Hamnet, directed by Chloé Zhao and based on Maggie O'Farrell's novel, centers the story on Agnes Hathaway (Jessie Buckley), Shakespeare's wife, portraying her as a mystical earth mother and herbal healer whose grief over their son Hamnet inspires Hamlet. This 'radically feminine take' emphasizes feminine energies like nature, emotion, and motherhood against masculine civilization and ambition, with Agnes as the emotional and prophetic core. Paul Mescal plays a young, somewhat diminished Shakespeare, highlighting her influence. While faithful to the novel's feminist-leaning historical fiction, the film's overt focus on 'feminine consciousness' and leadership (per Zhao's interviews) infuses noticeable progressive gender dynamics into the narrative, influencing character arcs and themes without dominating the core story of love and loss. Casting is period-appropriate with white leads, but includes minor realistic Black extras in crowds, praised by some for subtle diversity. No race/gender-swapping, LGBTQ+ prominence, or DEI mandates evident; reception is critically strong (Oscar buzz) with some backlash labeling it manipulative feminist Oscar-bait that hogs Shakespeare's credit (e.g., National Review), but no widespread 'go woke go broke' audience revolt. Progressive elements are significant in elevating the wife's agency but feel somewhat organic to the source, not compromising entertainment with lectures.