The Film Industry Woos Shakespeare

dc.creatorBaldwin Lind, Paula
dc.date2016
dc.date.accessioned05-01-2026 18:10
dc.date.available05-01-2026 18:10
dc.descriptionThis chapter aims to analyse the notion of adaptation as a double process of reinterpretation and recreation (Hutcheon, 2013, p.8), and suggests that this is unique when the literary source is a theatre script; moreover, when such text has been written in a particular linguistic style to be performed on a specific stage within a historical and cultural context that is far more than four centuries from the present. The author uses two film adaptations of plays by William Shakespeare – Henry V (1989) and Hamlet (1996) – from the British director Kenneth Branagh, as study cases. She pays special attention to the use of space, an element that adds complexity to the work of a film director because Shakespearean plays have almost no stage directions or indications of place that guide and frame the setting of scenes. Even though Peter Brook states that “the absence of scenery in the Elizabethan theatre was one of its greatest freedoms” (Brook, 1996, p. 86), it is also true that this technical aspect transforms the job of the director into a challenge of creative reinterpretation that goes beyond the mere filming of a determined theatrical performance, but aims to represent a certain notion of space precisely by filling the Shakespearean undetermined and empty space with images and symbols.<br/>By comparing specific scenes from the plays already mentioned with Branagh’s film versions, this study suggests that a “good” adaptation of Shakespeare to film – that which is a mirror of the human conflicts proposed by the dramatist – will result not only from its fidelity to the text, but from its understanding of Shakespearean spatial poetics; that is to say, from the possibility that the adapted work can “sing, live and breathe in an empty space” (Brook, 1988, p. 191), which the director-author will configure according to his own interpretation of the dramatic plot.<br/>eng
dc.identifierhttps://investigadores.uandes.cl/en/publications/d092dc6f-033a-4105-bf5e-3234ebb7aa86
dc.languageeng
dc.publisherCambridge Scholars Publishing
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
dc.sourceBaldwin Lind, Paula (Ed.), Telling and Re-telling Stories: Studies on Literary Adaptation to Film., p.79-98. Newcastle-Upon-Tyne (England).: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. [ISBN 978-1-4438-8881-3]
dc.subjectShakespeare
dc.subjectFilm adaptation
dc.subjectKenneth Branagh
dc.subjectTheatrical space
dc.subjectCinematographic space
dc.titleThe Film Industry Woos Shakespeareeng
dc.typeChaptereng
dc.typeCapítulospa
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