The director even went far enough to have Nora wear a hospital bracelet, hinting at her being a patient. Torvald moves away from being her huband, and instead acts like her doctor. Even when he is calling her pet names, it is without love or heart, it is simply showing that she belongs to him. There is a "frigid chemistry" between the two, and the director wanted to show from the start that the marriage is fake and has no love behind it.
I think it's an interesting idea to focus on Nora being trapped, but I also think it moves away from Ibsen's original ideas. I like the idea that the house looks comfortable and some place where the audience would want to live and then we can join Nora on her journey as her story unravels. I think it would have been better if the house starts out as Ibsen describes it and then slowly gets darker, but not to the gloomy place that this version ends up. I also think it's better for the audience to believe in Nora and Torvald's relationship in the beginning, because it makes it more interesting when it slowly breaks apart.
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ReplyDeleteThe play with the yellow walls reminds me of a story that I read about a woman whose baby has been taken away from her and she lives in this yellow wall papered room and her husband treats her like a patient rather than a wife and she goes insane...the author committed suicide i think (sorry i forgot the name of the story!)
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