Lady Macbeth Archives – We Got This Covered 396164 All the latest news, trailers, & reviews for movies, TV, celebrities, Marvel, Netflix, anime, and more. Wed, 06 Nov 2024 17:21:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/wp-content/s/2022/04/WGTC_Favicon2.png?w=32 Lady Macbeth Archives – We Got This Covered 396164 32 32 210963106 Cinemaholics #46 6g4t4j The Top 10 Movies Of 2017 https://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/movies/cinemaholics-top-10-movies-2017/ https://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/movies/cinemaholics-top-10-movies-2017/#comments <![CDATA[Jon Negroni]]> Mon, 08 Jan 2018 02:47:32 +0000 <![CDATA[Movies]]> <![CDATA[News]]> <![CDATA[Baby Driver]]> <![CDATA[Bad Genius]]> <![CDATA[Blade Runner 2049]]> <![CDATA[Brigsby Bear]]> <![CDATA[Call Me By Your Name]]> <![CDATA[Coco]]> <![CDATA[Free Fire]]> <![CDATA[Good Time]]> <![CDATA[I Don't Feel At Home In This World Anymore]]> <![CDATA[I Tonya]]> <![CDATA[It]]> <![CDATA[Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond]]> <![CDATA[John Wick: Chapter 2]]> <![CDATA[Lady Bird]]> <![CDATA[Lady Macbeth]]> <![CDATA[Logan]]> <![CDATA[mother!]]> <![CDATA[Podcast]]> <![CDATA[Podcasts]]> <![CDATA[Prevenge]]> <![CDATA[raw]]> <![CDATA[Star Wars: The Last Jedi]]> <![CDATA[The Big Sick]]> <![CDATA[The Disaster Artist]]> <![CDATA[The Florida Project]]> <![CDATA[The Killing of a Sacred Deer]]> <![CDATA[The Shape of Water]]> http://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/?p=673820 <![CDATA[
This week, we're taking an extended look back at the best movies of 2017, along with some discussion about the year's overall box office, movies that disappointed us the most, and theater experiences that surprised the heck out of us.]]>
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New year, new episode of Cinemaholics! 38364c

This week, we’re taking an extended look back at the best movies of 2017, along with some discussion about the year’s overall box office, movies that disappointed us the most, and theater experiences that surprised the heck out of us.

Additionally, we also list off our own Top 10s, so expect plenty of overlap and a clear favorite between all of us. For those of you who want it in writing, here it is:

Will Ashton’s Top 10 of 2017:

1. Brigsby Bear
2. The Shape of Water
3. Raw
4. Lady Bird
5. The Florida Project
6. Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond
7. mother!
8. I Don’t Feel at Home in this World Anymore
9. Good Time
10. The Killing of a Sacred Deer

Jon Negroni’s Top 10 of 2017:

1. Baby Driver
2. Bad Genius
3. Blade Runner 2049
4. The Florida Project
5. Brigsby Bear
6. Coco
7. Lady Bird
8. The Shape of Water
9. The Big Sick
10. Call Me By Your Name

Maveryke Hines’s Top 10 of 2017:

1. Good Time
2. Brigsby Bear
3. Baby Driver
4. Lady Macbeth
5. The Florida Project
6. The Big Sick
7. Blade Runner 2049
8. John Wick: Chapter 2
9. The Killing of a Sacred Deer
10. Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond

(Bonus) Matt Donato’s Top 10 of 2017:

1. Lady Bird
2. Call Me By Your Name
3. Logan
4. Prevenge
5. I, Tonya
6. Star Wars: The Last Jedi
7. It
8. Free Fire
9. Coco
10. The Disaster Artist

If you like what you hear, become a Cinemaholic! Subscribe to the podcast on YouTube via the WGTC channel or available episodes on Apple Podcasts or directly from the full archive.

Feel free to hang out with us on Facebook and Twitter for episode updates as well, and be sure to email cinemaholicspodcast [at] gmail.com to submit any and all . You might just hear your email read on next week’s show!

