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The Night Crew

Sleep vs. The All-Nighter

The epic struggle.

I usually go to bed if I can get at least 4 hours of sleep. If it's less than that, I'll usually stay awake for a while and then get ready for the next day. If I end up taking a short nap after that, so be it.
 
^ Same here. I hate doing all-nighters if I can at least get an okay amount of sleep.

It's weird. I absolutely hate going to bed, and put it off for as long as possible, but once I'm there I never want to get up. :lol:
 
^I'm a master of all-nighters. Too much of one, actually.
Let's stay up all night talking about Hamlet. I was in a play once that was a parody of Hamlet based on the story Run Spot Run. I was Rosencrantz.

EDIT: As long we don't have to kill ourselves because our families are dweebs. That'd kind of suck, as romantic as it is.
Hamlet is so good that I already want to watch it again -- and I've only watched the first half!
 
Which one? Kenneth Braunagh?

^ Same here. I hate doing all-nighters if I can at least get an okay amount of sleep.

It's weird. I absolutely hate going to bed, and put it off for as long as possible, but once I'm there I never want to get up. :lol:

Yeah, me too. :(
 
Yeah, I tried to add the tag "delayed sleep phase syndrome" to this thread awhile ago but it exceeded the character limit :mad:
 
Which one? Kenneth Braunagh?
Yes! I just bought it. I haven't seen it since high school. I love that nothing is cut (which is why I watched only half today). Most intriguing, though, is the set. It was brilliant to set it in the 19th century -- at once it made it more accessible without the jarring contrast of the language in a modern-day setting, and the brightness, the ornateness, and the cleanliness throw the darkness of the play into sharp relief. The palace, with it's doors in bookcases, two-way mirrors, hidden passageways, all surounded by a snow-blanketed maze of a garden is simply a fun metaphor for Hamlet's madness. I am also quite fond of his interpretation, particularly, the exact moment when Hamlet becomes aware of Polonius and Claudius eavesdropping. It's not perfect, and there are definitely things I would change, but it's a brilliant version.


Although, I must confess that I couldn't help but imagine David Tennant and Patrick Stewert in their respective roles at least half the time. :D
 
:lol: Because you think they're such dreamboats?

It is a brilliant version. I'm sure it'll be the benchmark for quite some time.
 
^He he, that was a fun read. :)
:lol: Because you think they're such dreamboats?

It is a brilliant version. I'm sure it'll be the benchmark for quite some time.
Because I experience great physical and emotional pain every time I remember that they're playing Hamlet and I'm never going to see it.

There is not an emoticon to express the grief I am experiencing.
 
Yes! We have to watch Hamlet together. Anything else is an aimless life filled with grief. ;)

EDIT: And with that admission in place, I am off to bed!
 
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Which one? Kenneth Braunagh?
Yes! I just bought it. I haven't seen it since high school. I love that nothing is cut (which is why I watched only half today). Most intriguing, though, is the set. It was brilliant to set it in the 19th century -- at once it made it more accessible without the jarring contrast of the language in a modern-day setting, and the brightness, the ornateness, and the cleanliness throw the darkness of the play into sharp relief. The palace, with it's doors in bookcases, two-way mirrors, hidden passageways, all surounded by a snow-blanketed maze of a garden is simply a fun metaphor for Hamlet's madness. I am also quite fond of his interpretation, particularly, the exact moment when Hamlet becomes aware of Polonius and Claudius eavesdropping. It's not perfect, and there are definitely things I would change, but it's a brilliant version.


Although, I must confess that I couldn't help but imagine David Tennant and Patrick Stewert in their respective roles at least half the time. :D

Well, if Stewart ever actually makes The Merchant Of Venice (Vegas in his version) with Ian McKellen, you may get your wish...

As for Hamlet, I risk committing sacrilege when I say this but I loved the 2000 version set in New York City. True, a lot was cut out, and Ethan Hawke's acting ability is such that he would have a hard time conveying the concept of falling if you pushed him off a cliff, but as far as I'm concerned any film with Kyle MacLachlan in it can't be all bad.

And the Denmark Corporation... :lol:
 
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