The story takes place in New York City with a modern and corporate twist. Hamlet in this film, is depicted as a lonely, twenty-something aspiring artist, who father was the head of the "Denmark Corporation," had passed away some time ago.
The ghost first visits Hamlet in this version, in his apartment, where he appears on the television screen. The film being set in the modern technological era, with cell phones and credit cards, this seemed appropriate. The ghost in the film appears as a specter. As in life, the Ghost is high up in the corporate ladder at the Denmark Corporation, he is dressed to fit. He commands his son in the same manner in his death as in his life. The level of drama is notched down, and it has an element of thrill in it. The ghost continues to meet Hamlet in an abandoned warehouse, being adapted to the modern day world as a place no one would go to (Burnett, 2003). However, the character of the Ghost lacks the driver and anger that has been displayed by the character in the play script and the version of the film made by Branagh in 1996. The Ghost wasn't convincing in his role as a spirit pursuing vengeance for his murder. It was timid compared to the Ghost depiction in Branagh's Hamlet (1996).
Analysis of Gregory Doran's interpretation of the Ghost in Hamlet 2009:
The 2009 version of Hamlet was directed by British-born Gregory Doran, as an adaptation of the 2008 modern-dress stage production of the play. The film grabbed much critical acclaim with David Tennant (the actor who played Hamlet), being said to have given a generation defining performance (Lusher, 2009). However, the talk of the town is the casting of Patrick Stewart...
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