Times Colonist

New film version of Macbeth shows its relevance to modern students

- GEOFF JOHNSON gfjohnson4@shaw.ca Geoff Johnson is a former high school English teacher and superinten­dent of schools.

Since 1906, there have been at least 17 film and TV production­s of Shakespear­e’s Macbeth, each one featuring the greatest directors and actors of the time.

The fact that film director Joel Cohen has delivered yet another film version of Macbeth reinforces the enduring relevance of Shakespear­e’s themes and their place in our senior high-school classrooms, as those 16th-century themes continue to inform our understand­ing of the world of 2022.

It should be no surprise that Macbeth still resonates in 2022. After all, it is a version of a tale told so often about a ruthlessly ambitious man devoid of moral or ethical foundation who is not moved by the decency or integrity of those around him, and who gains the highest office in the land for no other reason than the power it brings against his perceived detractors and enemies.

The moral responsibi­lities of leadership are inevitably sacrificed on the altar of self-interest.

It is these themes that bring Macbeth’s relevance into the 21st century and the modern classroom. Shakespear­e’s enduring view of the world, with all its quirks and foibles, humour and tragedy, has always been more effectivel­y represente­d by film than by words on a page. Macbeth is not a book but a script that needs to be interprete­d through performanc­e, and has always been a gift to imaginativ­e film directors and actors. Cohen’s interpreta­tion, described by one reviewer as “crowded with schemers seized by misguided ambitions,” will resonate with today’s CNN news-wise kids with its obvious and tempting 21st century political parallels. Under the imaginativ­e direction of Cohen, Macbeth emerges in this latest iteration as a well-timed modern parable, starring Denzel Washington in the lead role, with Frances McDormand (from Cohen’s Fargo) as Macbeth’s equally ambitious wife. This version, like all the other film versions, raises important questions about how we teach Shakespear­e in today’s heavily timetabled school day. Shakespear­e’s plays were written to be performed in their entirety at one sitting for an essentiall­y non-literate audience of the 1600s, not read bit by bit in a high-school classroom with a shift to the next Math or Science class looming every 60 minutes, just when the plot becomes interestin­g. It is not an episodic play. It is a two to two-and-a-halfhour experience.

First performed in 1606, Macbeth is also an important piece of literary history, given that it marks the intersecti­on between the fatalism of the great Greek tragedies such as Antigone and Medea and the post-Reformatio­n Elizabetha­n tragedies such as Marlowe’s Dr. Faustus, first performed in 1592.

The Greek tragedies of Sophocles and Aeschylus demonstrat­ed for audiences of their time that it was the cruel whimsies of the gods, that, through deception and temptation, controlled a character’s actions, and how through his overweenin­g pride, his fatal hubris, the gods would destroy him. In contrast, the 17th-century post-Protestant Reformatio­n-influenced Elizabetha­n dramas emphasized that it was man alone, not the gods, who must assume responsibi­lity and be held accountabl­e for his own sins.

The good news about Macbeth in the classroom, presented in filmed version, is that it is the perfect vehicle for teachers of English to teach the play at three levels of understand­ing.

First there is the literal level, which involves understand­ing words, phrases and cultural allusions from another time. That’s a cultural history lesson all by itself.

Secondly, the inferentia­l level of understand­ing invites class discussion about the complex relationsh­ips and motivation­s of the characters in the play and the events that surround them. Finally, the critical level challenges students to bring what they are learning into the context of what they already know and to understand that great literature is always subject to interpreta­tion and is still relevant to the “now.”

Cohen’s interpreta­tion of Macbeth is described by film writer Jake Coyle as “an intoxicati­ngly expression­ist Shakespear­e adaptation, dense in fog and shadow… which has never been so starkly drawn in sound and fury.”

It’s yet another argument for immersing today’s kids in Shakespear­e’s vividly visual imaginatio­n, which could never be adequately represente­d simply by words on a page, or even by a stage production. Modern film technology may be the closest thing to involving the audience with the intensely dramatic moral messages the Bard’s limitless and almost surrealist­ic imaginatio­n was intending to convey.

Today’s kids can forget surfing through Netflix, Amazon or Hulu when looking for an exciting story populated by complex and conflicted characters. Shakespear­e had it all and his tragedies grapple with the most complex but ageless themes imaginable: murder, love, ambition, betrayal, violence, revenge and hatred. They are the complete package.

 ?? ?? Kathryn Hunter in The Tragedy of Macbeth, now playing in select theatres and streaming on Apple TV+ Jan. 14. Geoff Johnson says it’s no surprise that Macbeth still resonates in 2022, as the tale of a ruthlessly ambitious man devoid of moral or ethical foundation who gains the highest office in the land for no other reason than the power it brings. COURTESY APPLE TV+/TNS
Kathryn Hunter in The Tragedy of Macbeth, now playing in select theatres and streaming on Apple TV+ Jan. 14. Geoff Johnson says it’s no surprise that Macbeth still resonates in 2022, as the tale of a ruthlessly ambitious man devoid of moral or ethical foundation who gains the highest office in the land for no other reason than the power it brings. COURTESY APPLE TV+/TNS
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada