01:24:10,080 --> 01:24:13,470
. . .while my fearful head is on!
1394
01:24:17,040 --> 01:24:18,792
You stand on brittle ground.
1395
01:24:18,960 --> 01:24:21,713
Will it last,
or will someone next week say:
1396
01:24:21,880 --> 01:24:25,668
''Hey, they got a bum rap.
Let's push the case of the kids''?
1397
01:24:26,280 --> 01:24:29,238
The kids have got to go.
1398
01:24:31,120 --> 01:24:32,838
Is thy name Tyrell?
1399
01:24:33,040 --> 01:24:34,951
James Tyrell. . .
1400
01:24:35,520 --> 01:24:38,159
. . .and your most obedient subject.
1401
01:24:38,320 --> 01:24:40,993
Darest thou resolve
to kill a friend of mine?
1402
01:24:41,160 --> 01:24:45,438
Please you.
But I had rather kill two enemies.
1403
01:24:45,600 --> 01:24:47,636
Thou hast it.
1404
01:24:48,120 --> 01:24:53,035
Two deep enemies, foes to my rest
and sweet sleep's disturbers. . .
1405
01:24:53,240 --> 01:24:56,277
. . .are they that I would have thee
deal upon.
1406
01:24:56,440 --> 01:24:58,590
Tyrell. . .
1407
01:25:00,240 --> 01:25:03,073
. . .I mean those bastards in the Tower.
1408
01:25:05,320 --> 01:25:09,199
Let me have open means
to come to them. . .
1409
01:25:09,360 --> 01:25:11,999
. . .and soon I'll rid you
from the fear of them.
1410
01:25:13,840 --> 01:25:15,159
Say it is done. . .
1411
01:25:15,320 --> 01:25:19,393
. . .and I will love thee,
and prefer thee for it.
1412
01:25:19,560 --> 01:25:22,393
I will dispatch it straight.
1413
01:25:48,720 --> 01:25:52,349
I am so far in blood. . .
1414
01:25:53,320 --> 01:25:58,872
. . .that sin will pluck on sin.
1415
01:25:59,640 --> 01:26:04,509
Tear-falling pity dwells not in this eye.
1416
01:26:18,840 --> 01:26:22,753
Any production of Richard III,
the last act dribbles out for me.
1417
01:26:22,920 --> 01:26:25,195
-I'm gone.
PACINO: For me, the last act. . .
1418
01:26:25,400 --> 01:26:28,597
...Richard is the most accessible
because it's clear. . .
1419
01:26:28,760 --> 01:26:31,752
. . .that Richard has attained
this power now.
1420
01:26:31,960 --> 01:26:35,999
He's king and he's on the decline
because as soon as he becomes king. . .
1421
01:26:36,160 --> 01:26:40,039
. . .they come at him from all sides.
Richmond is attacking.
1422
01:26:42,400 --> 01:26:45,358
This guy, Richmond,
his family were the losers...
1423
01:26:45,560 --> 01:26:47,357
...in the War of the Roses.
1424
01:26:47,520 --> 01:26:50,796
He had fled to France and was there
raising an army...
1425
01:26:51,000 --> 01:26:53,912
... to get the throne back
for the house of Lancaster.
1426
01:26:54,080 --> 01:26:56,150
MESSENGER 1 :
My gracious sovereign. . .
1427
01:26:56,320 --> 01:27:00,233
. . .now in Devonshire,
as I by friends am well advertised.
1428
01:27:00,440 --> 01:27:01,998
MESSENGER 2:
In Kent the Guildfords are in arms.
1429
01:27:02,160 --> 01:27:04,674
Every hour more competitors
flock to the rebels.
1430
01:27:04,880 --> 01:27:06,233
Their power grows strong.
1431
01:27:06,400 --> 01:27:08,630
Sir Thomas Lovel
and Lord Marquis Dorset. . .
1432
01:27:08,800 --> 01:27:11,553
-. . .in Yorkshire are in arms.
-Out, ye owls!
1433
01:27:11,800 --> 01:27:14,439
Nothing but songs of death?
1434
01:27:14,640 --> 01:27:17,108
Take thou that,
till thou brings better news.
1435
01:27:17,280 --> 01:27:19,157
He suspects everyone around him.
1436
01:27:19,320 --> 01:27:21,311
He has no friends.
