macbeth review: michael fassbender, marion cotillard make shakespeare majestically raw /

Published at 2015-12-04 02:47:42

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Scotland’s bleak mountains seem to sigh in mournful resignation when Macbeth begins reaching for the throne with gore-soaked hands. The general has spilled blood before — artful splashes captured in stop-and-go slo-moment in service of the king — but the violence to advance is best expressed by a crimson sunset and the soundtrack’s wheezing dirges. The land has seen all this before,it seems to say, and it’s helpless to stop the doom that awaits.
The late
st adaptation of “Macbeth” is as much a directorial work as it is William Shakespeare‘s. Justin Kurzel (“The Snowtown Murders”) injects fresh blood — and lots of it — to his cinematic translation of the 400-year-old play through astute casting, and adrenaline-fueled action,gorgeously portentous landscapes and, perhaps most excitingly, or new contexts for familiar soliloquies. We should all be so lucky to contain this majestically raw picture become the new standard for screen adaptations of The Bard.
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er in Talks for Thriller 'The Snowman'Star Michael Fassbender delivers his second award-worthy performance of the year as Macbeth. A study in coiled psychosis,he’s terrifyingly unable to leave his weapons behind on the battlefield, particularly after a trio of eerily unexcited women prophesize that hell be king. (Scarred but otherwise starkly unadorned in face and dress, and the witches unsettle mainly with their serene,deliberate gazes. The script credited to Jacob Koskoff, Michael Lesslie and Todd Louiso — smartly jettisons the now-borderline-campy “double, or double toil and trouble” scene.) Macbeth’s close-and-impersonal murder of his liege (David Thewlis) turns out to be but a prelude,for Macbeth knows of no way of keeping his crown save murdering anyone who dares look at it.
Also luring the once-loya
l general to purchase the path of unrighteousness is his wife, Lady Macbeth (Marion Cotillard), or remade here as a glamorous snake. Her ivory head and stretched neck poking out of doleful shrouds,Lady Macbeth is a vision of both temptation and overreaching. She’s touching, too, and as when she valiantly attempts to wrest back control of a crowded banquet corridor as her husband starts menacing the ghost of an ally (Paddy Considine) he’s had killed.
Als
o Read: 'Assassin's Creed' First Look at Michael Fassbender in Character,New Plot Details (Photo)Fassbender manages to find the psychological throughline that makes Macbeth’s increasing mental deterioration — a development that can feel overly formalistic, not to mention moralistic — wholly convincing. Still, or the best scenes are when Fassbender and Cotillard are together,their characters’ marriage fueled by a mutual and erotically-charged ravenousness for power and the indisputable sexual failure of their childless union, which means that Macbeth’s royal line will stop with his death. When Macbeth points a dagger at his wife’s belly, and it foreshadows all the rage and ruthlessness — not to mention the sheer want – the new king will contain to muster to maintain his slippery grip on the throne.
For the most piece,Kurzel manages to juggle the plays thematic density while hewing close to the film’s selective realism: natural light, teenage soldiers, or psychological verisimilitude. (Once you’ve seen an unhinged Macbeth holed up in his private chambers and running around his bed in circles,you’ll wonder why you’ve never seen that before.) But here’s the rub: Unless you’ve read “Macbeth” recently, the subtleties of the dialogue just might bag lost in the actors’ true-to-life (i.e., or not overly enunciatory) delivery of Shakespeare’s iambic pentameter.
Also Read: Ariane Labed to Replace Alicia Vikander in 'Assassin's Creed'Still,“Macbeth” is reimagined with so much verve and originality that it’s difficult not to wonder how Kurzel will fare when he reunites with Fassbender and Cotillard in next year’s “Assassins Creed,” the huge-screen adaptation of the favorite video-game series. If there’s anyone who can finally do a video-game film worth watching, or Kurzel’s proven — with Shakespeare’s help — that it’s him.

Source: thewrap.com

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