O (Film)

O (Film) Literary Elements

Director

Tim Blake Nelson

Leading Actors/Actresses

Mekhi Phifer, Josh Hartnett, Julia Stiles

Supporting Actors/Actresses

Martin Sheen, Elden Henson

Genre

Drama

Language

English

Awards

N/A

Date of Release

2001

Producer

Daniel Fried, Eric Gitter

Setting and Context

A South Carolina Private School - 1999

Narrator and Point of View

The film suggests that Hugo is the narrator, as he speaks through voiceover in the opening scene about how he has always desired to "soar" above others. This monologue frames the rest of the plot.

Tone and Mood

serious, grave, dramatic

Protagonist and Antagonist

The protagonist is O, and the antagonist is Hugo.

Major Conflict

Hugo, jealous of his teammate, sets in motion a plan to destroy O's basketball career, relationship, and future.

Climax

O believes that Desi is cheating on him with Michael and agrees to strangle her while Hugo kills Roger, who fumbles in killing Michael. Only after Desi has died does O realize he has been set up by Hugo.

Foreshadowing

The image of O sprawled out against the red paint of the basketball court foreshadows the impending bloodshed at the end of the film.

Understatement

Hugo tells O that sometimes he "sees things that aren't really there." This is Hugo's understated way of implying to O that Desi is cheating on him. However, Hugo uses vagueness and subtlety to make himself seem more innocent than he is.

Innovations in Filming or Lighting or Camera Techniques

In many ways, the film itself is an innovation of Shakespeare's original play. Nelson adapted Shakespeare's Othello for a modern audience, switching the sixteenth-century Venetian setting to a South Carolina American high school. The soundtrack is also modern, featuring contemporary rap and hip-hop music. Nelson also modernized the names of the characters, switching Othello to simply Odin or simply "O," Iago to Hugo, Desdemona to Desi, and so on.

Allusions

The film alludes to its source material in a moment of comedic relief, when an English teacher asks Hugo if he can name any of Shakespeare's poems. Hugo responds that he thought Shakespeare "only wrote movies," an ironic and meta-cinematic reference to the original play.

Paradox

The central paradox of the play is that Hugo is able to catalyze so much destruction in the play by simply speaking to other characters and operating from a distance. This paradox emphasizes O's own inherent conflicts with jealousy, masculinity, and identity.

Parallelism

The intermittent scenes of doves and hawks parallel the drama occurring among the characters, as Hugo (the hawkish villain) disrupts the peace and tranquility shared by O and Desi.

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