1437
01:27:21,480 --> 01:27:23,516
I'm listening, I'm listening.
1438
01:27:30,600 --> 01:27:32,033
QUINN:
Fellows in arms...
1439
01:27:32,200 --> 01:27:34,156
. . .and my most loving friends.
1440
01:27:34,320 --> 01:27:37,710
Thus far into the bowels of land
we march'd without impediment.
1441
01:27:37,920 --> 01:27:40,957
And here receive we
from our father Stanley...
1442
01:27:41,120 --> 01:27:45,636
. . .lines of fair comfort
and encouragement.
1443
01:27:45,800 --> 01:27:46,994
Ah. . . .
1444
01:27:47,160 --> 01:27:49,879
QUINN: The wretched, bloody,
and usurping boar...
1445
01:27:50,040 --> 01:27:53,794
... that spoil'd your summer fields
and fruitful vines...
1446
01:27:54,000 --> 01:27:59,757
. . .this foul swine is now even
in the centre of this isle.
1447
01:27:59,920 --> 01:28:00,955
[CHEERING ]
1448
01:28:01,120 --> 01:28:04,749
Every man's conscience
is a thousand men. . .
1449
01:28:04,920 --> 01:28:07,957
. . .to fight against this guilty homicide.
1450
01:28:08,680 --> 01:28:11,240
Then, in God's name, march.
1451
01:28:11,600 --> 01:28:15,912
True hope is swift,
and flies with swallow's wings.
1452
01:28:16,400 --> 01:28:21,349
Kings it makes gods,
and meaner creatures kings.
1453
01:28:21,520 --> 01:28:22,748
[CHEERING ]
1454
01:28:22,920 --> 01:28:24,512
[COUGHING ]
1455
01:28:24,680 --> 01:28:26,352
KIMBALL: well.
-Am I dying?
1456
01:28:26,520 --> 01:28:28,590
That's what I want to know.
Am I dying?
1457
01:28:28,800 --> 01:28:31,917
When are we gonna kill Richard?
1458
01:28:32,080 --> 01:28:34,594
-I have a worse question.
-Excuse me?
1459
01:28:34,800 --> 01:28:36,279
I have a feeling. . .
1460
01:28:36,440 --> 01:28:39,398
. . .that your Richard will have earned
his death. . .
1461
01:28:39,560 --> 01:28:42,233
. . .and we should think about
a way to do it.
1462
01:28:42,400 --> 01:28:44,277
[COUGHING ]
1463
01:28:45,120 --> 01:28:48,317
Close-- Close-- Close the door.
1464
01:28:48,480 --> 01:28:50,357
[COUGHING ]
1465
01:28:51,200 --> 01:28:54,715
You're 98.6.
Put it under the tongue.
1466
01:28:54,880 --> 01:29:00,512
Then it doesn't click. If I'm 98.6,
then you're a Shakespearean actor.
1467
01:29:00,720 --> 01:29:05,953
''On the 22nd of August, 1 485, a battle
was fought for the crown of England.
1468
01:29:06,120 --> 01:29:08,873
A short battle,
ending in a decisive victory.
1469
01:29:09,040 --> 01:29:13,636
In that field, a crowned king, manfully
fighting in the middle of his enemies. . .
1470
01:29:13,800 --> 01:29:16,473
. . .was slain and brought to his death. ''
1471
01:29:18,800 --> 01:29:20,438
PACINO:
Here, pitch our tent, here. . .
1472
01:29:20,600 --> 01:29:23,717
. . .even here in Bosworth field.
1473
01:29:26,440 --> 01:29:29,238
SCHOLAR 1 : What is fascinating
when you come to the last act. . .
1474
01:29:29,440 --> 01:29:33,956
. . .to the Battle of Bosworth,
the battle itself goes for very little. . .
1475
01:29:34,120 --> 01:29:38,033
. . .apart from, ''My horse. My horse.
Kingdom for a horse. ''
1476
01:29:38,200 --> 01:29:43,035
To me, the battle is really the ghost
scene. The ghost scene is the battle.
1477
01:29:43,200 --> 01:29:47,432
PACINO: Richard is visited in his sleep by
the ghosts of the people he's murdered.
1478
01:29:47,600 --> 01:29:50,717
glve me another horse.
Bind up my wounds.
1479
01:29:50,880 --> 01:29:52,199
glve me another horse!
