Beowulf

Beowulf

  • Beowulf Posters
  • BEOWULF

    Director: Robert Zemeckis
    Stars: Ray Winstone, Crispin Glover, Angelina Jolie
    Studio: Paramount Pictures

    CAST:

    Angelina Jolie… Grendel’s Mother
    Anthony Hopkins … King Hrothgar
    Ray Winstone … Beowulf
    Robin Wright Penn … Queen Wealthow
    Crispin Glover … Grendel
    John Malkovich … Unferth
    Alison Lohman … Ursula
    Dominic Keating … Old Cain
    Brendan Gleeson … Wiglaf
    Sebastian Roché … Wulfgar
    Chris Coppola … Olaf
    Charlotte Salt … Estrith
    Greg Ellis … Garmund, Golden Man
    Nick Jameson … Drehgbearn
    Tyler Steelman … Young Cain
    Rik Young … Eofor, Golden child
    Nadine Stenovitch … Ensemble
    Leslie Harter Zemeckis … Yrsa
    Sharisse Baker-Bernard … Hild
    Emily Johnson … Maiden 12
    Woody Schultz … Hengest
    Shay Duffin
    Randy Shelly … Boy
    Richard Burns … Sentry Guard / Unferth Guard
    Chris Mala … Thane 5
    Tim Trobec … Thane 1
    John Littlefield … Thane 23
    Jared Weber … Thane 3
    Tom West … Thane 44
    Kevin Dorman … Unferth Guard

    SYNOPSIS:

    The Old English poem Beowulf follows Beowulf from heroic youth to heroic old age. He saves a neighboring people from a monster, Grendel, eventually becomes the king of his own people, and dies defending them from a dragon. It is a great adventure story, and a deeply philosophical one. Scholars differ over the poem’s original purpose and audience, but Beowulf probably appealed to a wide audience and garnered a range of responses.

    Beowulf survives in one manuscript, which is known as British Library, Cotton Vitellius A.15. At least one scholar believes the manuscript is the author’s original, but most scholars believe it is the last in a succession of copies. Beowulf may have been written at any time between circa 675 A.D. and the date of the manuscript, circa 1000 A.D.
    No one knows where the manuscript was before it surfaced in the hands of a man named Laurence Nowell in the sixteenth century. An edition of Beowulf was published by G. S. Thorkelin in 1815, but for over 100 years study focused on Beowulf not as poetry, but on what it revealed about the early Germanic tribes and language (philology).
    J. R. R. Tolkein’s “The Monsters and the Critics” moved study on to the poem as literature. The excavation of the Sutton Hoo ship burial and Tolkein’s own popular Lord of the Rings, influenced by his lifelong study of Beowulf, helped to interest general readers in the poem. Since then translations and adaptations of the poem have increased the poem’s audience and recognition. It has influenced modern adventure fantasy and inspired at least two best-sellers, comic books, and even a Beowulf/Star Trek Voyager cross-over.

    In 1939, an important archaeological discovery was made which contributed to the twentieth-century understanding of Beowulf. The remains of a ship burial were uncovered at Sutton Hoo, an estate on the estuary of the Deben river in Suffolk, England. Some of the objects in the grave included a sword, shield, and helmet, a harp, and Frankish coins which date approximately to 650-70 A.D.— the presumed date of the action of the epic.

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