Hamlet - 1st Soliloquy - Oh, that this too, too solid flesh...

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  • Опубліковано 21 жов 2024
  • David Tennant in the role of Hamlet, 2009.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 48

  • @bennyshakes9136
    @bennyshakes9136 3 місяці тому +2

    I love the emotional honesty here. His father died an untimely death, and no one seems to care. Not even his mother. Big emotions happen like this, outburst, anger, tears, then steely resolve. I see where people are coming from with the "overacting" comments, but I respectfully disagree.

  • @pipkinsweetgrass
    @pipkinsweetgrass 11 років тому +62

    David does the best Hamlet ever. And I'm a fan of Branagh!

    • @absmith12
      @absmith12 4 роки тому +1

      Fuck off! This is by far the some of the worst acting I've seen. Kenneth nails it and is miles better than this.

    • @sissybean8797
      @sissybean8797 4 роки тому +4

      @@absmith12 You seem rather aggressive my friend, people can have different opinions

    • @absmith12
      @absmith12 4 роки тому

      @@sissybean8797 agreed mate. And it wasnt supposed to sound aggressive. But to even say this is good acting..... David Tennant is a good actor don't get me wrong, but not in this.

  • @amiefortman7220
    @amiefortman7220 9 років тому +75

    That beginning, where he just stayed curled in the fetal position...oh, my God. *sob*

    • @Emily-eq1ts
      @Emily-eq1ts 4 роки тому +1

      broke my heart, I wanted to soothe him.

  • @margaretbonnette678
    @margaretbonnette678 12 років тому +26

    I just compared David to Kenneth Branagh's acting this same scene. I can't say which one is better. The difference is David puts much more energy, more emotion into it. He pauses here and there, creating tension.....I am not a big fan of Shakespeare, however, I see David Tennant is a really good actor and he portrays Hamlet so well I believe he should receive an award for it, if he hasn't already.

  • @daphnegunn3283
    @daphnegunn3283 4 роки тому +4

    Mans just needs a hug

  • @pablohierro5060
    @pablohierro5060 2 місяці тому

    Good Job on this scene

  • @ChibiClover1
    @ChibiClover1 13 років тому +7

    GAWD I LOVE DIS

  • @griffinbinnicker8102
    @griffinbinnicker8102 8 років тому +30

    Just as a note for texts sake, the line is "Oh, that this too too SULLIED flesh". A lot people make the choice to have it almost sound like "solid" as an acting choice in response to the text. This is my favorite version of this piece.

    • @ohowjuicy
      @ohowjuicy 8 років тому +2

      +Max Aref Actually, according to the Norton Shakespeare, both Q1 and Q2 use the word "sallied," which is assumed to be an earlier form of "sullied." I'm pretty sure that this film uses only the second quarto, but either way, it still isn't "solid."

    • @kabiraltaf
      @kabiraltaf 6 років тому +8

      The "solid" vs. "sullied" debate is a legit one and goes on to this day.

    • @cmsg77
      @cmsg77 6 років тому +9

      An absolutely legitimate point of debate, and differences exist in the sources; however, beyond the well-trodden discussion of the merits of the various texts, there is scope to insert some reason and interpretation: the contrast between solid flesh and thawing to a dew is a most natural one, whereas it is unclear how sullied flesh might be purified by being made liquid. Further, Hamlet does not seek purification of his sullied flesh, but its destruction ("that th'almighty had not fixed his canon 'gainst self-slaughter"). The idea of his destruction coming about by melting away is more sensible than that his sullied self might be made pure by melting.

    • @colleennikstenas4921
      @colleennikstenas4921 6 років тому +1

      kabiraltaf Absolutely love this debate.

  • @ericlehman6841
    @ericlehman6841 5 місяців тому

    I'm learning about soliloquies, so this is helpful to me.

  • @SomethingOfAJoke
    @SomethingOfAJoke 12 років тому +20

    I KNEW THIS WAS TENNANT! XD It was bothering me the whole time I was watching this. I was like "This guy looks SO familiar, I feel like I should know him....He reminds me of Tennant..." And Lo and Behold, it is Tennant! He looks SO different without the trench coat, converse, and the wild hair.

  • @Undead_Queen
    @Undead_Queen 4 роки тому +6

    So there's a final coming up for English. I knew exactly where to go.

  • @okkervilriverking
    @okkervilriverking 12 років тому +3

    lovely!