1480
01:29:52,360 --> 01:29:55,079
Frederic and I decided to go
to the actual theater...
1481
01:29:55,240 --> 01:29:58,869
... where Richard III was performed
some 300 years ago...
1482
01:29:59,040 --> 01:30:02,669
...and this ghost scene was acted
on the stage here, in London.
1483
01:30:02,840 --> 01:30:07,072
We thought we'd rehearse
and see if we could get a sense...
1484
01:30:07,280 --> 01:30:10,033
...of those old spirits.
Method acting-type stuff.
1485
01:30:10,240 --> 01:30:13,152
I've always had trouble
with this speech.
1486
01:30:13,320 --> 01:30:16,198
It's good when an actor
has trouble with a speech. . .
1487
01:30:16,360 --> 01:30:18,157
. . .and goes and tries to do it.
1488
01:30:18,320 --> 01:30:23,678
I've heard you talking about Richard
as a man who cannot find love.
1489
01:30:23,880 --> 01:30:27,555
A person who finally,
in the last scenes, knows...
1490
01:30:27,720 --> 01:30:31,793
... that he does not have
his own humanity, that he's lost it.
1491
01:30:31,960 --> 01:30:33,871
PARSONS:
Tormenting dreams!
1492
01:30:34,040 --> 01:30:37,077
KIMBALL: He has let the pursuit
of power totally corrupt him...
1493
01:30:37,240 --> 01:30:39,834
...and is alienated from his own body...
1494
01:30:40,000 --> 01:30:41,797
...and his own self.
1495
01:30:41,960 --> 01:30:44,952
GHOST:
Dream on, of bloody deeds and death.
1496
01:30:45,200 --> 01:30:46,792
Where are my children?
1497
01:30:47,000 --> 01:30:50,675
PARSONS: Toad!
-Despair. Despairing. Death.
1498
01:30:50,840 --> 01:30:53,991
-glve me another horse.
ALLEN: Where is thy brother, Clarence?
1499
01:30:55,000 --> 01:30:57,389
PACINO: Get me a horse!
Get me a horse!
1500
01:30:57,560 --> 01:30:59,630
ALLEN:
Yet thou didst kill my children.
1501
01:30:59,840 --> 01:31:02,798
-Despair. And die.
PACINO: Bind up my wounds.
1502
01:31:02,960 --> 01:31:05,315
Bloody Richard!
1503
01:31:05,760 --> 01:31:07,716
[GASPS]
1504
01:31:07,880 --> 01:31:09,552
[THUNDER ROLLS]
1505
01:31:11,600 --> 01:31:14,319
[METAL SCRAPES]
1506
01:31:18,200 --> 01:31:20,270
Soft! I did but dream.
1507
01:31:20,960 --> 01:31:22,234
Soft!
1508
01:31:23,880 --> 01:31:25,791
I did but dream.
1509
01:31:26,480 --> 01:31:28,198
O coward conscience. . .
1510
01:31:28,360 --> 01:31:30,794
. . .how dost thou afflict me!
1511
01:31:31,960 --> 01:31:33,791
The lights burn blue.
1512
01:31:33,960 --> 01:31:36,110
It is now. . .
1513
01:31:36,280 --> 01:31:38,475
. . .dead midnight.
1514
01:31:40,440 --> 01:31:44,433
Cold fearful drops stand
on my trembling flesh.
1515
01:31:47,920 --> 01:31:50,115
Richard.
1516
01:31:50,640 --> 01:31:52,278
Richard.
1517
01:31:52,440 --> 01:31:53,998
What do I fear?
1518
01:31:54,160 --> 01:31:56,037
myself?
1519
01:31:57,280 --> 01:31:58,713
There is none else by.
1520
01:31:59,600 --> 01:32:02,194
Is there a murderer here? No.
1521
01:32:02,560 --> 01:32:05,028
Yes, I am.
1522
01:32:05,800 --> 01:32:08,109
Then fIy!
1523
01:32:08,320 --> 01:32:11,198
From myself? No.
1524
01:32:11,360 --> 01:32:12,873
No.
1525
01:32:16,800 --> 01:32:18,870
I love myself.
1526
01:32:20,600 --> 01:32:22,591
Alias. . .
1527
01:32:23,160 --> 01:32:25,276
. . .I hate myself. . .
