A Scottish lord becomes convinced by a trio of witches that he will become the next King of Scotland, and his ambitious wife supports him in his plans of seizing power.A Scottish lord becomes convinced by a trio of witches that he will become the next King of Scotland, and his ambitious wife supports him in his plans of seizing power.A Scottish lord becomes convinced by a trio of witches that he will become the next King of Scotland, and his ambitious wife supports him in his plans of seizing power.
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- Nominated for 3 Oscars
- 21 wins & 115 nominations total
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To my mind it bears comparison with Orson Welles inexpensive version.
This is not a low budget version and it boasts heavyweights both behind and in front of the camera. Joel Coen, his wife Frances McDormand and Denzel Washington have 10 Oscars between them.
Denzel Washington as Macbeth starts out as low key before being consumed by his thirst for power as he is approached by the witches. (A contorted performance by Kathryn Hunter.)
To becomes the King of Scotland, he overthrows King Duncan (Brendan Gleeson) with the full support of the scheming Lady Macbeth (Frances McDormand) who likes the idea of becoming Queen.
Macbeth's corruption and paranoia invites revenge from Duncan's heir and Macduff. There is civil war in Scotland.
The text is dense but the film remains accessible. Coen has kept the play stripped down and stagebound.
Lady Macbeth who starts as clever and crafty becomes slowly mad to match her crazed husband.
Hunter shines as the witches. There are good performances from Bertie Carvel as Banquo and Alex Hassell as Ross.
There are a range of accents on offer in the movie, but very few Scottish ones.
1) Having studied the writer cover to cover, I can tell you that the overwhelming ethos of the writer's works is outward-looking/cosmopolitan, playful, humanistic, and above all skeptical of any received knowledge (such as "Shakespeare must be done this way and can't be done that way"). It is a well-established tradition that productions of Shakespeare (and other classical theater/opera) on stage and screen need not always emphasize historical accuracy, but that productions can pick different aesthetics and themes to explore in different productions, and pick times/places real or imagined in which to set a given production. This is well established both in England and around the world. It's generally agreed that today's sense of reimagining Shakespeare's work (and other classical theater/opera) is itself an act of respect and reinvigoration for Shakespeare as one of the most esteemed writers in history and part of our shared cultural heritage on this planet. The majority agrees that producing Shakespeare playfully is part of what keeps the works alive, and from descending into a renaissance faire or re-enactment of a single time and place with every production. I reject rejections of the universality of great cultural works, wherever they come from.
1a) Conversely there's nothing wrong with a given production emphasizing history and place among other themes. There's nothing wrong with either, and neither can do what the other does. But the writer himself hardly put historical or geographical accuracy above all else. There is no reason, outside of ideological horse blinders, to suppose that one or the other is forbidden.
2) Following from the above, it is generally agreed in England and around the world that actors can use their own natural accent to play their roles, given that the decision of characters' accents is more a function of the above creative decisions (the setting, themes to explore and emphasize, etc.) than anything else.
3) I have utter contempt for any notion that humanity has such essential differences that groups should or must be hermetically sealed off from each other, and I reject it regardless of what ideology is supposed to require these divisions, who says so, their sob story or motivations. Specific to acting, we are far better off accepting any casting for any substantially decent reason (whatever the end result), than thinking of ourselves as fundamentally categorized and those categories as hermetically sealed. There is not always a particular reason to cast with freedom in this way above other competing virtues, but the arts across enough time have an impeccable history of disproving the rantings of cranks, puritans, ideologues and pearl-clutchers. Furthermore, it's oil and water to compare casting classical works that have been produced thousands of times with casting works about people in living memory.
All that said, I'd like to review a movie in which the casting and acting in my estimation have problems for other reasons.
* * * * *
Breathtaking retro-formalism in Coen's version of MacBeth is marred by miscasting and patchy acting.
Studio formalism (informed by film from the western world in the 30s and 40s, German expressionism, and pinches of Bergman), yesteryear's 4:3 ratio, stark yet tasteful design and sets, and mid-contrast B&W all combine for a visually exhilarating version of MacBeth.
