Katie Knight
INLS 121
Dr. Sturm
November 3, 2003
Cue Card
The Cask of Amontillado
Bibliographic
Information:
Poe,
Edgar Allan. “The
Cask of Amontillado” from Great Tales of Terror. Watermill
Press, Mahwah, New Jersey. 1980. p. 26-37.
Ethnic Origin:
Running Time:
7
minutes, approx
Power Centers:
Suspense
(how will Montressor get his revenge on Fortunato): the creepiness of
Montressor’s
varying forshadowing (“I drink to your long life”, showing him the
trowel, pointing out how very, very damp the catacombs are).
Terror:
Fortunato’s screams as he’s waiting for Montressor to wall him up-
bury him
alive.
Characters:
Montressor
(narrator), Fortunato (victim), Luchresi (not appearing, but still part of
story)
Scenes:
Montressor
and Fortunato dressed for carnival talking about Amontillado
Montressor
and Fortunato walking through Montressor’s house to the catacombs
Montressor
and Fortunato walking through the catacombs, drinking wine and looking at
the niter on the walls (the moisture drips between the
bones…)
Montressor
and Fortunato finding the final crypt with the pile of bones in front
Fortunato
chained to the granite slab while Montressor bricks him in
Fortunato
and Montressor screaming together (climax)
Montressor
alone in the catacombs (in pace
requiescat)
Synopsis:
Montressor,
a nobleman from
Special Phrases:
Nemo me impune lacessit (no one attacks
me with impunity)
In pace requiescat (may he rest in
peace).
Audience:
Young
adult
Young
adults like to be scared, can identify with a concept like revenge, and would
probably be enticed to read the story (and hopefully other stories)
themselves.
Also, with the Eriksson “intimacy vs. isolation” stage that
young adults tend to go through, there will probably be a subconscious
identification and twisting of these sorts of feelings (the pseudo-intimacy
fostered by Montressor in the name of isolating Fortunato and the subsequent
isolation that Montressor feels after he has done such an awful thing- though
there’s less emphasis on the latter).
You could also see it as an allegory about
the conflict between a lack of imagination and creativity.
Versions/Variants:
Edgar
Allan Poe, though out of copyright, is the only person who wrote this story.