La machine infernale
A re-imagining of the Oedipus Rex of Sophocles, with some allusions to early 20th century psychiatric thinking. As in Sophocles, there is a
sense of the inexorability of disaster. The opening Act, in which Laius’s ghost has been scene by two sentries and then appears,
inevitably will recall for English readers the opening of Shakespeare’s Hamlet: I suspect that is intentional on Cocteau’s part.
Some of the language is a little grandiose. There are moments of lighter relief, but overall the play is a powerful depiction of the
unremittingness of a fate from which the chief participants have no escape