Actress takes Lady Macbeth role at small theater, flirts with young director. Haunted by Shakespeare's ghost wanting rewrites. Premise centers around performance, supernatural presence influ... Read allActress takes Lady Macbeth role at small theater, flirts with young director. Haunted by Shakespeare's ghost wanting rewrites. Premise centers around performance, supernatural presence influencing production.Actress takes Lady Macbeth role at small theater, flirts with young director. Haunted by Shakespeare's ghost wanting rewrites. Premise centers around performance, supernatural presence influencing production.
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Keith Boynton is wordsmith with a delicate touch, an eye for opportunity to interpret romance, magic, and to give the Bard a chance to revise his work. The cast played their parts to the hilt. I loved the film, and will revisit it with great joy. Boynton is truly a romantic at heart, with fresh breath of air!
As an aficionado of Shakespeare, I have to give Boynton high marks for his use of iambic pentameter: just right. The actors rose to the task of making the film a romantic reality. Believable at every turn. .
The film was too short for my liking, but that doesn't damper my marks for the best film I've seen in many a year.
As an aficionado of Shakespeare, I have to give Boynton high marks for his use of iambic pentameter: just right. The actors rose to the task of making the film a romantic reality. Believable at every turn. .
The film was too short for my liking, but that doesn't damper my marks for the best film I've seen in many a year.
I don't think I've ever seen a movie that seemed so assured in certain aspects and so inept in others. The concept is good; the script--which faces the considerable challenge of providing clear and witty blank verse dialogue and credible additional scenes for Macbeth--is often excellent; the tough parts of the actress and the ghost are handled well; and the cinematography is often lovely.
On the other hand, the pacing is poor, especially in the sluggish first half, in ways that could easily have been corrected. On at least two occasions, one character relates to another what happened in the previous scene--explanation that's begging to be cut. The set-up should have been established much more quickly, leaving more time for the payoff--the rehearsals and the performance of the play within the movie--which are entertaining, when they finally arrive.
The editing is far too busy: too many cuts, too many different shots, too much cutting back and forth during stretches of dialogue--all rather exhausting, undermining some decent material.
Finally, the actor playing the 'charmingly awkward' young theater director is all awkward and no charm. Not his fault, I suspect; he's not right for the part, and it doesn't seem he got much help from the director.
This could have been a fine little movie; it's hard to understand how the people involved could have missed such glaring problems.
On the other hand, the pacing is poor, especially in the sluggish first half, in ways that could easily have been corrected. On at least two occasions, one character relates to another what happened in the previous scene--explanation that's begging to be cut. The set-up should have been established much more quickly, leaving more time for the payoff--the rehearsals and the performance of the play within the movie--which are entertaining, when they finally arrive.
The editing is far too busy: too many cuts, too many different shots, too much cutting back and forth during stretches of dialogue--all rather exhausting, undermining some decent material.
Finally, the actor playing the 'charmingly awkward' young theater director is all awkward and no charm. Not his fault, I suspect; he's not right for the part, and it doesn't seem he got much help from the director.
This could have been a fine little movie; it's hard to understand how the people involved could have missed such glaring problems.
As a lifelong theater geek, this film is balm for my soul! That being said, it's not really about "The Thea-tah", (to be read in pretentious upper-class snotty tones!), it's about what all great works of art are about--love, connection, and living fully in the brief flare of our bright hours on this spinning globe. Who better to encompass all that life in gorgeous language than the Bard? Apparently Keith Boynton, whose lines for Shakespeare in this beautiful film are virtually indistinguishable from Shakespeare's own. I eagerly await his next project, and am trying really, really hard not to hate him for being so damn young and so incredibly talented...
I only give this beautiful gem nine stars because it could have been a lot longer and I wouldn't have cared in the least. I normally don't like Shakespearean acting, but this film is not only great, it's enlightening. Brilliantly written and equally acted, I carry a renewed love for Shakespearean theatre because for the first time I've been shown the great playwright as a human god instead of some capricious tyrant from Mount Olympus. Bravo to everyone involved!
Theatre friends, Bard buffs, Macbeth mavens, iambic pentameter addicts and lovers of a classic rom-com in which all ends well, I beg you not to miss this lovely movie. Polymathic writer-director Keith Boynton brings a gentle and satisfying gem of a movie that is literate, lovely to look at and listen to, and purely enjoyable. Anyone who has worked or seen any New England theatre festival performance will feel right at home here. Every discipline in this movie, from writing to acting to directing to lights, sound, cinematography, location and sets, is exquisitely right. Shout out to the hilariously acted character of the stage manager! My new favorite Christmas movie. After all, A Christmas Carol is a ghost story, too.
Did you know
- TriviaGeraint Wyn Davies played MacBeth in Season 2 of "Slings and Arrows" starring Paul Gross.
- How long is The Scottish Play?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 53m(113 min)
- Color
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