{"id":91625,"date":"2022-01-08T17:05:34","date_gmt":"2022-01-08T15:05:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/?p=91625"},"modified":"2021-12-31T11:24:58","modified_gmt":"2021-12-31T09:24:58","slug":"19-05-69","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/?p=91625","title":{"rendered":"A Coen Brother\u2019s Brilliant Macbeth"},"content":{"rendered":"<h5 style=\"text-align: center;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.tabletmag.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"center alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/www.reunion68.com\/Biuletyn\/img\/tablet-1.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"35%\"><\/a><span style=\"text-decoration: underline; color: #000080;\"><strong><a style=\"color: #000080; text-decoration: underline;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.tabletmag.com\/sections\/arts-letters\/articles\/coen-brothers-brilliant-macbeth\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">A Coen Brother\u2019s Brilliant Macbeth<\/a><\/strong><\/span><\/h5>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><strong>DAVID MIKICS<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<hr style=\"height: 15px; background: #d0e6fa; width: 100%;\">\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter\" src=\"https:\/\/tablet-mag-images.b-cdn.net\/production\/215304dadf60436d9cb59cefd3ac4067c51916fb-6000x4000.jpg?w=1300&amp;q=70&amp;auto=format&amp;dpr=1\" width=\"100%\"><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><em>Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand in \u2018The Tragedy of Macbeth\u2019A24 FILMS<\/em><\/span><\/p>\n<h4 class=\"Hero__dek color-gray-darker graebenbach text-center font-400\" style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><strong>Joel Coen\u2019s new film is a surprising capstone to the brothers\u2019 razor-sharp oeuvre.<\/strong><\/span><\/h4>\n<p>.<\/p>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto text-article-dropcaps\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The director Sam Raimi once remarked that the Coen brothers\u2019 movies obey three rules\u2014the innocent must suffer, the guilty must be punished, and you must taste blood to be a man. There might be a fourth rule, Raimi added: The dead must walk. Shakespeare\u2019s&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>&nbsp;embodies all these traits of the Coen canon. But Joel Coen\u2019s&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>&nbsp;goes beyond the movies he made with Ethan, which were infected by a glorious wiseass sensibility. There is no virtuoso madcap side to this&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>, and no trace of sarcasm. Here the older Coen brother is as serious as fate itself, and dark as blood. He has made by far the best film&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>, outshining the famous versions by Welles and Polanski.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><em>The Tragedy of Macbeth<\/em>, the first movie directed by Joel without Ethan as producer, will open on Dec. 25. Ethan, now writing plays in LA, has announced that he wants to devote himself to theater rather than cinema. There\u2019s no better time than this to look back on the Coens\u2019 oeuvre\u2014and to gaze more deeply into Joel Coen\u2019s new&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>, which turns out to be a surprising capstone to the Coens\u2019 films.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Starting with&nbsp;<em>Blood Simple<\/em>&nbsp;(1984), these smartass Jewish zanies from Minnesota have been the most happily volatile presence in American movies. Steeped in film noir and with a strong taste for bloodshed, they also inherited Preston Sturges\u2019 roguish screwball talent\u2014but the Coens\u2019 movies have a steel-trap sensibility and a grain of vicious fun that Sturges never possessed. Applying the sadistic acumen of a Road Runner cartoon to grown-up storylines, the Coens were merciless parodists, yet so thorough and pitch-perfect that they seemed to honor their victims, like the Hollywood communists in the underrated&nbsp;<em>Hail, Caesar!<\/em>&nbsp;or the studio fat cat Jack Lipnick in&nbsp;<em>Barton Fink<\/em>.