Sunday, 26 July 2015

What are the specific parallels between Shakespeare's The Tempest and Forbidden Planet?

It's my understanding that Morbius, the scientist in Forbidden Planet who is alone save for his daughter, is a reflection of Prospero, the anti-hero of Shakespeare's play who is likewise living alone on an island with his daughter. Both Morbius and Prospero seek to control the elements, and thus the world around them, through 'magic' - in Morbius' case, an advanced alien technology.



In both versions of the story a group of young men (sailors swept in by the tempest of the title, a space crew on a routine mission) enter this supposed utopia, only to cause upheaval and eventual destruction when the leader of said groups falls in love with Morbius/Prospero's daughter.



One other factor that surely reveals the origins of Forbidden Planet's storyline is the inclusion in both versions of a cook for comic relief, this character being a drunken buffoon in both versions.

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