One thing is that he keeps giving Fortunato alcohol/drinks purposely to do what he has to do.
No, Montresor is not a reliable narrator. He is manipulative and deceptive, using his storytelling to justify his actions and portray himself as the victim when he is actually the one committing a heinous act of murder. He is a skilled liar who carefully crafts his narrative to mislead the reader.
The narrator's last name in "The Cask of Amontillado" is Montresor.
Montresor is considered an unreliable character in Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Cask of Amontillado." He deceives and manipulates his victim, Fortunato, leading him into a trap under false pretenses. Montresor's narration of events is biased and serves his own vengeful motives, making him an untrustworthy narrator.
The narrator in "The Cask of Amontillado" is Montresor. He tells the story of his revenge against Fortunato for an insult he endured. Throughout the story, Montresor manipulates Fortunato into following him to the catacombs where he ultimately traps and walls him up alive.
The narrator of "The Cask of Amontillado" is Montresor. He tells the story of how he seeks revenge on Fortunato, ultimately leading to Fortunato's demise.
In Edgar Allan Poe's story The Cask of Amontillado, the narrator is Montresor.
nibba
Montresor, the protagonist; Fortunato, the antagonist. In addition there are servants who are referred to but never seen and the character Luchesi who also is never seen. There is also the person to whom the narrator, Montresor is speaking. At one point, Montresor says, "you who know me so well" as if he is speaking to a person in the story.
Montresor, the narrator, is the main character. and fortunato is the other main character
The main conflict in "The Cask of Amontillado" is between Montresor, who seeks revenge on Fortunato for an insult, and Fortunato, who is unsuspecting and unaware of Montresor's true intentions as he leads him deeper into the catacombs under false pretenses. This conflict drives the tension and suspense of the story as Montresor's dark plan unfolds.
The point of view is that of the first person from the protagonist/main character Montresor.the point of view of the cask of amontillado is gothic and dark because the narrator montresor tells the reader how he tortured fortunato
Unreliable narrator. The usual example of this is 'The Cask of Amontillado' by Edgar Alan Poe, wherein the narrator Montresor is progressively seen as been mad rather than credible.
A storyteller who is easy to trust