Shakespeare Plays Available in Video Format
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All’s Well That Ends Well
Antony and Cleopatra
As You Like It
The Comedy of Errors
Coriolanus
Cymbeline
Hamlet
Henry IV, part 1
Henry IV, part 2
Henry V
Henry VI, part 1
Henry VI, part 2
Henry VI, part 3
Henry VIII
Julius Caesar
King John
King Lear
Love’s Labour’s Lost
Macbeth
Measure for Measure
The Merchant of Venice
The Merry Wives of Windsor
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Much Ado About Nothing
Othello
Pericles
Richard II
Richard III
Romeo and Juliet
The Taming of the Shrew
The Tempest
Timon of Athens
Titus Andronicus
Troilus and Cressida
Twelfth Night
Two Gentlemen of Verona
The Winter’s Tale
Shakespeareana

Available versions

1948: Orson Welles

1954: George Schaefer

1961: Paul Almond

1971: Roman Polanski

1979: Philip Casson

1981: Arthur Allan Seidelman

1983: Jack Gold

1997: Jeremy Freeston

1998: Michael Bogdanov

2001: Gregory Doran

2006: Geoffrey Wright

2006 [1988]: Michael T. Starks

2009: Colleen Stovall

2010: Rupert Goold

2014: Eve Best

2015: Justin Kurzel

2017: Barry Avrich

2018: Robin Lough

2018: Kit Monkman

2021: Joel Coen


Adaptations

1957: Throne of Blood

1991: Men of Respect

1991: Scotland, PA

1992: Nikolai Serebryakov, Dave Edwards (animated)

2005: ShakespeaRe-Told: Macbeth

2016: Macbeth Unhinged

2022: Curse of the Macbeths


Production drama

1999: Macbeth in Manhattan

2003: Slings and Arrows (Season 2)

2017: The Scottish Play (series)

2021: The Scottish Play


Educational

2008: This Is Macbeth

2013: Shakespeare Uncovered (Season 1, Ep. 2)


Macbeth
2021: Joel Coen

Joel Coen’s first directorial effort without his brother Ethan, this is an artistic tour de force and a kind of life project for his wife Frances McDormand, who recited one of Lady Macbeth’s soliloquies as a young student. It is filmed in an intense black and white; everything, including exterior scenes, was shot on a sound stage. The whole seems deeply artificial, and it certainly makes no attempt at a naturalistic presentation. Some may find that alienating; I do not. It manages to isolate the story and the diction in a surreal but focused way, and leaves the door open for some very intense performances.

Any production of Macbeth rides chiefly on the acting of its two principals, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. Between them they have the bulk of the lines, and there are relatively few scenes in which one or another of them does not appear. Their power relationship has to be carefully sculpted if it is to be persuasive, and the chiastic exchange of power between them as the play goes on — where Macbeth becomes increasingly resolute, but loses all sight of his soul, while Lady Macbeth goes from an almost demonic temptress to a fragile shell of a woman — is fascinating in almost any production if it’s done at all well. This certainly is. Both of the two carry their roles well and intelligently.

There was at least one prominent reviewer who attacked Washington’s performance in Much Ado About Nothing by claiming that he had “phoned it in”: I didn’t find that true there, but no one could possibly make a like claim about this one. His delivery is august and restrained, to be sure, and his Macbeth has more dignity than many. Nevertheless in that restrained exposition of the character, he manages to include significant nuance, and his performance is well worth watching and studying.

Frances MacDormand has created a wide variety of characters throughout her career, many of them appealing and lovable (like her role as the sherrif in Fargo). Here she is cold, hard, and fiercely intelligent. Her persuasive force against Macbeth, leading him astray step by step until he’s ready to murder his king and benefactor, is credible if dismaying. She’s always a pleasure to watch, even when the part she’s playing is not one you’d like to know.

Of the secondary actors in the piece, some may recognize the (surprisingly trim) Harry Melling in the role of Malcolm: many will remember him as the tubby and self-absorbed Dudley Dursley in the Harry Potter movies. He carries the role perfectly plausibly.

The script is certainly somewhat cut, which is always regrettable, especially in a piece as lean as Macbeth, but it is ample enough to maintain the organic flow of the story. I’m not sure that I’d recommend this as a first Macbeth for anyone, especially given its stylistic severity and mannered delivery, but it stands up very well indeed on multiple viewings, and deserves consideration.


Angus: Robert Gilbert

Apparition Boy: Kayden Alexander Koshelev

Apparition Boy: T.K. Weaver

Apparition Boy: Ledger Fuller

Banquet Guest: Chander Daya (uncredited)

Banquo: Bertie Carvel

Captain: Ralph Ineson

Child: Mylo Uschold (uncredited)

Children's Nurse: Olivia Washington

Demitrius: Phil DiGennaro (uncredited)

Doctor: Jefferson Mays

Donalbain: Matt Helm

Duncan: Brendan Gleeson

Duncan's Protector: Timothy Oakes (uncredited)

Fleance: Lucas Barker

Lady in Waiting: Susan Berger

Lady Macbeth: Frances McDormand

Lady Macbeth's Nurse: Nancy Daly

Lady Macduff: Moses Ingram

Lady Macduff's Murderer: Wayne T. Carr

Lennox: Miles Anderson

Macbeth: Denzel Washington

MacDuff Soldier: Nicholas F. Philipp (uncredited)

Macduff: Corey Hawkins

Macduff's Daughter: Madison Randolph (uncredited)

Macduff's Son: Ethan Hutchison

Malcolm: Harry Melling

Monteith: Sean Patrick Thomas

Murderer: Brian Thompson

Murderer: Scott Subiono

Old Man: Kathryn Hunter

Porter: Stephen Root

Ross: Alex Hassell

Seyton: James Udom

Siward: Richard Short

Soldier: Peter Janov (uncredited), Chander Daya (uncredited)

Wheyface: Jacob McCarthy

Witches: Kathryn Hunter

Woodsman: Ben Deschaine (uncredited)