Earl Edward, you turn a little smoke

Chelsey 2022-03-24 09:02:57

Shakespeare, the Tudors, court intrigues, royal scandals. When these elements come together it gives me a reason to watch. As soon as this play came out, it happened to catch up with the battle between Fang Zhouzi and Han Han, and it was suspected that this film was here to help out.

For the palace part, even if you have read the extras, even those who are true and false, even if they are experts in the history department who are familiar with the details, I am afraid they will not be able to guarantee their votes. After all, history only records the "truths" it wants to let future generations know.

Whether Shakespeare is male or female, gay or heterosexual (although this Uncle Edward is suspected of being a little smoky, very artistic Gay), whether he is illiterate or a genius, I don't really care, the important thing is that he really stayed. works below. Good works can infect everyone from the bottom of their hearts, whether they are nobles or commoners.

Leaving aside those familiar classics on the surface is an achievement. Although the theater is simple, the stage setting and scene effects are not ambiguous at all. Compared with the avant-garde experimental plays staged in small theaters today, the quality is not the same. Is art regressing, or how many people deceive the audience and themselves under the guise of art?

View more about Anonymous reviews

Extended Reading

Anonymous quotes

  • Ben Jonson: Politics? My play has nothing to do with politics. I-i-i-it's just a simple comedy.

    Earl of Oxford: It showed your betters as fools who'd go through life barely managing to get food from plate to mouth were it not for the cleverness of their servants. All art is political, Jonson, otherwise it would just be decoration. And all artists have something to say, otherwise they'd make shoes. And you are not a cobbler, are you Jonson.

  • Young Earl of Oxford: [after sword gets knocked into young Robert Cecil's chess game] You were losing anyway.

    Boy Robert Cecil: [had been playing alone] I was also winning!

    Young Earl of Oxford: [tosses a piece back at Robert, who misses it] Really?