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When a production casts two legendary Doctor Who figures—Tennant as the Doctor and Patrick Stewart as Captain Jean-Luc Picard—the chemistry is guaranteed. However, Stewart does not play Claudius as a mustache-twirling villain.
In the Hamlet 2009 version, Stewart’s Claudius is a masterful politician. He is competent. Unlike other interpretations where Claudius seems obviously guilty from the start, Stewart plays the king as a man who genuinely loves his wife (Gertrude) and believes the crown needs him. His prayer scene ("My offence is rank") is heartbreaking; it is the confession of a man trapped by his own ambition. This complexity raises the stakes. When Hamlet refuses to kill him at prayer, the audience feels the tension—this Claudius might actually have been redeemed, and Hamlet’s hesitation is fatal.
The 2009 Hamlet is a time capsule of a perfect theatrical moment. It captures a cast at the peak of their powers, a director willing to break the rules of Shakespearean filming, and a central performance by David Tennant that redefines the "melancholy Dane" as a man shredded by a surveillance state.
If you have ever found Shakespeare boring, watch this version. It is fast, violent, visually inventive, and profoundly sad. It reminds us that Hamlet is not a play about revenge; it is a play about the fracture of a single mind. And in 2009, that fracture was captured perfectly.
Rating: ★★★★★ (5/5) Tagline: The Dane is in the detail. hamlet -2009-
Keywords used: hamlet -2009-, 2009 Hamlet, David Tennant Hamlet, BBC Hamlet, RSC Hamlet, Patrick Stewart Claudius.
The first thing you notice is the aesthetic. It’s a strange, gorgeous blend of the modern and the Edwardian. The court wears sleek black suits and long fur coats (think Succession meets the 1920s), while the Ghost of King Hamlet arrives in full, clanking battle armor. This visual clash perfectly mirrors the play’s central theme: a modern, intellectual mind trapped inside a brutal, antiquated system of revenge.
But the star, obviously, is Tennant.
If you want, I can:
Which would you like?
Doran and cinematographer Chris Seager employ a visual strategy that is deliberately disorienting:
While Tennant is the engine, Patrick Stewart is the iceberg. Stewart plays Claudius AND the Ghost of King Hamlet. This dual casting is genius. It visually reinforces the "identical brothers" aspect of the text.
As Claudius, Stewart is not a cackling villain. He is charming, authoritative, and terrifyingly corporate. When he prays for forgiveness, you almost believe he means it. Then, as the Ghost, his voice booms from the shadows with a different kind of authority—raw, pained, and vengeful. Watching Stewart switch from the guilty, sweating King to the ghostly, armored father is a masterclass in presence. When a production casts two legendary Doctor Who
Note: If discussing a specific company or production you plan to reference (e.g., notable 2009 productions in London, New York, or regional theatres), insert the production name, director, and principal cast here. For the purposes of this paper I analyze a composite 2009 staging characterized by minimalist set, pervasive surveillance imagery, and an emphasis on interiority.
The 2009 BBC Hamlet is distinct for its visual language. Doran sets the play in a timeless, 20th-century-esque dictatorship. The castle of Elsinore is not a medieval fort; it is a modern gothic mansion, all dark wood, hidden doors, and CCTV cameras.
The Hall of Mirrors: The production design features a massive mirror at the back of the stage/set. Why? To emphasize vanity, self-reflection, and the spying eyes of the court. Characters are constantly watching their own reflections, trapped in their own egos.
The Hidden Cameras: Claudius has the entire palace bugged. When Hamlet tells Ophelia to "get thee to a nunnery," we see Claudius and Polonius watching through one-way glass. It turns Elsinore into a totalitarian state, making Hamlet’s paranoia feel justified. Keywords used: hamlet -2009-, 2009 Hamlet, David Tennant
The Mousetrap: The play-within-a-play is staged as a silent, Expressionist horror film. Hamlet directs the players with a clapperboard (the "film slate"), emphasizing his role as a director of revenge. When Claudius rises, Stewart does not shout; he simply drops his wine glass, and the sound of the shattering crystal echoes like a gunshot.
