Archive for 三月 11th, 2026

11
三月

《哈姆尼特》(HAMNET)

   Posted by: admin    in 香港影評人協會

A Masterpiece of Love, Loss, and Shakespeare’s Ghost

Chloé Zhao, the Oscar-winning Chinese director, has delivered a profoundly moving masterpiece with Hamnet. This is not a stuffy period drama but a sensuous, deeply felt portrait of a family shattered by grief.

Zhao, working from Maggie O‘Farrell’s novel, proves once again her extraordinary ability to find the universal in the specific, crafting a film that is as much about the healing power of art as it is about loss .

The cast is flawless. As Agnes, Shakespeare’s wife, Jessie Buckley gives a performance of raw, primal power. Her grief is not just acted; it’s embodied, from the guttural howl of loss to the quiet, simmering resentment toward a husband who processes pain through his quill.

Paul Mescal is equally compelling as Will, a man who flees his overwhelming sorrow into the burgeoning theatre scene of London, his detachment a quiet devastation of its own .

Beyond the performances, the film is a triumph of craft. Cinematographer Lukasz Zal, known for The Zone of Interest, shoots with a naturalistic, unflashy eye, favoring wide shots that place the characters within their oppressive, often beautiful environments .

Production designer Fiona Crombie builds a tangible world—the Shakespeare home feels genuinely lived-in, a heavy wooden box of domesticity .

The costumes by Malgosia Turzanska are a character study in themselves; Agnes’s bark-textured clothing and Will’s doublets, stained with ink, root them in their world without ever feeling like costume parade .

Maggie O’Farrell’s 2020 novel Hamnet, which won the Women’s Prize for Fiction, provides the source material for this extraordinary film .

The book emerged from O’Farrell’s fascination with the scant historical record of William Shakespeare’s family—specifically his son Hamnet, who died at age eleven in 1596, likely of bubonic plague.

O’Farrell made a crucial creative decision that shapes both novel and film: she renames Shakespeare’s wife Anne as Agnes, drawing from a historical variant, and places her at the story’s emotional center rather than relegating her to a footnote.

In O’Farrell’s telling, Agnes emerges as a woman with mysterious gifts—a healer attuned to the natural world who can read people’s natures with a single touch, the daughter of a reputed sorceress .

The novel weaves together the tragic arc of Hamnet’s death with the love story of his parents’ first meeting, exploring how grief can both shatter and ultimately transmute into art .

As O’Farrell herself explained, she wanted “to ask readers to forget everything they think they know about him, and meet this person as a human”—to strip away the literary icon and reveal a father processing unimaginable loss .

Where Zhao’s interpretation soars is in its focus. Unlike other Shakespeare-adjacent films that revel in the glamour of the Globe, Hamnet is anchored in the quiet, muddy reality of Stratford. It is less concerned with the birth of a legend than the death of a child.

The film’s climactic scene, where Agnes witnesses Hamlet for the first time, is a stunning piece of adaptation—she realizes her husband has transmuted their shared agony into art, a moment of reconciliation that feels truly earned .

Audiences include this reviewer were visibly moved at the Hong Kong premiere, with the cinema sitting in hushed silence as the credits rolled.

In the end, Zhao has not just adapted a book; she has given us a new, unforgettable classic about the spaces between people and the art that can fill them.

Elven Ho
11
三月

《狸想奇兵》(Hoppers)

   Posted by: admin    in 香港影評人協會

Pixar’s Robotic Beaver Caper is a Hilarious and Heartfelt Triumph

For its first original release of 2026, Pixar has delivered a film that feels like a vault back into the “vintage” era of Monsters, Inc. and Finding Nemo.

Hoppers is an excellent, wildly imaginative, and profoundly moving piece of animation that re-establishes why this studio remains the gold standard for storytelling.

The film introduces Mabel Tanaka, a passionate and fiercely rebellious animal lover horrified to discover that the smooth-talking Mayor Generazzo plans to bulldoze the nearby glades to extend a freeway.

Desperate to stop him, Mabel volunteers for a revolutionary project: to “hop” her consciousness into a lifelike, robotic beaver. This allows her to infiltrate the animal world and communicate directly with its inhabitants.

What follows is a dazzling adventure that plays out like Avatar meets Mission: Impossible. Mabel finds herself navigating a complex animal society led by King George, a hilariously charismatic beaver, and an eclectic council of rulers.

As she integrates, she uncovers that the animal kingdom is considering drastic measures to fight back against the human threat, forcing Mabel to rally both sides before it escalates into war.

The premise can be described as controlled lunacy. Director Daniel Chong leans into the absurdity with gleeful abandon, resulting in an incredibly funny film.

The humour lands constantly—from scientifically accurate visual gags about beavers to sharp dialogue—yet it never undermines the story.

Instead, it fuels the film’s incredible positive energy. It is also visually stunning, blending stylised, almost felted character designs against lush environments, with a unique aesthetic that immerses the audience.

At the core of this energy is Mabel. She is one of the best lead characters Pixar has crafted in years: flawed and impulsive, but with such a vibrant spirit that you cannot help but root for her.

The supporting cast, including the delightfully smarmy mayor and the perfect comedic foil of King George, are equally strong. Every character feels fully realised.

But the true magic of Hoppers lies in its emotional core. For a film filled with robotic beavers, it is achingly human.

The themes of empathy and environmental stewardship are handled with a delicate touch, building toward payoffs that hit you right in the chest.

There are moments of such tender connection that you feel the sting of tears welling up.

It makes you laugh uncontrollably one minute and has you swallowing a lump in your throat the next.

In the end, Hoppers is a home run for Pixar—a must-watch for families.

You’ll go for the laughs, but you’ll stay for the heart.

Elven Ho