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Hamlet (1948)

 Hamlet (1948)
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 Hamlet (1948)
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Hamlet (1948)
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Hamlet1948
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Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })Hamlet is a 1948 film directed by, and starring, Laurence Olivier.It is—how did you know?—an adaptation of William Shakespeare's Hamlet. Hamlet, Prince of Denmark (Olivier) is all bummed out because his father, King Hamlet, died two months ago. King Hamlet was succeeded by his brother, Claudius, whom his nephew Prince Hamlet strongly dislikes. Much worse, barely a month after King Hamlet was in the ground, his widow Queen Gertrude married her former brother-in-law Claudius. Prince Hamlet does not like this one little bit.One night Hamlet's good friend Horatio reports to him that the watchmen on the walls of Elsinore Palace have seen a ghost of Hamlet's father, walking in the night. When Hamlet goes to see for himself, the ghost tells him some very disturbing news. It seems that King Hamlet did not die of natural causes as everyone assumed, but was murdered by Claudius, who poured poison in his ear and thus took his brother's life, throne, and wife. The ghost, who is not happy about all this, makes Prince Hamlet swear to avenge him.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); })The second of three big theatrical Shakespeare adaptations that Laurence Olivier directed and starred in, following his Henry V and succeeded by his Richard III. Contained several future stars of British and Hollywood film. Jean Simmons appeared in her Star-Making Role as Ophelia, Hamlet's girlfriend, who probably should have dumped him. Patrick Troughton, later known as the second Doctor Who, appears as the Player King. This was the first of twenty-four films that Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee appeared in together; Cushing plays Osric while Lee is an extra (one of the guards). Patrick Macnee also appears as an extra. Character actor John Laurie plays Francisco, one of the guards in the opening scene who sees the ghost.
 Hamlet (1948)
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2020-05-14T08:25:50Z
 Hamlet (1948)
parsed
2020-06-24T02:57:42Z
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DBTropes
 Hamlet (1948) / int_10f28611
type
Excessive Mourning
 Hamlet (1948) / int_10f28611
comment
Excessive Mourning: In his first appearance everyone else is telling Hamlet to cheer up and stop mourning his dead father. Claudius calls it "unmanly grief".
 Hamlet (1948) / int_10f28611
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_20917b55
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Milking the Giant Cow
 Hamlet (1948) / int_20917b55
comment
Milking the Giant Cow: In this film Hamlet's instructions to his players are interrupted by the Player King making a silly "dramatic speech" gesture with his arm, which causes Hamlet to say "Nor do not saw the air too much with your hand." Despite this instruction the Player King still milks the giant cow during his scene with the Player Queen.
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Curtain Camouflage
 Hamlet (1948) / int_20dc0291
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Curtain Camouflage: Poor Polonius should have picked a better place to hide.
 Hamlet (1948) / int_20dc0291
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_222dc873
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Black Comedy
 Hamlet (1948) / int_222dc873
comment
Black Comedy: A lot of this when Claudius is trying to find out just what the heck Hamlet did to Polonius. Hamlet remarks that if they wait a month or so, they may smell a bad stink around the stairs. When Claudius sends his guards there, Hamlet says "He will stay till ye come."
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_2f4916be
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Paralysis by Analysis
 Hamlet (1948) / int_2f4916be
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Paralysis by Analysis: This is often described as Hamlet's Fatal Flaw, his inability to stop dithering about Claudius's treachery and Gertrude's sluttiness and just act. It's expressly stated in this film, in a prologue where Olivier's voiceover describes the story as "the tragedy of a man who could not make up his mind".
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_33d5b7f2
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Adapted Out
 Hamlet (1948) / int_33d5b7f2
comment
Adapted Out: Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, Hamlet's two buddies who are both Generic Guys in the play, are cut from this film entirely. Although Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are so superfluous to the story that an entire play was written around their pointlessness, this is the only one of the major theatrical Hamlet adaptations that does not include them. Fortinbras, prince of Norway who comes in at the end of the play to pick up the bodies (seriously, there was no curtain in Elizabethan theater, and Shakespeare needed a way to get the corpses off the stage) and assume the crown of Denmark, is also omitted.
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LapPillow
 Hamlet (1948) / int_348e5217
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Lap Pillow: Hamlet does this not on Ophelia's lap, but on his mother's, in the scene where Polonius is murdered that absolutely reeks of Incest Subtext.