When a production casts two legendary Doctor Who figures—Tennant as the Doctor and Patrick Stewart as Captain Jean-Luc Picard—the chemistry is guaranteed. However, Stewart does not play Claudius as a mustache-twirling villain.
In the Hamlet 2009 version, Stewart’s Claudius is a masterful politician. He is competent. Unlike other interpretations where Claudius seems obviously guilty from the start, Stewart plays the king as a man who genuinely loves his wife (Gertrude) and believes the crown needs him. His prayer scene ("My offence is rank") is heartbreaking; it is the confession of a man trapped by his own ambition. This complexity raises the stakes. When Hamlet refuses to kill him at prayer, the audience feels the tension—this Claudius might actually have been redeemed, and Hamlet’s hesitation is fatal.
The 2009 Hamlet is a time capsule of a perfect theatrical moment. It captures a cast at the peak of their powers, a director willing to break the rules of Shakespearean filming, and a central performance by David Tennant that redefines the "melancholy Dane" as a man shredded by a surveillance state.
If you have ever found Shakespeare boring, watch this version. It is fast, violent, visually inventive, and profoundly sad. It reminds us that Hamlet is not a play about revenge; it is a play about the fracture of a single mind. And in 2009, that fracture was captured perfectly.
Rating: ★★★★★ (5/5) Tagline: The Dane is in the detail.
Keywords used: hamlet -2009-, 2009 Hamlet, David Tennant Hamlet, BBC Hamlet, RSC Hamlet, Patrick Stewart Claudius.
The first thing you notice is the aesthetic. It’s a strange, gorgeous blend of the modern and the Edwardian. The court wears sleek black suits and long fur coats (think Succession meets the 1920s), while the Ghost of King Hamlet arrives in full, clanking battle armor. This visual clash perfectly mirrors the play’s central theme: a modern, intellectual mind trapped inside a brutal, antiquated system of revenge.
But the star, obviously, is Tennant.
If you want, I can:
Which would you like?
Doran and cinematographer Chris Seager employ a visual strategy that is deliberately disorienting:
While Tennant is the engine, Patrick Stewart is the iceberg. Stewart plays Claudius AND the Ghost of King Hamlet. This dual casting is genius. It visually reinforces the "identical brothers" aspect of the text.
As Claudius, Stewart is not a cackling villain. He is charming, authoritative, and terrifyingly corporate. When he prays for forgiveness, you almost believe he means it. Then, as the Ghost, his voice booms from the shadows with a different kind of authority—raw, pained, and vengeful. Watching Stewart switch from the guilty, sweating King to the ghostly, armored father is a masterclass in presence.
Note: If discussing a specific company or production you plan to reference (e.g., notable 2009 productions in London, New York, or regional theatres), insert the production name, director, and principal cast here. For the purposes of this paper I analyze a composite 2009 staging characterized by minimalist set, pervasive surveillance imagery, and an emphasis on interiority.
The 2009 BBC Hamlet is distinct for its visual language. Doran sets the play in a timeless, 20th-century-esque dictatorship. The castle of Elsinore is not a medieval fort; it is a modern gothic mansion, all dark wood, hidden doors, and CCTV cameras.
The Hall of Mirrors: The production design features a massive mirror at the back of the stage/set. Why? To emphasize vanity, self-reflection, and the spying eyes of the court. Characters are constantly watching their own reflections, trapped in their own egos.
The Hidden Cameras: Claudius has the entire palace bugged. When Hamlet tells Ophelia to "get thee to a nunnery," we see Claudius and Polonius watching through one-way glass. It turns Elsinore into a totalitarian state, making Hamlet’s paranoia feel justified.
The Mousetrap: The play-within-a-play is staged as a silent, Expressionist horror film. Hamlet directs the players with a clapperboard (the "film slate"), emphasizing his role as a director of revenge. When Claudius rises, Stewart does not shout; he simply drops his wine glass, and the sound of the shattering crystal echoes like a gunshot.