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The Determination To Obtain Vengeance In Hamlet And Ridley Scott's Gladiator

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The Determination to Obtain Vengeance Depending on the perspective of a situation, revenge can be ethical to someone, but it can also be immoral to someone else. In William Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Ridley Scott’s Gladiator, the protagonists experience grief and are both driven to seek revenge after the deaths of loved ones, which leads to their tragic downfall. Hamlet and Maximus are ambitious in avenging the murder of their family members as they obsessively want to execute Claudius and Commodus. However, their strong desire causes them to delay obtaining vengeance as they must be careful with the strategies they use since they could affect themselves. Both characters are quick to believe the killer is someone that has done harm to them in the past eliciting them to be enraged. King Hamlet’s Ghost returns to the castle encountering Hamlet for the first time as he reveals that Claudius, Denmark’s new King and Hamlet’s uncle, is his murderer and in addition tells him that he must take revenge for his death. Hamlet without hesitation trusts what the ghost is telling him, “Now to my word. / It is ‘Adieu, adieu, remember me.’ / I have sworn’t” (Shakespeare 1.5.110-112). Hamlet’s extreme melancholy causes him to make a promise as his only loyalty is to his father and he is willing to sacrifice anything to achieve retaliation. This task creates him to have a huge liability while still being in a miserable condition, which leads Hamlet to think suicidal. Yet, along the way of

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