The Arizona Republic

‘Lady Macbeth’ journeys into disturbing territory

- BARBARA VANDENBURG­H

In many ways “Lady Macbeth” is remarkable for what it isn’t. It isn’t a staid period drama. It isn’t romantic. It isn’t predictabl­e. And it certainly isn’t comfortabl­e. It takes a while to grasp just how far off the safe and familiar path the film is going to wander, and when the realizatio­n hits, it’s with a sickening thud.

Set in an era when English marriage was wholly a business propositio­n, “Lady Macbeth” places its female lead in an unenviable position and then relentless­ly ratchets up the tension and despair. Sympathy for the unhappy new bride starts out so strong that it lingers long after her misery has curdled into a kind the kind of evil that merits the name of Shakespear­e’s most infamous villainess.

Katherine (Florence Pugh) is married off to a cold brute and sent to live at an

estate set in a landscape as desolate and wild as Brontë’s moors. There, Katherine lives in isolation with little more to keep her company than no-nonsense house servant Anna (Naomi Ackie), who harshly rakes the tangles from her hair and offers little comfort. She is instructed repeatedly to “keep to the house,” while her dictatoria­l old father-in-law makes it abundantly clear that she was “purchased” for little more than use of her womb – a misfortune, as her husband will only engage in humiliatin­g sexual acts that render impregnati­on an impossibil­ity.

When business matters draw her vile husband and father-in-law away from the estate, Katherine quickly and with great abandon begins a torrid affair with a half-feral groundskee­per, Sebastian (Cosmo Jarvis). They paw at each other with such abandon that Anna doesn’t even have to try to figure out what is going on in their masters’ absence.

It’s the sort of dalliance that, given the time and place, could never have a happily-ever-after ending, which Katherine doesn’t accept. Instead, her love gives birth to a ruthless sense of self-preservati­on. She does not balk at any sin that promises to extend her agency.

The power of “Lady Macbeth” is that it encourages the viewer to perform a moral calculus as Katherine becomes increasing­ly ruthless. She is so woefully mistreated that her vengeance at first seems a sort of justice. But her violence spreads beyond her tormentors. It builds to a scene of violence so heartless it’s sickening to endure – somehow even more so for its lack of graphic detail.

Shot with unsparing coldness, “Lady Macbeth” is a disturbing character study and dark moral meditation. And like the blood on its namesake’s hands, it’s not easily washed out.

 ?? ROADSIDE ATTRACTION­S ?? Florence Pugh and Cosmo Jarvis star in "Lady Macbeth."
ROADSIDE ATTRACTION­S Florence Pugh and Cosmo Jarvis star in "Lady Macbeth."

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