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Hamlet (1948) / int_348e5217
 Hamlet (1948) / int_4712bc4f
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Exact Eavesdropping
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Exact Eavesdropping: In this version of the story Hamlet, listening from above, hears Polonius tell the King and Queen of his plan to "loose my daughter unto him." The idea is for Ophelia to find out why Hamlet is acting so weird. There is nothing in the text of the play to suggest that Hamlet overhears this conversation, but it would explain why he is so nasty to Ophelia later.
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_4c21a018
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Virgin in a White Dress
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Virgin in a White Dress: Ophelia is dressed all in white, emphasizing her purity.
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Hamlet (1948) / int_4c21a018
 Hamlet (1948) / int_53c9fc92
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Flashback
 Hamlet (1948) / int_53c9fc92
comment
Flashback: The ghost's tale of his murder is accompanied by a flashback to Claudius pouring poison into the ear of King Hamlet (also Laurence Olivier).
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Hamlet (1948) / int_53c9fc92
 Hamlet (1948) / int_5e70919d
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Catch the Conscience
 Hamlet (1948) / int_5e70919d
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Catch the Conscience: Hamlet hopes the Mousetrap will catch Claudius's conscience, evoking visible guilt over his murder of the old king.
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Hamlet (1948) / int_5e70919d
 Hamlet (1948) / int_6439de78
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Heroic Sacrifice
 Hamlet (1948) / int_6439de78
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Heroic Sacrifice: Every production or adaptation of Hamlet has to decide whether or not Gertrude knows the wine is poisoned. In this version she obviously does—she stares at it quite meaningfully—and she drinks it in order to stop Hamlet from drinking it. (Obviously it doesn't do much good as Hamlet is sliced with Laertes' poisoned blade moments later.)
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_722b3319
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Camp Gay
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Camp Gay: Peter Cushing plays Osric this way, with a mincing manner, an effeminate voice, and a hat with a huge feather that he waves around constantly.
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_75e2bf23
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Chiaroscuro
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Chiaroscuro: The film is shot in black and white, leading to many starkly lit, high-constrast shots. The opening sequence where Hamlet goes to meet the ghost is full of shots like this.
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Hamlet (1948) / int_75e2bf23
 Hamlet (1948) / int_7bd88e4a
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Slain in Their Sleep
 Hamlet (1948) / int_7bd88e4a
comment
Slain in Their Sleep: Hamlet's father was murdered during his afternoon nap.
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_80d0d980
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The Generic Guy
 Hamlet (1948) / int_80d0d980
comment
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, Hamlet's two buddies who are both Generic Guys in the play, are cut from this film entirely. Although Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are so superfluous to the story that an entire play was written around their pointlessness, this is the only one of the major theatrical Hamlet adaptations that does not include them.
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Hamlet (1948) / int_80d0d980
 Hamlet (1948) / int_8163e2bb
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Dramatic Drop
 Hamlet (1948) / int_8163e2bb
comment
Dramatic Drop: Hamlet drops his dagger in surprise when he pulls back the curtain and it's Polonius, not Claudius, who tumbles out dead.
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_86e17259
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Alas, Poor Yorick
 Hamlet (1948) / int_86e17259
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Alas, Poor Yorick: Trope Namer. Hamlet encounters the alleged skull of Yorick, the court jester of his childhood, prompting the prince to reflect on his mortality.
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Fire and Brimstone Hell
 Hamlet (1948) / int_8acbc572
comment
Fire and Brimstone Hell: The Ghost of Hamlet's father reveals that as his punishment in the afterlife, he must spend the days in "sulf'rous and tormenting flames" (by night, he walks as a ghost). The Ghost's prison is not Hell, but Purgatory, as (he says) his punishment will last (only) until his earthly crimes "are burnt and purged away".
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_93deab19
type
Ominous Fog
 Hamlet (1948) / int_93deab19
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Ominous Fog: In the opening scenes where Hamlet goes out to see the ghost, the castle is very heavily shrouded in spooky fog.
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_9c00c209
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Hurricane of Aphorisms
 Hamlet (1948) / int_9c00c209
comment
Hurricane of Aphorisms: Polonius's parting words to his son Laertes, the famous "to thine own self be true" speech.
