

What came first-The chicken or the egg? Hamlet or The Lion king?
As soon as I began reading this play, my immediate thoughts were how strikingly similar Claudius is to 'Scar', (an evil character in The Lion King for those of you who are unaware of their DISNEY CLASSICS!). Let me divulge into the similarities that make me question if Walt Disney was basing a childrens favorite on the works of an English playright. It may be a farfetched theory, but their is undoubtetdly proof to support such a claim.
Scar is the brother of Mufasa, a kindhearted, generous and majestic king who is stern on his son, Simba, but only to teach him to become a responsible adult and future king. As Mufasas brother, Scar was next in line for the throne until Simba was born. Throuhgout the movie, he is obsessed with the need to possess the kingdom in anyway he can. He is evil and cunning and while masquerading as a good man to his nephew, he plots to kill Mufasa and successfully does so.
Claudius is the brother of Hamlet's recently deceased father, and thus the uncle of Hamlet. He is the antagonist of the play, just as Scar is of the movie. He has a unwavering lust for power, and is ambitious, manipulating and villainous.
Check out the two photos posted...Two Conniving Look-A-Likes.
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Hamlet's first soliloquy in act 1 scene 11, expresses Hamlets disraughtness from the death of his father so much that he consideres suicide as he wishes god hadn't made it sinful as he says, " Or that the Everlasting had not fix’dHis canon ’gainst self-slaughter!" He is also even more so distresssed and disgusted by his Mothers marriage to Claudius. The idea lies behind a sort of incest as he says, "with such dexterity to incestuous sheets. ”He harps on the marriage being bad for Denmark as it " is not nor it cannot come to good.”


The question of right or wrong in this play can be better described in a sense of sympathy for the characters or lack of. Upon reading the entire play, my feeligns towards the chracters varied immensely. Although in my first post I discuss how the honor does not surpass the excessive killing, I now see the characters actions as more of concern of a means to an end. As I said in class, a praying mantises way of reproduction falls along the same lines. The male rapes the female, and the female attacks back, biting his head off and eating it, yet it still impregnates her. The comparison I am trying to make here is that when we learn of this or maybe see this take place, we immediately have negative feelings toward the male and think his actions are wrong. But as angry as this may make us, the male is doing this for a cause, he is continuing his species existence. So as Titus killing his own son may seem very wrong, he is doing it for the sake of carrying on the honor. And with the other characters who kill, they kill for their country. So when you look at the play at a whole, this is what I mean of it all being done for a means to an end. 