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The Coens gave us a series of mocking, spit-polished parables illustrating the symbiosis of three crucial American traits, ingenuity, stupidity, and recklessness. They studied the fablelike lessons told by old Westerns for&nbsp;<em>The Ballad of Buster Scruggs<\/em>. And they adored the hardboiled novels of James M. Cain, especially&nbsp;<em>Mildred Pierce<\/em>. Cain\u2019s heroine looks to my mind exactly like Frances McDormand (Joel\u2019s wife), whose tough yet tender small-town vibe is central to so many Coen brothers movies. (The Coens told an interviewer that the fa\u00e7ade of Columbia\u2019s Butler Library ought to read \u201cSophocles &#8230; Plato &#8230; Aristotle &#8230; James M. Cain.\u201d)<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The Coens\u2019 movies almost always revolve around a fall guy or&nbsp;<em>shlemiel<\/em>. Sometimes the&nbsp;<em>shlemiel<\/em>&nbsp;triumphs in his foolishness (<em>The Big Lebowski,<\/em>&nbsp;<em>The Hudsucker Proxy<\/em>,&nbsp;<em>O Brother, Where Art Thou?<\/em>). Other times he ends up a survivor matured by trauma (<em>Barton Fink<\/em>). Sometimes, like Llewyn Davis or Bernie Birnbaum in&nbsp;<em>Miller\u2019s Crossing<\/em>, he is a doomed sacrifice or also-ran.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">To counterbalance the&nbsp;<em>shlemiel<\/em>, the Coens often provide a moral compass: Mike Mannix in&nbsp;<em>Hail Caesar!<\/em>, detective Marge in&nbsp;<em>Fargo<\/em>, the elderly Black timekeeper in&nbsp;<em>The Hudsucker Proxy<\/em>&nbsp;(who seems straight from the pages of Ellison\u2019s&nbsp;<em>Invisible Man<\/em>), the wife in&nbsp;<em>O Brother, Where Art Thou?<\/em>, Sheriff Ed Tom Bell (Tommy Lee Jones) in&nbsp;<em>No Country for Old Men.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The Coens feel most Jewish when they put together the&nbsp;<em>shlemiel<\/em>&nbsp;and the moral compass, suggesting that ignorance and wisdom are two sides of life\u2019s coin. In&nbsp;<em>A Serious Man<\/em>, the Coens\u2019 most overtly Jewish movie, hapless physics professor Larry Gopnik is both&nbsp;<em>shlemiel<\/em>&nbsp;and highly fallible moral compass.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><em>A Serious Man<\/em>, \u201cour Jew movie,\u201d as Joel Coen once called it, remains an exception in the Coen canon. The Coens have mostly focused on the classic American gentile fueled by bluff overconfidence. America puts foolishness into overdrive, and the results are sometimes lucky, sometimes not. A hearty idiocy drives the north country murderers of&nbsp;<em>Fargo<\/em>. The Coens love dumb people, spectacularly in&nbsp;<em>Burn After Reading<\/em>, that delectable moronic scherzo, but quietly and respectfully in&nbsp;<em>The Man Who Wasn\u2019t There<\/em>, with its morose existentialist barber Ed Crane (Billy Bob Thornton), a dullard everyman facing the void.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The Coen brothers have at times shown us implacable, force-of-nature serial killers\u2014Mad Man Mundt (John Goodman) in&nbsp;<em>Barton Fink&nbsp;<\/em>and Anton Chigurh in&nbsp;<em>No Country for Old Men<\/em>. But for the most part, the Coens\u2019 criminals are bunglers (<em>Raising Arizona<\/em>,<em>&nbsp;Burn After Reading<\/em>). Ethan once noted that \u201cin most cases criminals belong to the strata of society least equipped to face life, and that\u2019s why they\u2019re caught so often.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<div class=\"Divider Divider--dotted-rule overflow-hidden\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Enter Macbeth, one of Shakespeare\u2019s more intellectually challenged heroes. Macbeth is a lousy tyrant who can\u2019t get anything right. No one dreads his authority, since he has none\u2014he has only the power to kill, and when that runs out, a fierce willingness to die.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">When he wrote&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>, Shakespeare invented the gangster movie. And gangsters, as Robert Warshow told us in a classic essay from the 1940s, subvert the American dream. Warshow wrote that \u201cthe gangster speaks for us, expressing that part of the American psyche which rejects &#8230; \u2019Americanness\u2019 itself.\u201d America promises that family values, good neighbors, and grabbing the next promotion will make us happy, but such \u201coptimism is fundamentally satisfying to no one,\u201d Warshow adds.