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Cinemaholics #26 m331a The Dark Tower Review https://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/movies/cinemaholics-dark-tower-review/ https://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/movies/cinemaholics-dark-tower-review/#respond <![CDATA[Jon Negroni]]> Mon, 07 Aug 2017 01:04:51 +0000 <![CDATA[Movies]]> <![CDATA[News]]> <![CDATA[Cinemaholics]]> <![CDATA[Girls Trip]]> <![CDATA[Lady Macbeth]]> <![CDATA[Podcast]]> <![CDATA[Podcasts]]> <![CDATA[The Dark Tower]]> http://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/?p=639829 <![CDATA[
This week, the Cinemaholics review The Dark Tower, the latest film adaptation of a popular novel by Stephen King and starring Idris Elba and Matthew McConaughey. They also take a close look at Lady Macbeth and Detroit, two movies discussed in previous episodes that are finally hitting wider release, while the episode ends with a mini review for Girls Trip.]]>
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This week, the Cinemaholics review The Dark Tower, the latest adaptation of a popular novel by Stephen King and starring Idris Elba and Matthew McConaughey. They also take a close look at Lady Macbeth and Detroit, two movies discussed in previous episodes that are finally hitting wider release, while the episode ends with a mini review for Girls Trip.

To start things off though, Jon and Will discuss their favorite Stephen King films, and Will tries to get to the bottom of Jon’s intense dislike of King’s work as a whole.

As always, here are the links to what was discussed this week (your Cinemahomework):

If you like what you hear, become a Cinemaholic! Subscribe to the podcast on YouTube via the WGTC channel or available episodes on iTunes or directly from here.

Feel free to hang out with us on Facebook and Twitter for episode updates as well, and be sure to email cinemaholicspodcast [at] gmail.com to submit any and all . You might just hear your email read on next week’s show!

*Note: This week’s show was originally recorded with Maveryke Hines and special guest Sam Flynn, but due to audio issues, Jon and Will did a shorter recovery episode. We apologize for the inconvenience!

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Cinemaholics #23 4h6gj War For The Planet Of The Apes Review https://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/movies/cinemaholics-war-planet-apes-review/ https://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/movies/cinemaholics-war-planet-apes-review/#respond <![CDATA[Jon Negroni]]> Sun, 16 Jul 2017 22:59:13 +0000 <![CDATA[Movies]]> <![CDATA[News]]> <![CDATA[TV]]> <![CDATA[A ghost story]]> <![CDATA[Cinemaholics]]> <![CDATA[Lady Macbeth]]> <![CDATA[Podcast]]> <![CDATA[Podcasts]]> <![CDATA[The Big Sick]]> <![CDATA[the standups]]> <![CDATA[War For The Planet of the Apes]]> http://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/?p=634691 <![CDATA[
The Cinemaholics have two big movies to review in full on this episode, first with War for the Planet of the Apes and then The Big Sick, which both hit theaters this week. The latter is Matt Reeves's conclusion to the Planet of the Apes prequel reboot trilogy, which has been one of the better blockbuster franchises in recent years. As for The Big Sick, it's the highly anticipated and acclaimed romantic comedy from Kumail Nanjiani and Emily Gordon.]]>
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The Cinemaholics have two big movies to review in full on this episode, first with War for the Planet of the Apes and then The Big Sick, which both hit theaters this week. The latter is Matt Reeves’s conclusion to the Planet of the Apes prequel reboot trilogy, which has been one of the better blockbuster franchises in recent years. As for The Big Sick, it’s the highly anticipated and acclaimed romantic comedy from Kumail Nanjiani and Emily Gordon.

But that’s not all the Cinemaholics discuss, of course. Will Ashton takes some time to unpack his thoughts on Lady Macbeth during Mini Reviews, and both Will and Jon Negroni talk about A Ghost Story from A24. Finally, Maveryke Hines shares his experience watching Netflix’s recent standup comedy series, The Standups, along with a full-length comedy special that’s now streaming.

For more, here are the links to what was discussed this week (your Cinemahomework):

If you like what you hear, become a Cinemaholic! Subscribe to the podcast on YouTube via the WGTC channel or available episodes on iTunes or directly from here.

Hang out with us on Facebook and Twitter for episode updates, and be sure to email cinemaholicspodcast [at] gmail.com to submit any and all . You might just hear your email read on next week’s show!

