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Grand Theft Hamlet

Grand Theft Hamlet Review

A documentary about the greatest Shakespearean GTA stunt ever pulled.

Grand Theft Hamlet Review - IGN Image

Grand Theft Hamlet is now playing in theaters. This review is based on a screening at the 2024 SXSW Film Festival.

Spoiler alert: I cried at the end of Grand Theft Hamlet. Yeah, the documentary about a performance of the Shakespere tragedy staged entirely within Grand Theft Auto Online. And not because it’s an especially sophisticated and moving piece of theater, either. Grand Theft Hamlet might be sold as an improbable story about renegade performers turning Rockstar’s felonious video game world into a thespian’s fantasy, but there’s also a focus on how the COVID-19 pandemic decimated industries as well as lifestyles. More importantly, it shows how video games became one of the only ways to emulate social engagements at the height of COVID lockdown.

My Playstation escape of choice was Call of Duty: Warzone. Sam Crane and his good friend Mark Oosterveen, a fellow out-of-work actor, retreated to GTA's massively multiplayer online world. The mindsets, paranoias, and bouts of sadness they discuss in Grand Theft Hamlet were like reliving traumas I haven’t yet been able to process. Sorry to start on such a sobering note, but I use the anecdote as testament to the power of documentary filmmaking – or, more importantly, an affecting and accomplished documentary. I went into the “Shakespearean GTA Movie” only expecting laughs and incredulous pixelated feats. Instead, I was brought back to a period in global history when time stopped, socialization shifted online, and video games became a salvation for many.

Sam and Mark’s amazing journey starts during the UK’s third lockdown in January 2021. Before the pandemic, Sam had been cast in a life-changingly prominent role in the London production of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. His wife – and Grand Theft Hamlet co-director – Pinny Grylls was a documentary filmmaker with promising career prospects. Mark’s multifaceted stage, television, and film career was as stable as ever. All three Londoners had the sunniest of dispositions, projecting positivity into the future – but the novel coronavirus brought all that to a screeching halt. Sam and Pinny's 12-year-old (at the time) son started going on about a Minecraft YouTuber developing fiction narratives within the game, which sparked Sam and Mark’s eventual idea, as well as Pinny’s decision to document their never-before-seen objective.

The thought of corralling Grand Theft Auto players to do anything but commit robbery and murder is hilarious, and Grand Theft Hamlet records it in all of its cartoonishly violent glory. Practice runs are frequently interrupted by rogue players with rocket launchers or NPC police officers who rain bullets on actors as they try to deliver moody monologues. Los Santos encourages deviant behavior that Sam and Mark cannot pause or avoid, so they learn to adapt around delays like respawns, accidental blimp crashes, and uninvited guests. The result is as hilariously chaotic and unpredictable as you might imagine, and accounts for quite possibly the funniest and most wholesome scene in the whole film, when a supportive player named “ParTeb” doesn’t want to act, yet offers his talents as security. Cue ParTeb hovering over Sam and Mark’s rehearsal in a fighter jet, blasting machine gun rounds at anyone who dares approach.

What Is Your Favorite Grand Theft Auto Game?

Any production needs actors, and the process of casting Hamlet exclusively in Grand Theft Auto means auditions are held over typically crummy console headsets. Sam and Mark try wandering up to strangers in-game, but that hardly ends well. There’s comedy in their errors, but then hopeful participants start appearing thanks to a virtual casting call recorded by Pinny (who uses her character’s POV to stage cinematography). You start to hear why anyone would try out for Hamlet in this medium, and the film’s communal spirit grows stronger.

There’s no stage fright when the audience is made up of avatars; dodgy audio quality means any voice will suffice, which lets shy but curious blokes like Gareth, aka “Turkomas,” try out even though they have a self-proclaimed “face for radio and voice for mime.” Anyone with an internet connection – from stay-at-home dads to recently out trans persons – could pursue their acting dreams with the fewest risk factors and roadblocks. Some professionals even lend their prestige to the production, including the voice of Overwatch’s Pharah herself, Jen Cohn. A recurring theme throughout Grand Theft Hamlet is the petrifying loneliness many felt during lockdown, in addition to stagnation and restlessness – but for a brief period, Sam and Mark’s project gives everyone involved a reprieve from increasingly normalized stay-at-home malaise.

Grand Theft Hamlet morphs from a gamer-culture curio into a defining exploration of life during COVID lockdown.
“

As for the dramatic angles that unfold throughout Grand Theft Hamlet, heartfelt speeches are sometimes drowned out by microphone static, and avatars struggle to convey emotional depths. There’s an uncanny unease to the blue-haired, skeleton-clothed digital representations of Sam and Pinny standing at attention as Pinny confesses her frustrations with Sam’s obsessive prioritization of Hamlet over real life – but this scene between two avatars has trouble generating genuine empathy. Sam and Mark meet Dipo, aka “Dolla101,” in a distracting Los Santos subway station, where he reveals that due to relaxed lockdown restrictions, he’s landed a new job and can no longer play Hamlet. They try to drum up tension and conflict as Dipo cuts his apology short because he’s enamored by the game’s transportation mechanics, but it’s another hard sell with the digital tools at the filmmaker’s disposal.

What transcends Grand Theft Auto’s coded barriers is Mark’s passionate admission that Grand Theft Hamlet is all he has; he is a man riding out the pandemic without human companionship. No family, no roommate. That’s where the documentary morphs from a gamer-culture curio into a defining exploration of lockdown conditions and how people of various situations coped with COVID-19 seclusion. I felt the heart and soul of Charli XCX: Alone Together beating in tandem with Grand Theft Hamlet, two docs about niche communities that came together to lift one another during quarantine. You could also relate Grand Theft Hamlet to Alien on Stage, another British doc about amateur performers who fantasized about bringing a humble production to the masses. Grand Theft Hamlet is more than Pinny’s documentation of the logistical madness; it shares vulnerabilities and an inspiring tale, finding hope even in lawless, dystopian video game universes.

Verdict

Grand Theft Hamlet is more than a documentary about logistical madness, randomly hump-thrust-emoting alien avatars, and mindless virtual violence. Sam and Mark are visionaries who desperately craved a creative outlet and saw untapped potential, which becomes an outrageous story of blind ambition. Where many ask “Should we?,” these two maniacs thought “How can we?” and leapt into action. Whatever human elements Grand Theft Hamlet discards by staying in-game, it’s not enough to erase the magic in Pinny’s behind-the-scenes account of every bonkers detail from Vinewood location scouting to crowd control. This is an irreplicable experience that speaks volumes about following your dreams despite the challenges that await. The reward will always be worthwhile, even if it’s just about the friends you make and NPC cops you massacre along the way.

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Grand Theft Hamlet is an emotional reliving of COVID-19 pandemic circumstances told through GTA and Shakespeare, coming together in a sneakily sincere documentary about how important video games could be during pandemic lockdown.
Matt Donato Avatar Avatar
Matt Donato
Official IGN Review
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