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Hamlet Poster

Hamlet

2026 | 113m | English

(285 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Director: Aneil Karia
Writer: Michael Lesslie
Staring:
Details

Set in a modern-day London of economic and political uncertainty, the story follows the intersecting themes of familial honor, moral duty and dynastic corruption.
Release Date: Feb 06, 2026
Director: Aneil Karia
Writer: Michael Lesslie
Genres: Drama
Keywords london, england, revenge, based on play or musical, fratricide, hamlet, regicide
Production Companies BBC Film, Waypoint Entertainment, JW Films, Confluential Films, Left Handed Films
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Mar 12, 2026
Entered: Nov 23, 2025
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Full Credits

Name Character
Riz Ahmed Hamlet
Morfydd Clark Ophelia
Timothy Spall Polonius
Art Malik Claudius
Jasmine Jobson Fortinbras
Sheeba Chaddha Gertrude
Joe Alwyn Laertes
Julia Westcott-Hutton VIP Guest
Nina Kumar Wedding Guest
Hiten Patel Wedding Guest
Eben Figueiredo Marcellus
Avijit Dutt Old Hamlet
Raj Awasti Wedding Guest
Krish Misra Osric
Taru Devani Aunt
Nitin Harshad Patel Wedding Guest
Tara Mohatta Wedding & Funeral Guest
Name Job
John Rafique Special Effects Supervisor
George Elliott Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Aneil Karia Director
William Shakespeare Theatre Play
Adam Conlon First Assistant "A" Camera
Nadine Richardson Production Sound Mixer
Suzi Battersby Prosthetic Designer
Amanda James Editor
Michael Lesslie Writer
Marc A. Wilson First Assistant Director
Stuart Bentley Director of Photography
Adam Marshall Supervising Art Director
Dean Wares Title Designer
Lara Manwaring Casting
Mikkel E.G. Nielsen Editor
Maxwell Sterling Original Music Composer
Name Title
Riz Ahmed Producer
Michael Lesslie Producer
James Wilson Producer
Tommy Oliver Producer
Ken Kao Executive Producer
Josh Rosenbaum Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 4 10 1
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Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2026 3 602 780
Year Month High Avg
2026 2 430 595

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
6.0

Shakespearean purists probably ought not to bother with this relocated and heavily abridged version of his tale of the Prince of Denmark but as reimaginings go, this is still quite an interesting effort. Here, “Elsinore” is an epitome of corporate greed hitherto run by the father of “Hamlet” (Riz Ah ... med) until his death after a long illness. Barely has he drawn his last breath when his widow “Gertrude” (Sheeba Chaddha) announces that she will marry his brother “Claudius” (Art Malik). “Hamlet” is fairly traumatised by this news and it’s in this slightly emotive state that he is visited by a spectre that suggests all was not entirely natural regarding his father‘s death and that his soul must wander the spirit world until such time as it is released by the truthful avenging of the crime. Now “Hamlet” must discover what really happened and outmanoeuvre the vested interests that care not who his father was. Now some of this simply doesn’t work. Industrialists with BMWs are not kings (nor queens) and so much of the power lust of the court intrigues that gave the play much of it’s sense of menace and venom is absent. The transference of the plot from medieval times to 21st Century Hindu Britain offers us a potential new canvas, and there is a dance routine that is lively and evocative, but those don’t compensate for the scant regard given to roles like “Polonius” (Timothy Spall), “Laërtes” (Joe Alwyn) and even “Ophelia” (Morfydd Clark) who are largely sidelined throughout. It is a brave effort to bring a story of treachery and duplicity to a new audience and in some ways the cultural adaptation just about delivers, but essentially this is only a vehicle for the charismatic Ahmed to show off his versatility as an actor rather than a considered updating of a toxic story of fantasy, horror and mysticism. Sadly, far too much of the nuance and the power of the prose has been sacrificed and what we are left with is simply too heavily cut to the bone. It is worth a watch, though, but condensing "Hamlet" down to under two hours was always going to be a very tough ask.

Feb 11, 2026