1528
01:32:26,280 --> 01:32:27,918
. . .for hateful deeds.
1529
01:32:28,120 --> 01:32:30,588
Guilty. Guilty.
Committed by myself.
1530
01:32:30,760 --> 01:32:33,035
Guilty.
1531
01:32:34,000 --> 01:32:35,592
I am a villain.
1532
01:32:36,880 --> 01:32:38,632
I am a villain.
1533
01:32:38,800 --> 01:32:41,598
Yet I lie. I am not.
1534
01:32:41,760 --> 01:32:44,115
Fool, of thyself speak well.
1535
01:32:44,280 --> 01:32:45,554
Fool. . .
1536
01:32:47,400 --> 01:32:49,391
. . .do not flatter.
1537
01:32:55,640 --> 01:32:58,108
I shall despair.
1538
01:33:00,440 --> 01:33:03,716
There is no creature loves me.
1539
01:33:05,120 --> 01:33:07,759
When I die. . .
1540
01:33:08,640 --> 01:33:11,632
. . .no soul shall pity me.
1541
01:33:14,120 --> 01:33:16,236
Wherefore should they. . .
1542
01:33:16,400 --> 01:33:18,709
. . .since that I myself. . .
1543
01:33:19,400 --> 01:33:22,198
. . .find in myself. . .
1544
01:33:22,360 --> 01:33:25,557
. . .no pity to myself?
1545
01:33:25,720 --> 01:33:28,154
KIMBALL: My lord!
-Who is there?
1546
01:33:28,320 --> 01:33:30,993
Ratcliffe, my lord. 'Tis I.
1547
01:33:31,160 --> 01:33:33,674
well, get out of here. I'm working.
1548
01:33:35,080 --> 01:33:37,355
-You got it.
-Let's try it one more time.
1549
01:33:38,200 --> 01:33:40,589
Catesby, my lord. 'Tis I.
1550
01:33:41,520 --> 01:33:43,795
-Catesby.
-The early village-cock. . .
1551
01:33:43,960 --> 01:33:47,316
. . .hath twice done salutation
to the morn. Your friends are up. . .
1552
01:33:47,480 --> 01:33:50,631
-. . .and buckle on their armor.
-Catesby.
1553
01:33:51,640 --> 01:33:53,995
I've had a fearful dream.
Catesby, I fear--
1554
01:33:54,160 --> 01:33:56,230
COX:
Nay, nay, good my lord. . .
1555
01:33:56,640 --> 01:33:58,631
. . .be not afraid of shadows.
1556
01:33:59,560 --> 01:34:02,120
By the apostle Paul,
shadows to-night. . .
1557
01:34:02,280 --> 01:34:04,999
. . .have struck more terror
in the soul of Richard. . .
1558
01:34:05,160 --> 01:34:08,357
. . .than can the substance of
1 0,000 soldiers armed to proof. . .
1559
01:34:08,520 --> 01:34:11,592
. . .and led by shallow Richmond.
1560
01:34:12,240 --> 01:34:13,673
Come, come with me.
1561
01:34:13,840 --> 01:34:18,356
The silent hours steal on, and flaky
darkness breaks within the east.
1562
01:34:18,520 --> 01:34:20,715
PACINO:
Stanley, look to your wife.
1563
01:34:20,880 --> 01:34:23,678
If she convey letters to Richmond,
you shall answer.
1564
01:34:23,840 --> 01:34:26,149
BRYGGMAN:
Prepare thy battle early in the morning. . .
1565
01:34:26,320 --> 01:34:30,313
. . .and put thy fortune to the test
of bloody strokes and mortal-staring war.
1566
01:34:30,680 --> 01:34:33,114
You have to glve a speech
in half an hour.
1567
01:34:33,280 --> 01:34:35,794
-Maybe we should. . . .
-No, I got the general. . .
1568
01:34:35,960 --> 01:34:37,837
-. . .glst of it.
KIMBALL: Got the glst of it.
1569
01:34:45,480 --> 01:34:47,311
O Thou. . .
1570
01:34:47,480 --> 01:34:50,597
. . .whose captain I account myself. . .
1571
01:34:51,240 --> 01:34:54,755
. . .look on my forces
with a gracious eye.
1572
01:34:55,560 --> 01:35:00,429
Put in their hands
thy bruising irons of wrath. . .
