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Shakespeare and Revenge 593 Views
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Description:
Welcome to the dark side of Shakespeare. You didn't think he was all sonnets, roses, and romantic Romeos, did you?
Transcript
- 00:04
Shakespeare and Revenge, a la Shmoop. We’re all taught to be kind, patient people…
- 00:10
…but what happens when your archenemy shows up and starts… getting all up in your business?
- 00:15
Well, if you happen to be in a Shakespeare play, you probably take this opportunity to
- 00:19
launch a no-holds-barred quest for revenge.
- 00:22
Maybe therapy would have been a healthier option, but vendettas are so much more fun.
Full Transcript
- 00:27
The thing with revenge is, it's kind of like a steamroller... it flattens everything in
- 00:32
its way…
- 00:33
…whether it’s your desired target, or those fluffy kittens who were just crossing
- 00:37
the street.
- 00:38
Thankfully, Shakespeare's bloodthirsty characters don't have access to heavy machinery, but
- 00:42
most of them end up mowing down the innocent along with the guilty.
- 00:46
Iago takes down his frenemy, Othello, but his wife doesn't really get to celebrate with
- 00:51
him, since she's so busy… getting stabbed. Richard III basically develops a 5 year plan
- 00:57
devoted to spreading misery and despair, and all without the services of a personal assistant.
- 01:02
It's easy to boo these two model citizens, but what about those with righteous causes,
- 01:07
like Hamlet, who starts stabbing blindly and tapestries, and Titus, who likes to… cook
- 01:12
with young people?
- 01:13
If your family member was hurt or killed, and the evildoer was still waltzing around
- 01:17
scot-free…
- 01:17
… would you be able to let it go?
- 01:19
If you were in the Prince of Denmark's shoes… and stylishly matching hose… a little payback
- 01:21
would be hard to resist, even without spectral encouragement.
- 01:23
Justified or not, once revenge has been freed, it's hard to get back in the cage.
- 01:28
It's having way too much fun chasing cars and leaving land mines in your neighbors’
- 01:32
yards.
- 01:32
Maybe that's why so many of Shakespeare's plays end in piles of bodies.
- 01:37
Shakespeare always seems to side with karma.
- 01:41
If you decide to go vigilante, the chances are good that you’ll get served in the end.
- 01:46
Richard III bites it on the battlefield, and while Iago doesn’t croak, he’s definitely
- 01:51
grounded for the whole summer.
- 01:53
You’d think Hamlet and Titus would at least get credit for just cause, but Titus’ cooking
- 01:57
goes sadly unappreciated…
- 02:00
…and Hamlet dies with his enemies, all at once, like Shakespeare forgot he left the
- 02:06
iron on or something.
- 02:08
Most of these guys end up getting their way, but not until “the circle of revenge”
- 02:12
is complete.
- 02:13
The few characters that survive are lucky to be left standing when the curtain drops.
- 02:17
No way to deny it, Shakespeare knew his way around a grudge.
- 02:20
His characters don’t mind breaking a few eggs, as long as they get that really delicious
- 02:24
revenge omelette with a side of crispy angst.
- 02:27
Villains like Iago and Richard III leave no stone unturned and no handkerchief unburgled
- 02:32
in their quest for mastery…
- 02:33
…but in the end, they go down just like the good guys.
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