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This educational resource provides insights into the film adaptation of Shakespeare's 'Coriolanus' and its connection to the play text. Discover how the film challenges expectations, explores themes of civil unrest and class, and delves into the characters of Coriolanus, Volumnia, and their relationship.
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This educational resource explores details from the film Coriolanus alongside aspects of the play text in a range of activities suitable for students of literature at GCSE level and equivalent.
Coriolanus, a hero of Rome, is a great soldier but despises the people. His extreme views ignite a mass riot and he is banished from Rome. Coriolanus allies with a sworn enemy, Aufidius, to take his revenge on the city. As director and star, Ralph Fiennes brings William Shakespeare’s visceral history play to the big screen for the first time. Coriolanus is a drama for the ages, a commentary on the precarious draw of war and an auspicious directorial debut from one of the world’s great classical actors.
Dir: Ralph Fiennes UK release date 20 January 2012 Certificate: 15
Written between 1605 and 1608, Coriolanus is one of Shakespeare’s lesser-known plays and one of his last tragedies. This film interpretation uses Shakespeare’s language (although the play text has been cut and adapted), yet relocates the story to a modern-day Balkan state. Look closely at the film poster below, and watch the film’s trailer closely https://www.youtube. com/watch?v=Di-XOO_LTlw
When first approaching a play text, it is important to establish the identity of the main characters and their relationships with one another in the course of the play. The play and the film Coriolanus are named after the principal character in the drama. However, as in some other Shakespeare plays, the title character is known by more than one name: at the start of the play, he is called Caius Marcius. He is given the title Coriolanus as a result of his bravery and victory over the city of Corioles.
The play text gives a sense of character through the words and actions of the characters themselves, and through what others say about them and to them. You may already have a strong sense of who the character Coriolanus is. In adapting the play for the screen, the filmmakers take key decisions about how the character will look, act and interact with others, to give the audience an immediate impression of the character.
Look at these images of Coriolanus and explain what connotations you think the images have. Connotations are the associations that images, words or music give us – for example, red often connotes anger, or blood, or passion. Consider the features the filmmakers have used to show their interpretation of the character and see if you can find quotes about the character from the play to support (or challenge) the interpretation.
As well as being a soldier, Coriolanus is also a husband, a father and a son, and we see these domestic relationships at certain points in the play and the film. Volumnia, Coriolanus’ mother, is a powerful force in the play; for example, she says in Act V ‘Thou art my warrior, I holp to frame thee’ indicating her role in shaping her son’s character. Played by Vanessa Redgrave in the film, Volumnia has evident power over, and great pride in, her son.
Read through the following extract from Act I Scene III of the play. If you were directing this scene, how might you use the actors and the camera to convey meaning to an audience in this scene? What elements of the text would you want to emphasise to show how you interpret these two characters and the relationship between them? VOLUMNIA I pray you, daughter, sing; or express yourself in a more comfortable sort: if my son were my husband, I should freelier rejoice in that absence wherein he won honour than in the embracements of his bed where he would show most love. When yet he was but tender-bodied and the only son of my womb, when youth with comeliness plucked all gaze his way, when for a day of kings’ entreaties a mother should not sell him an hour from her beholding, I, considering how honour would become such a person that it was no better than picture-like to hang by the wall, if renown made it not stir, was pleased to let him seek danger where he was like to find fame. To a cruel war I sent him; from whence he returned, his brows bound with oak. I tell thee, daughter, I sprang not more in joy at first hearing he was a man-child than now in first seeing he had proved himself a man. VIRGILIA But had he died in the business, madam; how then? VOLUMNIA Then his good report should have been my son; I therein would have found issue. Hear me profess sincerely: had I a dozen sons, each in my love alike and none less dear than thine and my good Marcius, I had rather had eleven die nobly for their country than one voluptuously surfeit out of action.
Both characters are brave, strong, successful soldiers: Coriolanus says of Aufidius: …he is a lion That I am proud to hunt. (Act I Scene I) and Aufidius says of Coriolanus: If we and Caius Marcius chance to meet, Tis sworn between us we shall ever strike Till one can do no more. (Act I Scene II)
Using the template on the following page, storyboard a sequence showing an earlier meeting between these two characters that explains Aufidius’s vow to fight Coriolanus to the death. Think about how you would show each of the characters and suggest the tension between them, as well as indicating their respect of each other’s fighting skill.