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The Art of Film #4: Joel Coen’s The Tragedy of MacBeth

The Art of Film #4: Joel Coen’s The Tragedy of MacBeth

Coen’s Macbeth transforms Shakespeare’s tragedy into a claustrophobic nightmare. Analyze its cinematography, visual ingenuity, and the impact of ageing Macbeths in a thought-provoking film study.

Part 7 of 2

August 8, 2025

4:00 pm - 6:30 pm Europe/London View in my time

Register through LitSalon

‘When shall we three meet again?’ Joel Coen’s visually arresting adaptation of William Shakespeare’s Macbeth opens, perhaps ironically, on sound and text in an otherwise black void. After the fleeting appearance of the single word, ‘WHEN’, audiences are encompassed in darkness, cut through by Kathryn Hunter’s smoke-shattered delivery of the witches’ famous line.

Audiences are drawn from this blackness into a noirish tale of blood and betrayal. Reinvented by Coen’s sharp vision, the terrifying Macbeth (Denzel Washington) and his formidable wife (Frances McDormand) are caught in a claustrophobic nightmare that is literalized by the frames that confine them to their fate: shot in the squarish ‘Academy ratio’, the Macbeths are cornered by a destiny that at turns thrills and horrifies them.

Watch the trailer
Watch the trailer: Joel Coen’s The Tragedy of Macbeth (2021)

In his first solo venture away from his brother Ethan (with whom he brought us such celebrated works as Fargo and No Country for Old Men), Joel Coen draws on Shakespeare’s verbal artistry and his predecessors’ masterful film interpretations to deliver a raw-boned and redefined version of this great tragedy, one that feels both familiar and strange.

Join John Allemand and Julie Sutherland in a 2-week study of Joel Coen’s The Tragedy of Macbeth (2021). As with previous Art of Film studies (Thelma & LouiseThe Graduate), Julie and John will show select clips for discussion during the study, as well as leading a conversation about the film more generally. This study is for cineastes and Shakespeare lovers alike. No previous knowledge of the play is necessary, but participants are requested to watch the film in advance of the study.

As a separate but complementary series, Julie Sutherland is offering a 7-week study of Shakespeare’s Macbeth, beginning shortly after the film study closes (Wednesdays, 13 August-24 September). Participants in the Art of Film’s The Tragedy of Macbeth may be interested in joining this related event.

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An event hosted by the London Literary Salonan international community of readers who spend time together virtually or in-person, engaging in enriching discussions about literature and ideas.

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