Coriolanus Comments

  • Shaniya 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    The Iraqi scene movie version of Shakespeare's play is too...

  • Enrico 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    It is really unaccustomed to move to the modern age...

  • Deon 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    Three and a half. No matter how you see Shakespeare's lines in a modern context, your whole body is twisted. Talking normally can save at least half an hour. The first half of the movie can be said to be a good media textbook, suitable for people who are easily incited, including...

  • Catalina 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    Turning into a movie version of Shakespeare in a suit is really too hard, too stage play. Original dialogue,...

  • Krystal 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    A person's character is like two sides of a coin. There is a good side and a bad side. Coriolanus is brave, arrogant, stubborn, mighty, and unyielding. He has achieved unimaginable feats, but he has also become a senate. Victims of the power...

  • Morgan 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    Putting Shakespeare's story into a modern theme is a good wish, but watching Voldemort and Sparta with submachine guns speaking Shakespeare's lines is very timeless. The characters come from ancient times, and the story can't go back to modern...

  • Arvilla 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    Shakespeare, forgive...

  • Bulah 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    Coriolanus is an adaptation of Shakespeare. It's just that the background of the film is set in the contemporary era, and the lines with a large sense of drama seem a bit...

  • Carmella 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    A mighty epic might be more powerful in a medieval setting. A considerable part of the energy is spent on understanding the lines. Have a further understanding of the hero patriot...

  • Emmanuel 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    Movies with good ideas are not...

Extended Reading

Coriolanus quotes

  • Tullus Aufidius: Do they still fly to the Roman?

    Volsce Lieutenant: I do not know what witchcraft's in him, but your soldiers use him as the grace before meat, their talk at table, and their thanks at end. And you are darkened in this action, sir.

    Tullus Aufidius: He bears himself more proud, even to my person, than I thought he would when first I did embrace him.

    Volsce Lieutenant: Sir, I beseech you, think you he'll carry Rome?

    Tullus Aufidius: I think he'll be to Rome as is the osprey to the fish, who takes it by sovereignty of nature.

  • Volsce Lieutenant: How is it with our general?

    Tullus Aufidius: As with a man by his own charity slain.

    Volsce Lieutenant: Our soldiers will remain uncertain whilst 'twixt you there's difference, but the fall of either makes the survivor heir of all.

    Tullus Aufidius: I know it, and my pretext to strike at him admits a good construction. I raised him, and I pawned mine honor for his truth, who, being so heightened, he watered his new plants with dews of flattery, seducing so my friends. At the last, I seemed his follower, not his partner, and he waged me with his countenance as if I had been mercenary.

    Volsce Lieutenant: So he did, my lord. The army marveled at it. And in the last, when he had carried Rome and that we looked for no less spoil than glory...

    Tullus Aufidius: There was it! For which my sinews shall be stretched upon him. At a few drops of women's rheum, which are as cheap as lies, he sold the blood and labor of our great action. Therefore shall he die, and I'll renew me in his fall.