1573
01:35:00,600 --> 01:35:03,239
. . .that they may crush down
with a heavy fall. . .
1574
01:35:03,400 --> 01:35:06,915
. . .the usurping helmets
of our adversaries!
1575
01:35:09,120 --> 01:35:12,829
What shall I say more
than I have inferr'd?
1576
01:35:14,680 --> 01:35:19,356
Remember whom you are
to deal withal.
1577
01:35:19,520 --> 01:35:24,640
A sort of vagabonds,
rascals, and runaways. . .
1578
01:35:24,800 --> 01:35:29,635
. . .a scum of Bretons,
and base lackey peasants. . .
1579
01:35:29,800 --> 01:35:33,270
. . .whom their o'er-cloyed country
vomits forth. . .
1580
01:35:33,440 --> 01:35:37,513
. . .to desperate adventures
and assured destruction.
1581
01:35:37,720 --> 01:35:40,951
Make us thy ministers of chastisement.
1582
01:35:41,160 --> 01:35:44,914
You sleeping safe,
they bring to you unrest.
1583
01:35:45,080 --> 01:35:49,198
You having lands,
and blest with beauteous wives. . .
1584
01:35:49,360 --> 01:35:53,114
. . .they will restrain the one,
distain the other.
1585
01:35:53,280 --> 01:35:56,909
And who doth lead them
but a paltry fellow?
1586
01:35:57,720 --> 01:36:01,918
To thee I do commend
my watchful soul. . .
1587
01:36:02,920 --> 01:36:04,751
. . .ere I let fall the windows
of mine eyes.
1588
01:36:04,960 --> 01:36:07,235
A milk-sop. . .
1589
01:36:07,400 --> 01:36:13,669
. . .one that never in his life felt
so much cold as over shoes in snow?
1590
01:36:15,400 --> 01:36:17,038
O, defend me still!
1591
01:36:17,240 --> 01:36:21,313
Let's whip these stragglers
o'er the seas again.
1592
01:36:21,640 --> 01:36:26,475
Lash hence these overweening
rags of France. . .
1593
01:36:26,640 --> 01:36:31,873
. . .these famish'd beggars,
weary of their lives.
1594
01:36:32,520 --> 01:36:34,636
If we be conquer'd. . .
1595
01:36:34,800 --> 01:36:37,155
. . .let men conquer us. . .
1596
01:36:37,320 --> 01:36:40,073
. . .not these bastard Bretons.
1597
01:36:40,640 --> 01:36:43,108
Shall these enjoy our lands?
1598
01:36:43,280 --> 01:36:48,718
Lie with our wives?
Ravish our daughters?
1599
01:36:49,200 --> 01:36:52,556
Hark! I hear their drum.
1600
01:36:52,720 --> 01:36:55,951
Fight, gentlemen of England!
1601
01:36:56,120 --> 01:36:59,396
Fight, bold yoemen!
1602
01:36:59,560 --> 01:37:00,959
Draw, archers. . .
1603
01:37:01,120 --> 01:37:03,634
. . .draw your arrows to the head!
1604
01:37:03,800 --> 01:37:08,396
Spur your proud horses hard,
and ride in blood.
1605
01:37:08,760 --> 01:37:12,594
Amaze the welkin
with your broken staves!
1606
01:37:12,760 --> 01:37:15,399
[HORSES NEIGHING ]
1607
01:37:16,000 --> 01:37:17,831
[METAL SCRAPING ]
1608
01:37:18,400 --> 01:37:20,630
[YELLING ]
1609
01:37:24,720 --> 01:37:26,551
PACINO:
My horse!
1610
01:37:29,240 --> 01:37:31,196
My horse!
1611
01:37:42,200 --> 01:37:45,431
CONWAY:
And in a bloody battle end thy days!
1612
01:37:48,640 --> 01:37:50,870
Despair, and die!
1613
01:37:59,600 --> 01:38:01,716
ALLEN:
They withdraw.
1614
01:38:03,240 --> 01:38:04,719
See? They're deserting him.
1615
01:38:06,920 --> 01:38:09,798
A horse! A horse!
My kingdom for a horse!
1616
01:38:10,080 --> 01:38:11,672
Withdraw, my lord, withdraw--
1617
01:38:11,840 --> 01:38:15,879
Slave, I set my life upon a cast,
I'll stand the hazard of the die.
