Coriolanus Resources
Websites
Yeah, we'll say it: we're the best of the web! (Ooh. Hope that doesn't lead to our slaughter by the Volscians.) Check out our Shakespeare page for all the dirt on your favorite playwright.
Cool quiz tests your knowledge of character names featured in both Coriolanus and The Hunger Games.
Read the entire play online or do a search for your favorite characters' lines. (Also try searching for "wounds." We told you they were important.
Movie or TV Productions
Gerard Butler and Ralph Fiennes kick serious butt in this contemporary adaptation of Coriolanus. (Think Shakespeare meets The Hurt Locker.)
Movies or TV Productions
This is the one teachers showed in class before the 2011 film came out. It's a solid production, but students tend to think it's a snooze compared to Ralph Fiennes' action flick.
Articles and Interviews
Snarky article about T.S. Eliot's love for Shakespeare's play. (And why a certain Slate writer thinks T.S. Eliot is out of his mind.)
According to writer David Edelstein's review of Coriolanus (2011), Ralph Fiennes "acts and directs the bloody hell out of" this flick. We think "bloody hell" is a pretty good description of the play. Read the review or listen to the podcast here.
Video
Check out the 2011 movie trailer.
Clip from the 1984 BBC version of the play.
The actor/director dishes on Coriolanus.
Audio
Shakespeare's plays were meant to be heard. Listen to Coriolanus, compliments of LibriVox.
Images
The "bloody brow" is featured Ralph Fiennes's 2011 movie poster. Seems like a sound choice, given that Coriolanus is almost always covered in blood.
Screen shot from the 2011 film adaptation.
Check out Gaspare Lundi's famous painting Venturia at the Feet of Coriolanus. (FYI: Venturia is the original name of Coriolanus' mom in Plutarch's story but Shakespeare calls her Volumnia in his play.) This painting corresponds to Act 5, scene 3, where Volumnia begs for mercy.
Coriolanus and Aufidius go toe-to-toe in this scene from a 2006 production of the play.