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Hamlet Character Analysis

Decent Essays

In recreating Shakespeare’s Hamlet onscreen, directors often follow the same script with slight variations; however, Franco Zeffirelli, director of Hamlet (USA, 1990), decided to develop his own twist of the plot by focusing on this concept: “This above all—to thine own self be true” (Shakespeare 1.3.84). By emphasizing the need that the characters had to be true to themselves, it became clear that their downfalls were due to a lack of this observance. Ophelia lived only to fulfill her father’s will, Claudius sought greed over his family and Hamlet only lived his life attempting to relive his father’s; as a result, each fell to an untimely and tragic death, validating Zeffirelli’s concept that mankind must live their lives authentically. Ophelia was the first casualty of Zeffirelli’s concept; she was completely true to her father, Polonius, and completely untrue to herself. From the beginning of Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Ophelia hung on her father’s every word: Polonius: Affection, puh! You speak like a green girl unsifted in such perilous circumstance. Do you believe his “tenders,” as you call them? Ophelia: I do not know, my lord, what I should think. Polonius: Marry, I will teach you. Think yourself a baby… (1.3.110-114)
As a result of her father’s instructions, Ophelia completely relies on him and fails to consider what is best for herself. For example, Polonius orders her to lay in wait for Hamlet while he and Claudius hide in the shadows, and despite her love for Hamlet, her need to obey her father overrides her relationship with Hamlet. As a result, when Ophelia lies to him about the whereabouts of her father, she loses his trust and a piece of herself (3.1.141-152). Following her father’s death, Ophelia is hopeless. Without the commands of her father, it seems as though she has entirely lost her identity. She wanders the castle, singing wildly: “And will he not come again? And will he not come again? No, no, he is dead. Go to thy deathbed. He never will come again” (4.5.213-217). The film then depicts Ophelia falling to her watery grave by means of suicide, as she is incapacitated without the orders of Polonius (USA, 1990). Because of Ophelia’s unfaithfulness to herself, she lost the life she

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