Seconded. The best play to start with.
As for the film you need to keep the context of when it was filmed - it was adapted by Polanski following the murder of his wife (hence the very bleak undertones) and part-funded by Hugh Hefner (hence the nudity).
If you want a wonderful take on the story try Akira Kurosawa's Throne of Blood (1957).
Fandango gives you art. I give you sensationalist, base entertainment
reply
Lol. It’s a great film. And you can’t do better than a bit of sensationalist, base entertainment if it gets people into the book-of-the-film (do they still do those for modern films?)
reply
Random aside -- when Francis Ford Coppola released "Bram Stoker's Dracula," the novel tie in was not actually "Dracula" as written by Bram Stoker. Instead, they had Fred Saberhagen novelize "Bram Stoker's Dracula." So I'm not sure that movie actually got people to the right book.
reply
Brilliant aside - thank you.
I remember the books when I was a kid and you were waiting for a home video release or similar. Since they were based on scripts they sometimes included things not featured in the final movie…
reply
I don't know. Good question. I haven't seen one in years.
reply
Hunger Games?
I actually read the third book after watching the first two movies haha
reply
Yin n Yang.
We need both to live a balanced life
reply
Knowing the back story behind Roman Polanski’s film sure adds a poignant feel ;(
I like Kurosawa! Never thought that one of his films would be connected to Macbeth!
reply