Tag Archives: Shakespeare
Today’s Movie: William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet
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Tonight’s Movie: Much Ado About Nothing
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Tonight’s Movie: Much Ado About Nothing
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Quote of the Day
There is another writer I know, who, like myself, is thought by a great deal of people to be dead. His name is William Shakespeare, and he has written four kinds of plays: comedies, romances, histories, and tragedies. Comedies, of course, are stories in which people tell jokes and trip over things, and romances are stories in which people fall in love and probably get married. Histories are retellings of things that actually happened, like my history of the Baudelaire orphans, and tragedies are stories that usually begin fairly happily and then steadily go downhill, until all of the characters are dead, wounded, or otherwise inconvenienced. It is usually not much fun to watch a tragedy, whether you are in the audience or one of the characters, and out of all Shakespeare’s tragedies possibly the least fun example is King Lear, which tells the story of a king who goes mad while his daughters plot to murder one another and other people who are getting on their nerves. Toward the end of the play, one of William Shakespeare’s characters remarks that “Humanity must perforce prey upon itself, like monsters of the deep,” a sentence which here means “How sad it is that people end up hurting one another as if they were ferocious sea monsters,” and when the character utters those unhappy words, the people in Shakespeare’s audience often weep, or sigh, or remind themselves to see a comedy next time.
A Series of Unfortunate Events: The Carnivorous Carnival – Lemony Snicket
Quote of the Day
Quote of the Day
Quote of the Day
Beatrice: O that I were a man! What, bear her in hand until they come to take hands; and then, with public accusation, uncovered slander, unmitigated rancour, —O God, that I were a man! I would eat his heart in the market-place.
Much Ado About Nothing – William Shakespeare
Quote of the Day
Benedick: Your wit is as quick as the greyhound’s mouth; it catches.
Margaret: And yours as blunt as the fencer’s foils, which hit, but not hurt.
Benedick: A most manly wit, Margaret; it will not hurt a woman: and so, I pray thee, call Beatrice: I give thee the bucklers.
Margaret: Give us the swords; we have bucklers of our own.
Much Ado About Nothing – William Shakespeare
What Should Joss Whedon Do Next?
A few weeks ago, when Much Ado About Nothing official premiered, Entertainment Weekly ran a short article about who Joss Whedon should look to for inspiration. They asked his actors from Much Ado and they came up with some interesting suggestions. Alexis Denisof recommended something by Charles Dickens. Reed Diamond and Clark Gregg wanted to do more Shakespeare, specifically Twelfth Night and my personal favorite, The Tempest. Several people brought up Anton Chekhov, perhaps Three Sisters. I’m sure there are many plays that he could adapt in a similar style, in a short period of time with a tiny budget, and I hope that more Shakespeare is in his future.
But I nearly spit water all over my computer screen when I read that Joss, himself, said, “I’m a huge Dickens fan.” Continue reading