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The gangster is never happy\u2014at least not in the movies, where our myths live. High-stakes dissatisfaction fuels him. He must make his mark because either \u201cone emerges from the crowd or else one is nothing,\u201d Warshow writes (true in both Macbeth\u2019s archaic Scotland and Prohibition-era Chicago). Since the gangster\u2019s success is \u201csimply the unlimited possibility of aggression,\u201d with no end in sight, his frustration and death are foretold from the start. He\u2019s trapped, a nothing despite all his firepower. \u201cEven to himself he is a creature of the imagination,\u201d Warshow says of the gangster, perfectly describing Macbeth, that poor player who struts and frets for his allotted time, and then is heard no more.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The Coens have always known that gangsters, nihilism, and loneliness all go together, and that these are the true dark American themes, at the heart of the hardboiled fiction and movies that explode this country\u2019s claim to a perpetual can-do cheerfulness.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Noir skates on the thin ice that separates the ordinary man from an outlandish yet all too real possibility, murder. Like many film noir gangsters, Macbeth is a relative nobody who bursts into the big time\u2014a nondescript thane just doing his brutal job, until the witches come to set him on fire. Then he burns with a visionary torment, and speaks some of Shakespeare\u2019s most staggering poetry.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">As Macbeth paces steadily toward Duncan\u2019s murder, a pang of conscience stops him. He fears that<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<blockquote><p><strong>&#8230; pity, like a naked newborn babe<\/strong><br \/>\n<strong>Striding the blast, or heaven\u2019s cherubim, horsed<\/strong><br \/>\n<strong>Upon the sightless couriers of the air,<\/strong><br \/>\n<strong>Shall blow the horrid news in every eye,<\/strong><br \/>\n<strong>That tears shall drown the wind.<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Such galvanizing poetic lightning can be found outside Shakespeare only in Greek tragedy and the Hebrew prophets. That naked newborn babe strips us bare, too. The only way for Macbeth to recoup this decimated innocence, the wound in nature caused by Duncan\u2019s death, is to press boldly forward to more killings, and rip out all compassion and pity. Blood will have blood.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\">\n<div class=\"Divider Divider--dotted-rule overflow-hidden\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Visually, the new&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>&nbsp;fits into the spare, beautifully bleak strain in the Coens\u2019 work, especially&nbsp;<em>The Man Who Wasn\u2019t There<\/em>, which like&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>&nbsp;is in black and white. Macbeth\u2019s cinematographer, Bruno Delbonnel, gives us a world of bleary opaque whiteness, influenced by Peter Brook\u2019s superstark&nbsp;<em>King Lear<\/em>&nbsp;but also the complex northern moods of the Danish director Carl-Theodor Dreyer. In Dreyer\u2019s movies characters swim up to the viewer like uncanny ghosts. He holds shots a little too long so he can study how emotions emerge and dissolve in a human face. Like Dreyer\u2019s, Coen\u2019s camera patiently watches his actors\u2019 faces, but Coen also dwarfs their presence with a soaring bizarre German Expressionist architecture borrowed from Fritz Lang\u2019s&nbsp;<em>Siegfried<\/em>&nbsp;(courtesy of set designer Stefan Dechant).<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Joel Coen has acknowledged Dreyer\u2019s influence on his&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>, along with that of F.W. Murnau\u2019s&nbsp;<em>Sunrise<\/em>. When Macbeth (Denzel Washington) returns home from the wars, having sent his wife (Frances McDormand) the letter telling her about the witches\u2019 prophecy, she seems to waken from a healing trance, her face softly glowing. She resembles the Woman in&nbsp;<em>Sunrise<\/em>&nbsp;happily welcoming her beloved. The fragile health evoked by Murnau turns ill here, for this is Lady Macbeth\u2019s first and last smile.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">In their mid-60s, Washington and McDormand are the oldest Macbeths I have seen on either stage or screen. McDormand\u2019s Lady Macbeth is no temptress, and there is no sexual heat between her and Macbeth. Their plot is not an act of passion but a somber duty to themselves\u2014this is their last chance at the throne. Shadowing each other, at one point they touch foreheads affectionately. The mood passes quickly. Soon they will become as numb to each other as a pair of married heroin addicts. The husband and wife end up cordoned off in solitary wretchedness\u2014the misery of killers, let\u2019s not forget. \u201cShe should have died hereafter,\u201d Macbeth intones when told of his wife\u2019s suicide, as if she were never really there.