Sneha Girap (Editor)

Beckett on Film

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
4
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron4
4
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
60
50
41
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Duration
  

Language
  
English

Director
  
Anthony MinghellaAtom EgoyanCharles SturridgeConor McPhersonDamien ODonnell

Release date
  
29 August 2002

Play samuel beckett beckett on film 2001


Beckett on Film was a project aimed at making film versions of all nineteen of Samuel Beckett's stage plays, with the exception of the early and unperformed Eleutheria. This endeavour was successfully completed, with the first films being shown in 2001.

Contents

The project was conceived by Michael Colgan, artistic director of Dublin's Gate Theatre. The films were produced by Colgan and Alan Moloney for the Irish broadcaster RTÉ, the British broadcaster Channel 4 and the Irish Film Board. Each had a different cast and director, drawn from theatre, film and other fields.

Ten of the films were screened at the 2000 Toronto International Film Festival and some shown on Channel 4 television. On Wednesday, 6 February 2002, the series won the Best TV Drama award at the 6th The South Bank Show Award at the Savoy Theatre in London. The films never enjoyed a general cinematic release, but, in September 2001, all nineteen were screened at the Barbican Centre in London. They were also released in a number of videos and as a four-DVD box set, comprising a souvenir programme and numerous additional features.

A documentary video, titled Check the Gate: Putting Beckett on Film and directed by Pearse Lehane, was released on 5 February 2003. It followed closely the project's work.

That time samuel beckett beckett on film 2001


Waiting for Godot

The play was originally published in 1952. Of directing the film version, Michael Lindsay-Hogg said, "Beckett creates an amazing blend of comedy, high wit and an almost unbearable poignancy in a funny yet heartbreaking image of man's fate. With the camera, you can pick those moments and emphasise them, making Beckett's rare and extraordinary words all the more intimate [...]. The play is about what it is about. Samuel Beckett would have said it's about two men waiting on the side of the road for someone to turn up. But you can invest in the importance of who is going to turn up. Is it a local farmer? Is it God? Is it salvation? Or is it simply someone who just doesn't show up?

"The important thing is the ambiguity, the fact that it doesn't really state what it is. That's why it's so great for the audience to be part of it: they fill in a lot of the blanks; it works in their imaginations.

"For me, Beckett's view of the world is quite sadly accurate. We are all really just bugs in the carpet."

The cast was composed of the following:

  • Vladimir: Barry McGovern
  • Estragon: Johnny Murphy
  • Pozzo: Alan Stanford
  • Lucky: Stephen Brennan
  • The Boy: Sam McGovern
  • Director: Michael Lindsay-Hogg
  • Running Time: 2 hours
  • Endgame

    Original play published 1957.

  • Hamm – Michael Gambon
  • Clov – David Thewlis
  • Nagg – Charles Simon
  • Nell – Jean Anderson
  • Directed by Conor McPherson
  • Running Time – 1 hour 24 minutes
  • Happy Days

    Original play published 1960.

  • Winnie – Rosaleen Linehan
  • Willie – Richard Johnson
  • Directed by Patricia Rozema
  • Running Time – 1 hour 19 minutes
  • Act Without Words I

    Original play written 1956.

  • Mime – Sean Foley
  • Directed by Karel Reisz
  • Running Time – 16 minutes
  • Act Without Words II

    Original play written 1956.

  • A – Pat Kinevane
  • B – Marcello Magni
  • Directed by Enda Hughes
  • Running Time – 11 minutes
  • Krapp's Last Tape

    Original play written 1958.

  • Krapp – John Hurt
  • Directed by Atom Egoyan
  • Running Time – 58 minutes
  • Rough for Theatre I

    Original play written late 1950s.

  • A – David Kelly
  • B – Milo O'Shea
  • Directed by Kieron J. Walsh
  • Running Time – 20 minutes
  • Rough for Theatre II

    Original play written late 1950s.

  • A – Jim Norton
  • B – Timothy Spall
  • C – Hugh B. O'Brien
  • Directed by Katie Mitchell
  • Running Time – 30 minutes
  • Play

    Original play written 1963.

  • M – Alan Rickman
  • W1 – Kristin Scott Thomas
  • W2 – Juliet Stevenson
  • Directed by Anthony Minghella
  • Running Time – 16 minutes
  • Come and Go

    Original play written 1965.

  • Vi – Anna Massey
  • Ru – Siân Phillips
  • Flo – Paola Dionisotti
  • Directed by John Crowley
  • Running Time – 8 minutes
  • Breath

    Original play written 1969.

  • Voice – Keith Allen
  • Directed by Damien Hirst
  • Running Time – 45 seconds
  • Not I

    Original play written 1972.

  • Auditor/Mouth – Julianne Moore
  • Directed by Neil Jordan
  • Running Time – 14 minutes
  • That Time

    Original play written 1975.

  • Listener and Voices – Niall Buggy
  • Directed by Charles Garrad
  • Running Time – 20 minutes
  • Footfalls

    Original play written 1975.

  • May – Susan Fitzgerald
  • Voice – Joan O'Hara
  • Directed by Walter Asmus
  • Running Time – 28 minutes
  • A Piece of Monologue

    Original play written 1980.

  • Speaker – Stephen Brennan
  • Directed by Robin Lefevre
  • Running Time – 20 minutes
  • Rockaby

    Original play written 1981.

  • Woman – Penelope Wilton
  • Directed by Richard Eyre
  • Running Time – 14 minutes
  • Ohio Impromptu

    Original play written 1981.

  • Reader and Listener – Jeremy Irons
  • Directed by Charles Sturridge
  • Running Time – 12 minutes
  • Catastrophe

    Original play written 1982.

  • P – John Gielgud
  • A – Rebecca Pidgeon
  • D – Harold Pinter
  • L – ?
  • Directed by David Mamet
  • Running Time – 7 minutes
  • What Where

    Original play written 1983.

  • Bam – Sean McGinley
  • Bem, Bim and Bom – Gary Lewis
  • Directed by Damien O'Donnell
  • Running Time – 12 minutes
  • Criticism

    Reviews were generally laudatory. Michael Dwyer, film correspondent of The Irish Times, called it "Commendably ambitious and remarkably successful, a truly unique collection".

    References

    Beckett on Film Wikipedia