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Lawrence Oliver And Hamlet Comparison

Decent Essays

Hamlet was a unique piece of its time that discussed family dynamics in a royal setting; it incorporated things that most likely were not discussed in the actual time period of the play. Problems like losing a family head and having your mom get remarried is not something we living the modern world would find new and fascinating, so it is up to the movie director to construe the same scene and try to “modernize” it for their audience. Kenneth Branagh, who released his film in 1996, tends to stick to a play like feel in his movie while Laurence Oliver, whose film was released in 1948, decided for a more dramatic approach to his visual for Scene one Act two in Hamlets soliloquy. This can be seen in the way Branagh retells his turmoil out loud …show more content…

They both have kept isolation as their main focus of the scenes. Laurence’s scene starts with him watching the wedding party leave the throne room while showing angst on his face. The black and white colouring also helps accentuate this point by allowing him to blend in the background with his own clothes. The camera shots in the beginning show just his face that takes up most of the screen and as the camera moves farther away the smaller he gets compared to his background as he cries, “things rank and gross in nature. Possess it merely” (l, ii, l. 136-137). The dark music playing in the background also sets the mood of great sorrow, thus creating juxtaposition between the music and his tone, allowing the scene to be dark with grief. It allows the audience to see his insignificance in the happenings of the palace. Branagh also has the same idea by starting his scene with Hamlet between the two thrones while having a long shot of the palace. While Laurence blended himself into the background, Branagh decided to stand apart to show how he is a misfit in his own home. Furthermore Branagh’s costume detail should be commended in the sense that while in the act before there was a wedding Hamlet is yet dressed so simply and furthermore in black, which signifies funeral attire in many cultures, further emphasizing his contempt for the happenings in his life. Branagh shows Hamlet’s isolation …show more content…

What this means is he has decided to focus on Hamlet’s grief of his father’s death unlike Branagh who instead gives more focus on Hamlet’s disdain in his mother remarrying. While speaking Oliver enunciates each word, “How weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable.”(l, ii, l. 135) so that you actually feel his misery, he talks softly and slowly to convey he is tired of the world. His entire posture is given the look of someone through with life. While walking he takes each step deliberately, heavy and lost in his thoughts. He stands before the chair that could have possibly been his father’s as if he might be standing before him with his arms crossed at his back. All these various acting techniques display how a person might act while mourning. Branagh on the other hand builds to a momentum; as he talks the angrier he gets. The way he emphasizes, “within a month”, (l, ii, l. 145 and 149) again and again allows the audience to know just what he thinks of the wedding. “She married. O most wicked speed, to post”, (l, ii, l. 156) is an important part because of the way Branagh decided to stress certain words, as if he is so disgusted he cannot even talk. It can be said he is so angry that he cannot contain it within himself that he has to use his body to express himself. Each time he points Branagh tends to point in the same direction, which could indicate

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