*evil chuckle*
Nov. 15th, 2010 01:11 pmToday in my "Shakespeare: From Stage to Screen" class I showed my students "The Conscience of the King."
BWAHAHAH!
I enjoyed their reactions. They actually seemed to get into it more than I thought they would. We all sniggered a little at the (TERRIBLE) "romantic" scene on the observation deck, but overall I THINK it was a success. I'll find out for sure on Wednesday--the class is 50 mins long, so there was no time even for brief discussion afterwards.
Oh, the phaser effect got a laugh. I guess I can't expect them all to appreciate 60s special effects the way I do.
I've been watching "I Dream of Jeannie" and "Bewitched" and it occurs to me that the women in Star Trek really are a bit more...liberated?...than those on a typical 60s TV show. (Not a big concern for me, but my thought whenever I watch either of those sitcoms is "I bet feminists HATE this!" Hehe)
EDIT: It is sad to me, though, that they, none of them, will fully appreciate the Kirk-Spock-McCoy scene when they discuss whether or not he should kill Kodos...if he even is Kodos. Not only is that a classic triumvirate moment, in my opinion--you really see them play out their roles in their little tri-partite soul-society-thing (that's how I think of it, anyway...)--but it's also a really interesting way of changing the Hamlet soliloquies into not-soliloquies.
But we'll talk about it on Wednesday, and I'll try very hard not to get too fangirlish about the scene.