 Hamlet (1948) / int_9c00c209
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Hamlet (1948) / int_9c00c209
 Hamlet (1948) / int_abdc0b3f
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Held Gaze
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comment
Held Gaze: The "long distance love-scene", where Hamlet and Ophelia hold each others' gaze from opposite ends of a corridor.
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Hamlet (1948) / int_abdc0b3f
 Hamlet (1948) / int_b6cebad3
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DoubleStandard
 Hamlet (1948) / int_b6cebad3
comment
Double Standard: After Laertes tells Ophelia to stay a virgin and not let Hamlet have sex with her, she insists that he should follow the same chaste advice himself.
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Hamlet (1948) / int_b6cebad3
 Hamlet (1948) / int_bc3b029b
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Impairment Shot
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comment
Impairment Shot: A variation on this, as the appearance of the ghost is marked by the camera going out of focus for a bit.
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Hamlet (1948) / int_bc3b029b
 Hamlet (1948) / int_bdbfdf8a
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The Dying Walk
 Hamlet (1948) / int_bdbfdf8a
comment
The Dying Walk: In this version Hamlet does not make Claudius drink the poisoned wine. Instead, after Hamlet stabs Claudius a few times, the king gets back up and picks up his crown, which fell off. He then staggers into the center of his room, and looks at his guards—all of whom then point their spears at him. Only then does Claudius keel over dead.
 Hamlet (1948) / int_bdbfdf8a
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Hamlet (1948) / int_bdbfdf8a
 Hamlet (1948) / int_bdc453a0
type
Incest Subtext
 Hamlet (1948) / int_bdc453a0
comment
Incest Subtext: Many productions of Hamlet have emphasized this trope in regards to Hamlet and Gertrude, but maybe none more than this one, which used an actress younger than Oliver (Eileen Herlie) and has her kiss Hamlet square on the lips in the early scene where everyone's telling Hamlet to stop moping about his father's death. She kisses him on the lips again in a rather un-motherly way at the end of the scene where Polonius dies (and this right after Hamlet tells her to not have sex with Claudius anymore), and then again right before he leaves.
 Hamlet (1948) / int_bdc453a0
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_c4c9bb40
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Inner Monologue
 Hamlet (1948) / int_c4c9bb40
comment
Inner Monologue: Oliver chose to stage some of the soliloquies as inner monologues, with him walking around or staring pensively as the soliloquy plays over the soundtrack. Hamlet's thoughts while standing over Claudius with a dagger are rendered this way.
 Hamlet (1948) / int_c4c9bb40
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_c871cf6d
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Playing Gertrude
 Hamlet (1948) / int_c871cf6d
comment
Playing Gertrude: The tradition of casting improbably young actresses as Gertrude is the Trope Namer, but few productions are as extreme as this one. Eileen Herlie, who plays Gertrude, was 11 years younger than Oliver. This only serves to increase the Incest Subtext.
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_d13e0db3
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Heartbeat Soundtrack
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comment
Heartbeat Soundtrack: There's a heartbeat soundtrack every time the ghost appears.
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_e1fa8421
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Dead Person Conversation
 Hamlet (1948) / int_e1fa8421
comment
Dead Person Conversation: The ghost of King Hamlet shows up and insists that Prince Hamlet avenge him.
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_e3c9fd6c
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Midfight Weapon Exchange
 Hamlet (1948) / int_e3c9fd6c
comment
Midfight Weapon Exchange: Happens in the duel between Hamlet and Laertes, meaning they are both mortally wounded with the poisoned blade.
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_f0e85546
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Unbuilt Trope
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comment
Unbuilt Trope: Ironically for Playing Gertrude (Laurence Olivier was 41, Eileen Herlie was 30) and traditions of casting actresses far too young to be mothers - this happened in works like Gone with the Wind too but this film is the Trope Namer. This casting was forced by Executive Meddling; the studio would only allow Hamlet to be made if Laurence Olivier played the lead.
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 Hamlet (1948) / int_ff7e9adf
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Hair of Gold, Heart of Gold
 Hamlet (1948) / int_ff7e9adf
comment
Hair of Gold, Heart of Gold: Brunette Jean Simmons wears a wig of long blonde hair as Ophelia. This, together with her white dress, emphasizes her sweet and gentle nature.
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Hamlet (1948)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Hamlet (1948)
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Back-of-Head Transition / int_74e8a92d
 Hamlet (1948)
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The Film of the Play / int_74e8a92d