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Lady Macbeth Review [LFF 2016] 3o6v3b https://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/movies/lady-macbeth-review/ https://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/movies/lady-macbeth-review/#respond <![CDATA[Brogan Morris]]> Sat, 26 Nov 2016 16:25:55 +0000 <![CDATA[Movies]]> <![CDATA[News]]> <![CDATA[Reviews]]> <![CDATA[Lady Macbeth]]> <![CDATA[movie reviews]]> http://wegotthiscovered.play1002.com/?p=568518 <![CDATA[
Lady Macbeth begins as a biting tale of female empowerment but slowly reveals itself to be something much crueler. Period pieces rarely feel this contemporary.]]>
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lady-macbeth

Too often period pieces are about nothing but themselves – dusty time capsules that seek to recreate a time gone by, along with all the era’s quaint, outdated conventions and social mores. William Oldroyd’s Lady Macbeth is different. In keeping the year unchanged but updating the setting of Nikolai Leskov’s 1865 novel, Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District, and taking the story from East to West – specifically, from Russia to Great Britain at its colonial peak – director Oldroyd and screenwriter Alice Birch are deliberately holding a mirror up to modern Western society and its own issues with gender and race.

Timely is the word here. Lady Macbeth first screened at the Toronto International Film Festival back in September but now, with America’s sexual and racial politics suddenly set back decades following the vote on November 8th, this Victorian-era melodrama feels crucially challenging.

At first, Lady Macbeth sets out its stall as a sympathetic (if severe) look at how women and people of color in the 19th century were treated as if cuts of meat, objects to be abused and effectively (and literally) purchased by white male masters. Florence Pugh’s Katherine ostensibly starts out our hero, a shy young woman sold for marriage to Paul Hilton’s Alexander, the alcoholic heir to a fortune made by his mill-owner father, Boris (Christopher Fairbank, relishing his character’s venom).

It’s immediately clear Katherine was not bought for love: when he can bear to be in the same room as his new bride, and not away at work or visiting his illegitimate mixed-race child, Alexander can only drunkenly castigate Katherine, the woman his father procured merely so he could continue the bloodline with a proper (white) heir.

The brutishness from husband and father-in-law, combined with her enforced isolation (the film is largely a chamber piece, Katherine like a doting housewife required to wait alone in the family home for long, quiet stretches) drives Katherine into the arms of stable-hand Sebastian (Cosmo Jarvis). The tryst is an act of rebellion by two people considered little more than property, with Katherine in particular taking pleasure fraternizing with someone so insultingly coarse and lowborn. When their affair is exposed, Katherine hatches a scheme to rid herself of both Alexander and Boris. It doesn’t go perfectly to plan, of course – cinematic convention dictates hardly anyone ever gets away with murder clean – and soon Katherine is resorting to cruel measures in order to save her own skin.

Without revealing too much here, before long Lady Macbeth begins to turn from a tale of female empowerment into the story of a white woman of influence using her position to subjugate the only people deemed more lowly than women during this period: people of color. As it turns out, the word of white and wealthy trumps black and poor – like Sebastian, family maid Anna (Naomi Ackie) and Alexander’s bastard son, all of whom are black or mixed-race – even when said word comes from a woman.

By the time Lady Macbeth has shifted gear to become this other story, we as an audience are already complicit. At first we root for Katherine as she takes back control of her life from vicious men, but it soon becomes clear that she’s no take-action heroine, rather just a sociopath prepared like the men in her life to use her privilege to ruthless advantage.

More biting and less formal than most period pieces, Lady Macbeth was likely influenced by Andrea Arnold’s raw 2011 take on Wuthering Heights moreso than any lavish BBC period drama, embracing its less than £500,000 budget to realize an austere, minimalistic authentic style. Oldroyd’s film, like Arnold’s, takes a revisionist look at moneyed life in the Victorian era. The actors wander not through spotless stately homes conversing drily in RP, but through cold, dark interiors speaking banalities in regional Northern English dialects. When Katherine does venture outside, there is no endless, nostalgic Jane Austen summer, just the chilly desolation of endless grey-brown scenery.

The unobtrusive Oldroyd, a former theater director, draws impressively un-showy turns from his cast, but it’s Pugh’s breakout performance that’s Lady Macbeth‘s callous centerpiece, Pugh that’s most in tune with the film’s darkly ironic humor. Katherine doesn’t evolve as a character over the course of the film, but rather dares to reveal ever deeper depths of malice as she grows in confidence. It’s to the actor’s credit then that even from the character’s virginal first scenes, when she’s seen obediently stood shivering naked in a corner as her husband pleasures himself, there are hints from Pugh at a terrible coldness underneath. When we finally see how far Katherine will go, we’re totally convinced, if horrified to have ever been charmed into taking her side in the first place.

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