Film Review
It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
signifying nothing... These immortal words surely do not apply to one of
the most famous works in the English language, nor to Orson Welles' haunting film adaptation.
Macbeth! Macbeth! Macbeth!... Like the
indellible blood spot on Lady Macbeth's hand, Shakespeare's darkest play continues to
stain the collective consciousness of the educated English, to the extent that barely
a day passes without some connection being felt, some line recalled or seen, bastardised,
on the cover of a book, in a newspaper or on a billboard. It is a vivid story
centred on the twin follies of ambition and desire for mastery over one's destiny - a
story of ruthless cruelty and bloody revenge. Shakespeare's most accessible play
is also his most spectacular and chilling, and it's not surprising that so many film makers
have been tempted to reformulate it for the big screen.
Macbeth is a play
which - like the Bard's other great piece,
Hamlet
- holds an eternal fascination, as though it were some great Oracle of human experience.
Orson Welles is not a man known for moderation and his take on Macbeth is by no means
a wishy-washy affair, the kind of thing you watch and then forget about straight afterwards.
Yet, neither is it a work of unqualified genius, and some have described it as being amongst
Welles' weakest films. The film has been praised for its bold cinematographic
style and condemned as a grotesque, self-indulgent travesty. Welles apparently had
no qualms about changing Shakespeare's text - moving speeches around, pruning dialogue
and even adding new dialogue here and there (horror!). No less controversially,
the director presents Macbeth less as a morally flawed man whose thirst for ambition brings
about his own destruction, but more as a victim of supernatural forces that cannot be
resisted. (This has similarities with a theatrical version - referred to as
"Voodoo Macbeth" - that Welles staged in 1936, with a cast composed entirely of black
actors.)
Purists would argue that this radical re-interpretation of Shakespeare's
work is thoroughly misguided, since it exculpates Macbeth of his part in the evil that
he perpetrates. Welles seems to regard Macbeth as a mere plaything of celestial forces
- he has no active part in the events that take place, and therefore is blameless of his
crimes. Whilst this does seem like an unwarrantable sacrilege of a great work, it
does perhaps provide an insight into how Welles (and others) saw the world in the aftermath
of World War II. Was it possible that mankind alone should be held responsible for
the destructive forces that had ravaged the world for six years, ruining nations and bringing
the human race to the very brink of annihilation? For those who had lived
through this terrible time, surely it was at least possible to think that events were
being driven by forces beyond our understanding - amoral spirits (or some invisible hand
of history) for whom man is merely a painted toy, a thing to be played with and tormented,
as a child might play and torment the worms it finds in its garden? Rather than
slavishly adapt the work of a greater artist, Welles uses this as a pretext for exploring
some unsettling philosophical ideas on human existence. Consciously or otherwise,
he inverts the irony in Shakespeare's Macbeth, and suggests that our sense of free will
is entirely illusory. As Macbeth himself states (when he realises the game is up),
we are mere players on a cosmic stage, speaking only what has already been written for
us, living only what has been pre-determined.
Whatever Welles' real intentions
were, it cannot be denied that the result is an errie, timeless and startlingly original
piece of cinema. Lacking the resources he needed to realise his creative vision,
Welles was compelled to make drastic economies, and in so doing conjures up a world that
has an unnatural, dream-like feel - redolent of Jean Cocteau - but filmed with the raw
primitiveness of Eisenstein, an approach that emphasises the supernatural elements of
the story and the brutal time in which it is set. As in a German expressionist film,
characters are dwarfed by their surroundings, angled shots and aggressive cutting create
a disorientating sense of a world in turmoil and moral decay. And everywhere there
is a cold lingering mist, dark menacing shadows, an all-pervading sense of doom, and sounds,
shrill and stark, that echo deep within our conscious thought.
Few devotees of
Orson Welles would regard this as the director's finest hour, however. Brilliant
as the cinematography is, it is constantly undermined by the characterless reportory-style
acting and some obvious penny pinching on the set design. Welles could have done
far better than to cast himself as Macbeth - his performance lacks any real passion or
human feeling and his portrayal takes away much of the power and pathos which Shakespeare's
dialogue gives him. Even before the film was released, it succumbed to the curse
which (supposedly) befalls every production of the Scottish Play. The distributors
objected to Welles' (bizarre) decision to have the dialogue spoken in an authentic Scottish
accent, and insisted that the film be redubbed so that it would be intelligible to an
American audience. The film was also deemed to be too long (and 107 minutes) and
so was cut to 89 minutes. It wasn't until the 1980s that the film was restored to
its original (and vastly superior) form. Undeterred, Welles would subsequently make
two further film adaptations of Shakespeare plays -
Othello
(1952) and
Falstaff (Chimes at Midnight) (1965).
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Orson Welles film:
Othello (1952)
Film Synopsis
Triumphant in battle, warriors Macbeth and Banquo return to their home in Scotland and
are greeted by three strange hags who offer them prophecies of future glory. Macbeth
shall be crowned King of Scotland, but it is Banquo's descendents who shall inherit the
throne. Whilst Duncan, the present king, is lodging in Macbeth's castle, the ambitious
Macbeth, encouraged by his wife, performs the terrible act of murder that will ensure
the first prophesy will come true. His attempt to thwart the second prophesy fails
- Banquo is killed but his son Fleance escapes. Macbeth summons up the three witches
and insists on knowing more of what the future offers him. He is assured by what
he hears. No one born of woman can harm Macbeth…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.