Acidliner said:
Hey guys, I have an essay due about how context has influenced Shakespeare's Macbeth and Polanski's production of the play. I have to explore the historical, cultural and social influences and refer to specific aspects of the play and the production.
I would love you forever if you could give me a few pointers, or some links, sigh.
Macbeth is the bane of my existence.
Okay no not really, but yes.
Thanks guys !
Thought it'd be easier to separate my post.
Historical context: ahh... doesn't really have that much in Polanski does it?
Cultural influences: ehehe I seem to have literally 0 notes on Polanski... ahh just remembered. Something about Polanski's wife being killed by some Manson guy. Charlie Manson? Any how, that might have affected the film.
Just remembered something else. Manson's murder of Polanski's wife was part of a hippie, revolutionist (tax my word & I'll kick your ass) movement associated with the rise of socialist politics, post Vietnam War era. Also typical of the time was the heavy rock and gothic stereotypes that emerged, that associated itself with notions of insanity and the macabre. This could correspond with the usage of mirrors as a reflection of the "insanity" of the human psyche. (remembered you might not understand the mirrors part. Pinpoint the part where you see tonnes of mirror images of Banquo on a throne with a crown on his head, and it keeps turning or something. The part where MacBeth meets the witches @ some party gathering)
Social influences: (aha! At least I found something) Polanski's Macbeth was produced shortly after the end of the Vietnam War. Consider the level of violence of the film, (and especially the scene of MacBeth's head being chopped off) it was considered to be within the extremities of violence at the time when it was produced. However when you look at the beheading more closely, it is relatively pacifist as it depicts such an easy struggle for victory (ie making a mockery of "war"). In a way, Polanski is making a political statement with his film (even if you think otherwise, twist the truth & back it up - the foundations of English).
Love me forever now don't ya?