Monday, August 14, 2017

Let's Bust a Recap : Hamlet

To be, or not to be: that is the question. Time for a recap of Hamlet and fun fact: last year I read my Shakespearean comedy in February and my tragedy in August, and that's what I ended up doing again this year. Not planned. Ha! 

Anyway, if you're not familiar with the drill around here, generally my recaps do not give any major plot points away but when it comes to Shakespeare, I basically give the CliffsNotes version. So what I'm saying is SPOILERS. If you don't want to know how everything ends, scram.

And speaking of how it all ends: everybody dies. Literally. Everybody. But let's back up a little.

At the beginning of the play, we learn that Hamlet's father (the king of Denmark) has recently died and in very little time, his mother (the queen) married his uncle (the new king). Yuck. Hamlet is obviously reeling with all this and grieving his father's death.

Hamlet's BFF Horatio sees Hamlet's father's ghost and takes Hamlet to see him as well. When the ghost appears to Hamlet, they have a little heart-to-heart about how he really died. Hamlet's uncle murdered him and now he's counting on Hamlet to get vengeance. 

Well, Hamlet starts acting crazy and everyone thinks he's plumb lost his mind. The King and Queen commission Rosencrantz and Guildenstern to figure out what's wrong with him, but Hamlet sees through that charade and doesn't give anything up to those two goons. 

Before he goes all Inigo Montoya on his uncle, Hamlet decides to put on a little play for his mom and uncle to see if his ghost daddy is for real or from the Devil. He basically writes a play depicting what supposedly went down in real life (his uncle poisoning his brother the king and marrying the queen and becoming king himself) to see how his uncle will react.

His uncle is GUILTY

The Queen calls her son into her closet to ask what this is all about while the King monologues about how he's being eaten alive with the guilt and what is he going to do about Hamlet who is obviously on to him and blah blah blah

While Hamlet is closeted with his mother, he inadvertently kills Polonius who is eavesdropping on their conversation. (That's what you get for meddling, Polonius.) The King and Queen ultimately decide to send Hamlet away to England with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern "for his own good". The king, however, also sends a missive with R&G basically ordering Hamlet's execution. Hamlet's no dope though so he switches out the king's orders with a message of his own that the letter bearers should be executed. (The letter bearers are Rosencrantz and Guildenstern for anyone who's starting to get a little lost.) Hamlet doesn't even feel bad about it because R&G are totally #TeamKing instead of #TeamHamlet. 

In the meantime, Laertes has come back to avenge his father Polonius' death. He finds that his sister Ophelia (Hamlet's one true love) has gone insane which adds more fuel to his fire. He concocts a plot with the King to invite Hamlet to a friendly duel in which Laertes will poison his sword so that when he strikes Hamlet, Hamlet will definitely die. And the King will poison Hamlet's drink, just for good measure. 

We have a whole little scene with Hamlet, Horatio, and two grave-digging clowns in which Hamlet talks to a bunch of skulls. Whatever.

Then we have Ophelia's funeral. Did I mention Ophelia committed suicide? Laertes, in his grief-stricken state,  actually jumps in the grave with her at which point, Hamlet can't take it and jumps in too because the love of 40,000 brothers can't even come close to the love he had for Ophelia. Hamlet and Laertes go at each other, but the King pulls Laertes off Hamlet and is all, "Stick to the plan, bro." Everybody makes nice and goes their separate ways.

Next we have Osric coming to get Hamlet to participate in the duel with Laertes. The duel is presented to Hamlet as a friendly wager, no big deal. Hamlet goes to the duel (against his better judgment) and what do you think happens? 

The Queen accidentally drinks the poison meant for Hamlet and dies.
Laertes stabs Hamlet with his poison sword, but they scuffle, Hamlet ends up with the poison sword and stabs Laertes back. Laertes feels bad about the whole thing and confesses all to Hamlet with his dying breath. Laertes dies.
Hamlet uses the last of his strength to stab the King with the poison sword, the King dies.
Hamlet says a few last words to Horatio about how he'll be remembered and dies. 

To sum up:
Polonius dies.
Ophelia dies.
The Queen dies.
Laertes dies.
The King dies.
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern die.
Hamlet dies.

