Abstrakt
The paper aims at analyzing the relationship between Eric Rohmer’s A Tale of Winter (Conte d’hiver, 1992) and Shakespeare’s late comedy. Although both works are entitled similarly, at first glance they have hardly anything in common, aside from one scene in which the two main characters watch Shakespeare’s play staged in a theatre. The author argues, however, that many references to original comedy, both on the level of plot and structure, can be found in Rohmer’s movie, which can therefore be perceived as a loose adaptation of Shakespeare’s work.
Bibliografia
T. Lubelski, Nowa Fala. O pewnej przygodzie kina francuskiego, Universitas, Krakow 2000, s. 313.
S. Cavell, Shakespeare and Rohmer: Two Tales of Winter, w: idem, Cities of Words. Pedagogical Letters on a Register of the Moral Life, Harvard University Press, Cambridge 2004, s. 429.
S. Cavell, On Eric Rohmer’s „A Tale of Winter”, w: Cavell on Film, ed. by William Rothman, State University of New York, Albany 2005, s. 287.
Szekspir i uzurpator. Z Krzysztofem Warlikowskim rozmawia Piotr Gruszczyński, W.A.B., Warszawa 2007, s. 14.
T. Sobolewski, Rohmer, „Kino” 2000, nr 5, s. 62.
D.A. Wroblewska, Pod lupą Rohmera, „Kino” 1998, nr 3, s. 19.
E. Mazierska, Droga do autentyczności i stabilizacji: obraz wakacji, podróży i zmian w filmach Erica Rohmera, „Film na Świecie” 2002, nr 403, s. 37.
W. Szekspir, Zimowa opowieść, przeł. M. Słomczyński, Wydawnictwo Literackie, Kraków 2001, s. 131.
Licencja
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