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Macbeth

"All hail Macbeth that shall be king"

Feature film adaptation of Shakespeare's Scottish play about General Macbeth whose ambitious wife urges him to use wicked means in order to gain power of the throne over the sitting king, Duncan.

Top Cast

  • Michael Fassbender

    Michael Fassbender

    Macbeth

  • Marion Cotillard

    Marion Cotillard

    Lady Macbeth

  • Paddy Considine

    Paddy Considine

    Banquo

  • Sean Harris

    Sean Harris

    Macduff

  • Jack Reynor

    Jack Reynor

    Malcolm

  • Elizabeth Debicki

    Elizabeth Debicki

    Lady Macduff

  • David Thewlis

    David Thewlis

    Duncan

  • David Hayman

    David Hayman

    Lennox

  • Maurice Roëves

    Maurice Roëves

    Menteith

Overview

Feature film adaptation of Shakespeare's Scottish play about General Macbeth whose ambitious wife urges him to use wicked means in order to gain power of the throne over the sitting king, Duncan.

Rating

6.4 / 10
1,527 Reviews
1 Popular

2 Reviews

  • Andres Gomez
    Andres Gomez
    6 Oct 17, 2016

    The directing and the photography are very good. The use of the color, the smoke and fog and the speed of the camera are very well chosen. Fassbender gives a very good performance, but it swallows everybody else in the movie. What I don't like that much of this version is that Lady Macbeth almost fades away. Her character is not as important as it should be and, in the end, everything is expected and everything becomes a bit boring.

  • CinemaSerf
    CinemaSerf
    6 Apr 13, 2022

    The thing about this play is that it is almost impossible to distil it down to two hours. Like most of Shakespeare's tragedies, there is immense richness in the language; in the pace the story develops; in the nuanced characterisations and in the imagery. Sure, the medium can reduce the need for much of the more descriptive narrative but it still takes time for the plotting and scheming; the menace and the power lust to percolate through. Now this isn't a terrible interpretation. Michael Fassbender is reasonable as the ambitious Thane of Glamis. He is informed by three witches after a battle that his accession to King Duncan's throne is assured, and together with his equally determined wife (Marion Cotillard) he sets about expediting that process. Not everyone believes his feigned innocence though, and that means he has to start removing his detractors - not least Banquo (Paddy Considine) and the late king's son Malcolm (an oddly cast Jack Raynor), and it's at this point that their cunning plan begins to unravel. The film looks great, the soundtrack is eerie and effective and the costumes, scenery and lighting really do help to convey something of the real Scottish environment; but again the absence of many significant plot lines - the caveats with the witches' initial prophecy, for example, rob the storyline of much of it's complex potency. The character of Lady Macbeth is underused as an underpinning motivation for her husband's actions and essentially we are just left with a rather straightforward story of power-hungry murder. It is worth watching, but it is also underwhelming.

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