Closer (Methuen Drama)
The play focuses on the complex relationships, politics and morality of four people trading partners in search of love and lust. It uniquely blends elements of tragedy, comedy, and melodrama and challenges audience perceptions at every turn. Marber turns upside down romantic notions of love and...
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The play focuses on the complex relationships, politics and morality of four people trading partners in search of love and lust. It uniquely blends elements of tragedy, comedy, and melodrama and challenges audience perceptions at every turn. Marber turns upside down romantic notions of love and sex uniting two people as one and pointedly challenges the idealistic notion that total honesty is the best way to preserve a relationship. As the four characters move in and out of relationships and expose their individual bleak takes on those relationships, the audience sees their self-delusions and their futile journey to find what they really desire in life. Marber's writing is noted for rapid dialogue with a staccato rhythm and intense exchanges that are at times abrasive and explicit in nature and are infused throughout with dark humor. This Student Edition comes complete with a full introduction, plot synopsis, commentary, discussion of the film version, bibliography and questions for study. It is the perfect edition for anyone studying the play at school or college.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780713683295 (0713683295)
Publish date: February 26th 2007
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Pages no: 224
Edition language: English
Category:
Academic,
School,
Literature,
European Literature,
British Literature,
Adult Fiction,
Media Tie In,
Movies,
Romance,
20th Century,
Plays,
Drama,
Theatre
Very much a play of its time (especially the rise of the In-Yer-Face theatrical movement of the 90s) but still fresh and interesting today. Veering between witty and heartbreaking, Closer analyses the human relationships and how something so intimate and beautiful as sex and love can ultimately be a...
A surprisingly more thorough relationship between the four protagonists in the book/play than was portrayed in the movie. The extra dialogue did make you understand Dan a bit more, and it made him even more unlikable. It makes me appreciate the screen version even more, because I can see how the ext...