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Screen Adaptations: Shakespeare’s Hamlet
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Screen Adaptations: Shakespeare’s Hamlet

Hamlet is the most often produced play in the western literary canon, and a fertile global source for film adaptation. Samuel Crowl, a noted scholar of Shakespeare on film, unpacks the process of adapting from text to screen through concentrating on two sharply contrasting film versions of Hamlet by Laurence Olivier (1948) and Kenneth Branagh (1996). The films’ socio-political contexts are explored, and the importance of their screenplay, film score, setting, cinematography and editing examined.

Offering an analysis of two of the most important figures in the history of film adaptations of Shakespeare, this study seeks to understand a variety of cinematic approaches to translating Shakespeare’s “words, words, words” into film’s particular grammar and rhetoric

Undertittel
The Relationship between Text and Film
Forfatter
Samuel Crowl
ISBN
9781408129555
Språk
Engelsk
Vekt
180 gram
Utgivelsesdato
30.1.2014
Antall sider
176