What might have been one of the greatest adaptations of Shakespeare on film fails to hold the throne due to some combination of acting and casting problems. It could be debated whether the problem is in the miscasting of Washington and McDormand as some have said; either Macbeth and Lady MacBeth cannot reasonably be characters in their sixties, or the pair aren't right for the roles themselves, or Shakespeare at all- whatever else we can say about these two incredible actors, it is fair to say that not every actor can play every role and style. Or, it could be debated whether there is no unity in the acting tones used across the performances.
There are a few acting flaws that I think are beyond debate, and they are intertwined. Most of the performances in Coen's MacBeth fail to unfold Shakespeare for the modern ear, failing to capture the thoughts and feelings within the text. I think it can also be said that the changes in MacBeth and Lady MacBeth, particularly the strangeness they both find themselves in and wind themselves up into, are not rendered in the performances. It pains me to conclude this on a project by one of my favorite directors, but I fear that the acting is more often that not too high-paced and general, and generalized acting is the absolute death of Shakespearean language on stage or screen. One could speculate further on the possible disconnects between what Shakespeare and Joel Coen each do well and why the combination did not bear fruit, but since I deeply admire both in their own right, I will leave off with a sigh.
With beautiful use of lighting and a lack of props, to put complete focus on the characters. While also using the lightning during the film to set different moods and feelings. With an incredibly slow start, this movie might seem boring at first but end up finishing intensely.
The negative reviews surrounding The Tragedy of Macbeth are disappointing. To be fair, without subtitles I wouldn't understand much either. But saying this cast is "woke" is downright disrespectful to the amazing performance by Washington.
The Tragedy of Macbeth is a beautiful piece of film. It's definitely a film worth seeing but a lot of people will be disappointed in the slow start and use of old English.
Also the actors all acting with their emotions on 11, with it all being depressing seems to draw praises and Oscars like the best of baits. Never mind the dreary, long and uninspired monologues (or dialogues if "lucky").
Doesnt anyone have any original ideas anymore? Cant you portray Macbeth in a new, original light and add something new to it, shape it into a form(format we havent seen yet, make it appealing to newer and/or younger audiences. Make it entertaining, informative, moral and multilayered.
Always making these dark, minimalistic and overboard in every aspects productions has gotten beyond boring, bland and a work to get through.
Cinema should be inviting, exploring, adventerous, imaginative, new... This is NOT that, not by a long shot, it is a deja-vu of numerous productions past.
The Coens (even though this is just Joel) are my favorite directors, the cast is incredible and the vibe certainly resonates, but even then I found it to be hollow. I was waiting for that Oscar moment from DENZEL, but it looked like he was contained throughout the production.
I will certainly review the film - with subtitles - to see what that does, but I walked out feeling empty. I thought this would walk away with film of the year, but I don't think it'll even end up in the Top 5 or 10.
Maybe I am the idiot looking for the Sound and Fury that should accompany one of best tales of all time.
Did you know
- TriviaThe whole movie was shot on a soundstage. Everything was built. Except for an element of the last shot in the movie, there isn't a single exterior shot.
- GoofsWhen Banquo and Fleance prepare to leave, Macbeth tells them their horses are ready. But Denzel Washington gets the line backwards. He says, "I commend them to your backs," instead of "I commend you to their backs." He speaks of plural horses, but in the next shot, Fleance is riding the only horse, and Banquo is walking.
- Quotes
Macbeth: Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow, creeps in this petty pace from day to day to the last syllable of recorded time. And all our yesterdays have lighted fools the way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle. Life is but a walking shadow... a poor player that struts and frets his hour upon the stage and then is heard no more. It is a tale told by an idiot... full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
- SoundtracksFair Is Foul (feat. Kathryn Hunter)
Artist: Carter Burwell
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $524,771
- Runtime
- 1h 45m(105 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1






