Will
Strata Poster
Not... really - a fairer comparison would be that Romeo & Juliet blends romance and tragedy as Alien does science fiction and horror; I might have missed something, but I don't remember a whole lot of comedy aboard the Nostromo. Unless we're talking about Resurrection. Which I, for one, am not.
Going back to the Shakespearean theme, I watched Looking for Richard yesterday after a recommendation from Neal, and really liked it. In a pretentious A-Level English student kind of way, I actually quite like Shakespeare, although I knew basically nothing about Richard III, save the fact that he wanted a horse for some reason, but, as was the premise of the documentary, the cast found a way of making the unfamiliar, occasionally complex plot as accessible as possible to the masses.
Plus, it was a chance to see the always amazing Al Pacino along with Winona Ryder and others treading unfamiliar ground, illustrating that neither American actors nor audiences need be as intimidated or 'turned off' as they are by Shakespearean material - hell, if the performance clips that interspersed the explanations (and the contrasts between Pacino as himself and in character, drawing parralels between Richard and his usual gangster characters were inevitably hilarious) were anything to go by, I'd love to see a lot more plays adapted in this style! Impressed
Going back to the Shakespearean theme, I watched Looking for Richard yesterday after a recommendation from Neal, and really liked it. In a pretentious A-Level English student kind of way, I actually quite like Shakespeare, although I knew basically nothing about Richard III, save the fact that he wanted a horse for some reason, but, as was the premise of the documentary, the cast found a way of making the unfamiliar, occasionally complex plot as accessible as possible to the masses.
Plus, it was a chance to see the always amazing Al Pacino along with Winona Ryder and others treading unfamiliar ground, illustrating that neither American actors nor audiences need be as intimidated or 'turned off' as they are by Shakespearean material - hell, if the performance clips that interspersed the explanations (and the contrasts between Pacino as himself and in character, drawing parralels between Richard and his usual gangster characters were inevitably hilarious) were anything to go by, I'd love to see a lot more plays adapted in this style! Impressed