
Hamnet
** Admission is FREE **
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Winner: People’s Choice Award, 2025 Toronto International Film Festival
In William Shakespeare’s day, the names Hamlet and Hamnet were interchangeable. The newest film by Chloé Zhao, director of the Oscar-winning NOMADLAND, uses that context as the basis for a tender exploration of Shakespeare’s domestic life, connecting a family tragedy to one of his most famous works. Maybe we can better understand Hamlet, Zhao suggests, if we consider that it was developed while the most famous writer in the Western canon was mourning the death of his 11-year-old son, Hamnet.
Based on the novel by Maggie O’Farrell, HAMNET’s main character isn’t The Bard—played here by an impressive Paul Mescal—or even the child who gives the film its name. HAMNET belongs to Agnes, Shakespeare’s thoughtful wife, played by an enthralling Jessie Buckley, who bathes the film in her warmth.
Many historical accounts preface reports of Hamnet’s death with statistics about how common child mortality was in the 16th century, as though it barely made an impact. HAMNET rejects that premise, presenting Shakespeare not as a distant, untouchable genius but as a real man whose literary prowess was irrevocably impacted by his domestic life.
Grief is a theme here, but HAMNET is not just a film about death. Early scenes of Agnes and William’s courtship are naturalistic, rendered through lush cinematography by Łukasz Żal (COLD WAR, Fall Focus 2018; THE ZONE OF INTEREST, Screening Series 2023). Like any family story, this one contains joy alongside sorrow.
—Toronto International Film Festival guide