1618
01:38:16,360 --> 01:38:18,351
There be six Richmonds in the field.
1619
01:38:18,520 --> 01:38:20,715
-Five have I slain to-day.
-My lord!
1620
01:38:38,800 --> 01:38:40,836
FEMALE SCHOLAR:
Although he's frightfully clever...
1621
01:38:41,000 --> 01:38:43,639
...he is, at the same time,
like a kind of boar...
1622
01:38:43,800 --> 01:38:48,316
... who has subsumed into himself
all these frightful animal images...
1623
01:38:48,480 --> 01:38:52,268
...and all that the rest have got to do
is to hunt the boar.
1624
01:38:52,480 --> 01:38:54,994
And that's what they do,
and they get him.
1625
01:38:57,040 --> 01:38:59,395
PACINO:
A horse!
1626
01:38:59,560 --> 01:39:01,994
A horse!
1627
01:39:02,720 --> 01:39:04,711
My kingdom. . .
1628
01:39:04,880 --> 01:39:06,632
. . .for a horse!
1629
01:39:06,880 --> 01:39:11,635
He's a hearty dude, and in the end,
he's surrounded and he just goes. . . .
1630
01:39:11,800 --> 01:39:16,157
He'll glve up anything for a horse.
He's rich, a king, and he needs a horse.
1631
01:39:25,680 --> 01:39:28,911
My kingdom for a horse.
1632
01:39:30,200 --> 01:39:32,111
[GRUNTING ]
1633
01:40:40,120 --> 01:40:42,759
[YELLING ]
1634
01:41:02,560 --> 01:41:04,790
KIMBALL: I didn't mean it.
-I love you, Frederic.
1635
01:41:04,960 --> 01:41:07,952
I didn't mean it. I didn't mean it.
1636
01:41:08,160 --> 01:41:12,119
PACINO: He didn 't mean it.
You kill me, after all I did for you.
1637
01:41:12,320 --> 01:41:14,675
-Richard's dead.
-Richard's--
1638
01:41:14,840 --> 01:41:18,799
At last we can rest.
1639
01:41:23,640 --> 01:41:28,475
God and your arms be praised,
victorious friends, the day is ours. . .
1640
01:41:28,640 --> 01:41:31,598
-. . .the bloody dog is dead.
-Dead!
1641
01:41:32,440 --> 01:41:33,919
-Is this it?
-I hope so.
1642
01:41:34,080 --> 01:41:35,513
Are we done? This is it?
1643
01:41:35,680 --> 01:41:38,956
If I toId him about the 1 0 rolls of film,
he'd want to use it.
1644
01:41:45,680 --> 01:41:47,636
I love the silence.
1645
01:41:49,160 --> 01:41:50,991
I love the silence.
1646
01:41:55,080 --> 01:41:57,958
After silence, what else is there?
What's the line?
1647
01:41:58,120 --> 01:42:00,680
SCHOLAR 2: ''The rest is silence. ''
-Silences.
1648
01:42:01,200 --> 01:42:04,112
Whatever I'm saying,
I know Shakespeare said it.
1649
01:42:04,680 --> 01:42:07,911
NARRATOR:
Our revels now are ended.
1650
01:42:09,840 --> 01:42:12,354
These our actors, as I foretold you...
1651
01:42:12,520 --> 01:42:15,751
... were all spirits
and are melted into air...
1652
01:42:15,920 --> 01:42:18,195
...into thin air.
1653
01:42:19,280 --> 01:42:22,238
And, like the baseless fabric
of this vision...
1654
01:42:22,400 --> 01:42:24,277
... the cloud-capp 'd towers...
1655
01:42:24,440 --> 01:42:26,590
... the gorgeous palaces...
1656
01:42:26,760 --> 01:42:29,035
... the solemn temples...
1657
01:42:30,960 --> 01:42:33,110
... ye all which it inherit...
1658
01:42:34,800 --> 01:42:36,995
...shall dissolve...
1659
01:42:40,760 --> 01:42:44,435
...and, like this insubstantial
pageant faded...
1660
01:42:44,600 --> 01:42:46,955
...leave not a wisp behind.
1661
01:42:49,440 --> 01:42:52,273
We are such stuff
as dreams are made on...
1662
01:42:53,720 --> 01:42:58,350
...and our little life
is rounded with a sleep.
1663
01:45:23,666 --> 01:47:23,666
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