Monday, May 12, 2008

Acting Hamlet in the Village of Mrdusa Donja

Predstava Hamleta u selu Mrduša Donja; tragicomedy, Croatia, 1973; D: Krsto Papić, S: Rade Šerbedžija, Milena Dravić, Krešimir Zidarić, Fabijan Šovagović, Ljubiša Samardžić, Ilija Ivezić, Mate Ergović, Izet Hajdarhodžić, Zvonko Lepetić, Zdenka Hersak, Slavica Maras

In the village Mrduša Donja in the Dalmatian Zagora, the position of the president of the working community was grabbed by Mate, who also stole some money and put the blame on a war veteran. But Joco, the veteran's son, wants to find out the truth. In order to celebrate the anniversary of his election, Mate orders the villagers to organize the play ''Hamlet'' with himself playing the King. The professor simplifies the text for the villagers, while the role of Hamlet goes to Joco. When the play starts and he hears his father committed suicide, Joco takes a knife and stabs Mate for real, and then runs away. But Mate continues to celebrate and eat, even though wounded, dancing with his followers.

In 1973 the satirical cult play "Acting Hamlet in the Village of Mrdusa Donja" by Ivo Brešan was too seriously, but still professionally adapted by director Krsto Papić. That way he got an ambitious drama-within-a-drama that criticizes dictators and autocratic rulers (an obvious jab at the Yugoslav Communist Party at the time), here symbolically embodied by the conceited Mate—the president of the working community who in order to honor and celebrate the anniversary of his election organizes the play "Hamlet" with himself in the role of the King!—but the best parts still remained those humorous bits. And the humor shines mostly in the first half where the local professor is anguished by trying to "adapt Shakespeare to the Balkan way", i.e. making it simple enough for the villagers to understand it. That way Hamlet and Ophelia became Amlet and Omelia, and among the "improved" monologues is also this one: "Look at Polonius over there, how he wants to ride an ox all by himself! The king would always like a seat, because it always licks his bare ass!" In English it doesn't sound so funny, but since it rhymes in Croatian, it is a riot. Too bad Papić did not more passionately embrace such a hilarious subplot that makes a caricature of "Hamlet", but the parallels between the play and the relationships of the characters are good, while the ending, although too bitter, is wonderfully nihilistic—such a subversive critique of autocratic politicians who celebrate the injustice that keeps them in power, devour and dance, without any consideration of others, is equal to a dark classic.

Grade:++

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