Everybody dies. 

Oh and then Fortinbras shows up with his army, but that's a whole different story that was going on throughout the entire play and I just didn't really care about it that much.

Hamlet is the longest play I've read so far and the second tragedy. Of the two tragedies, I personally liked Macbeth better, but Hamlet was also very good. Even though everyone dies, Hamlet seemed lighter and more comical than Macbeth. 

Read it, it's Shakespeare. 

I'm leaning towards Othello for my 2018 tragedy, but I'm open to suggestions. What do you think? Have you read Hamlet? What's your favorite Shakespearean tragedy?

9 comments:

  1. I love this. So hilarious. Well done. I named my current laptop Hamlet because all technology dies in the end, and my phone is always Ophelia. I rather liked the Mel Gibson Hamlet movie too. Words, words, words! Oh...and some of us saw "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead" in college, which was an interesting experience. Funny play, some awkward unnecessary moments, but that's theatre.

    It's been awhile since I read Hamlet, but this definitely makes me want to read it again...or watch Mel Gibson. I don't think I ever read Macbeth, but I watched an awesome version with Judy Dench and Ian McKellan in the lead roles from the Royal Shakespeare Company. Emperor Palpatine makes an appearance as well...as Duncan? Maybe?

    Othello would be a good choice. I personally think Iago is one of the most evil characters ever written. EVER. I couldn't even wrap my mind around it. Othello took me a week.

    Romeo and Juliet is a classic choice from school, as is Julius Caesar. Both are worth your time, but I don't know if the order matters, or if you've read either already. My brother is weirdly obsessed with King Lear, but it just made me really sad. I'm planning on reading an adaptation of it called One Thousand Acres that Ean has leftover from a college lit class. Cymbeline is listed as a tragedy, but I think it's the best kind...probably the closest you can get to a happy ending in a Shakespearean tragedy. Alisha Boley and I saw it together in Atlanta a couple years ago, and we both really enjoyed it.

    That pretty much exhausts my knowledge of the tragedies. When I read Julius Caesar, I'd had enough stage experience to start blocking the movements in my mind and visualizing it on stage, rather than only reading dialogue or visualizing like a normal story.

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    1. You named your laptop and phone Hamlet and Ophelia?? HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! That's awesome!

      I read Romeo & Juliet and Julius Caesar both in high school. When I first started making these lists, I thought I'd want to re-read those sooner rather than later, but now I'm thinking I'll save those till last since I'm pretty familiar with them.

      You've mentioned that about Iago before. I'm really thinking Othello's going to have to be my next tragedy.

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    2. I'd hit a low point with technology, especially with the laptop, lol.

      Gotcha on the other two choices. Go for something new then! Warning about Othello being so super awful depressing though. King Lear and Cymbeline should definitely be contenders for 2019. King Lear is more famous, but Cymbeline is probably the most light hearted "tragedy".

      Did you decide for next year's comedy? Twelfth Night or The Tempest? Twelfth Night has a great movie version with Helena Bonham Carter that I showed my students...we skipped a couple awkward moments, but I love how they set the poems to music in that version.

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    3. Actually now I'm leaning more towards All's Well That Ends Well or As You Like It for my comedy with that same reasoning that I'm less familiar with them than I am with Twelfth Night or The Tempest. *shrugs* We'll see how I'm actually feeling at the end of the year when it comes time to make my real list. :)

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  2. i'm partial to macbeth myself. i appreciate "read it, it's shakespeare".

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  3. I remember from Shakespeare class that Hamlet was a Revenge Tragedy which was a popular form in Shakespeare time. So many people have to die, and mostly in the last scene, the main character or person trying to get revenge has to die, and there are supposed to be supernatural elements. Hamlet isn't my favorite. It's good, but it does kind of lag a little bit, and I have never really figured out if Hamlet has actually gone mad or if he's just faking it. It does have some of Shakespeare's greatest soliloquies though. I agree with Reagan though. MacBeth is better.

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    1. Right?! I kept wondering the whole time if Hamlet was really insane or if it was an act....?? And I definitely agree with both of you about Macbeth.

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  4. I absolutely loved reading this summary. haha

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