  • @gymnastikschicaa
    @gymnastikschicaa 12 років тому +4

    what an actor!

  • @theendofeverything6356
    @theendofeverything6356 Місяць тому

    Dire!

  • @dominiquepilon5764
    @dominiquepilon5764 6 років тому +3

    Bravo David Tennant bravo 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

  • @erickg368
    @erickg368 4 роки тому +3

    David Tennant as Hamlet, The Doctor, The Fugitoid, Angus, and Scrooge McDuck

  • @hiyaninja123
    @hiyaninja123 13 років тому +3

    thanks for helping me on my essay!

  • @rakash0500
    @rakash0500 12 років тому +2

    But break my heart indeed.

  • @andrewdevine3920
    @andrewdevine3920 2 роки тому

    Oh, that this so, so solid crew would melt.

  • @itzchino4966
    @itzchino4966 4 роки тому +13

    I’m doing a test about this soliloquy 😂

  • @benjaminturton2655
    @benjaminturton2655 7 років тому

    so so pretty

  • @kotetsu131
    @kotetsu131 5 років тому

    ........holy shit.

  • @eileenschulman9843
    @eileenschulman9843 6 років тому +23

    thumbs up if you came here because you are depressed, and are now ugly crying because of the first stanza

    • @kristalball527
      @kristalball527 6 років тому +2

      Eileen Schulman I came here not only because it's beautiful, but also because he shows off his ass a lot.

    • @Breb1999
      @Breb1999 6 років тому

      How can I cry when I don’t understand what he is saying??
      (I came here because of my homework)

    • @samuelhalil6328
      @samuelhalil6328 4 роки тому

      nah im here with school

  • @sugarpoultry
    @sugarpoultry 11 років тому

    Agreed!

  • @wooohooo727
    @wooohooo727 11 років тому +6

    I love David, but I believe that Branagh is much more experienced with Shakespeare.

    • @august8090
      @august8090 5 років тому

      I hath to disagree david has been benedick hamlet richard II

  • @cmsg77
    @cmsg77 6 років тому +14

    I struggle with this interpretation. It has great emotional veracity, but I think emotional honesty can be taken too far. Let us not forget that one who reads Shakespeare speaks in verse. It is not realistic, and gains nothing by pedantic attempts at emotional verisimilitude. Let the text carry the emotion: it is splendidly written, and loaded with the stuff! Of course, do not be wooden, but don't either allow gasping for breath between sobs deny the rhythm of the verse. I have never been so disappointed in a play as when, in the Cumberbatch Hamlet, Horatio screamed "good-night sweet prince ..." like a wounded beast, such that is was almost unintelligible. Authentic, perhaps, but at what cost? I fear David here approaches such issues.

    • @kotetsu131
      @kotetsu131 6 років тому +3

      You know I think you're right, I appreciate the execution but his emoting distracts from the text. Maybe dial it back two notches and we'd be good.

    • @meto2854
      @meto2854 4 роки тому

      Agreed, agreed my liege!

    • @cathdodd5072
      @cathdodd5072 Рік тому +11

      With all respect to what you are saying, Hamlet was never meant to be *read* but instead to be seen. On stage, with a crowd full of all sectors of society - including the riffraff, the uneducated, the drunks as well as the well-to-do, the merchants, civil servants and the lettered nobility. All in the Globe, all looking for a good night of entertainment and an unforgettable, largely visual spectacle. Not a poetry recital.
      Shakespeare was first and foremost a playwright and he knew what put bums on seats. Why have a ghost (for not for thrills), Polonius' ramblings (if not for laughs), and Hamlet's solliquies- if not to see the internal anguish he suffers and break your heart - and then sympathise with someone who destroys lives acting out revenge?
      So how do you convey that emotion to people who don't understand the language to the fullest or don't always hear every word spoken? We've read Shakespeare in study for so long. Have we have forgotten that the role of an actor is to play a part and not recite verse?

  • @shakespearaamina9117
    @shakespearaamina9117 Рік тому

    I don't understand the crying in this scene
    I don't agree with the way he tries to portray a depressed prince.

  • @27Pyth
    @27Pyth Рік тому

    God. This is acting 101 basic mistake: start at 10 and leave yourself nowhere to go. No build. No arc.

  • @kylebrogmus8847
    @kylebrogmus8847 6 років тому +6

    Overacting at it's finest