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<div class=\"Divider Divider--dotted-rule overflow-hidden\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Coen\u2019s&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>&nbsp;stays faithful to Shakespeare, with only a few cuttings and pastings. As if to prove this is not a Coen brothers movie, he doesn\u2019t allow anything to become a freestanding tour de force\u2014not the acrobatic contortions of the witches (Kathryn Hunter plays all three) and not the hungover Porter\u2019s stand-up shtick (ably performed by Stephen Root).<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Coen\u2019s main innovation is to make the usually faceless Ross a pivotal figure in the story. Here is a man poised between evil and good and finally forced to choose, as if acting out Macbeth\u2019s own early doubt\u2014\u201cI dare do all that may become a man,\/Who dares do more is none.\u201d Ross becomes a moral compass, as in earlier Coen movies. Alex Hassell, who plays Ross, wears a short cape resembling an angel\u2019s or perhaps a devil\u2019s wings, lean and sharply defined, slicing through the fog and filthy air of the story. (Mary Zophres\u2019 costumes for the film are artful and pointed throughout.) Banquo, superbly played by Bertie Carvel, bears a more anguished ambivalence, full of foreboding. When Macbeth dandles the head of Fleance, the air is thick with mistrust\u2014this is Banquo\u2019s son, whom the witches have said will become king after Macbeth. Both Ross and Banquo resonate with a dilemma for all eras, including our own: how to react to the tyrant who has power over you, when resisting him would be suicidal, and staying loyal to him an offense to your soul?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Washington\u2019s Macbeth is a man on the brink\u2014resolute, hesitant, trapped by his own boldness. When he recites the \u201cIs this a dagger I see before me\u201d soliloquy, Washington chuckles softly under his breath, steeling himself. He speaks Macbeth\u2019s words rapidly, eschewing the pointed pauses and heavy underlinings most actors embrace in this role. The point is clear: Macbeth is the servant of these words, not their master. Hamlet plays with words, but Macbeth\u2019s words play him. So Denzel says the words swift and lowdown, like a knife to the heart.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">This Macbeth is shaky, too, haunted by terror just like the nerdy Barton Fink awakening next to a bloody corpse. \u201cHow full of scorpions is my mind, dear wife,\u201d Macbeth broods. He cannot again become the naive bloody soldier he was at the beginning of the play, not even with Lady Macbeth\u2019s help, for she too is haunted. Lady Macbeth would like to resemble&nbsp;<em>Fargo<\/em>\u2019s Marge, an utterly practical Midwestern spirit, for whom a body in a woodchipper is nothing so special. The Macbeths try to pull the same trick\u2014a dead body is just a dead body. It doesn\u2019t work. The dead will walk.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Washington stays subdued until he launches into reckless fury near the film\u2019s end. Then he vaunts and pivots like a samurai who dares all. With nothing left to lose, he will never know who or what has opposed him, whether the witches were allies or enemies. He strikes out wildly at emptiness. If only there were someone to fight, rather than a hurly burly cosmos signifying nothing.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Finally there is no future, only ceaseless, sleepless tomorrows, exactly resembling the vacant present day. Each noise signals a dreadful monotony. A steady, leaden thumping punctuates Coen\u2019s&nbsp;<em>Macbeth<\/em>: the thudding of boots, heavy knocking on gates, battleaxes hitting their target. There is also an old Coen brothers effect, the slow ooze of blood dripping from a dead body, tick-tock, and puddling like motor oil\u2014a viscous, mesmerizing token of the fate that plays tricks on you.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Macbeth, his horrid deeds exposed to all, resembles those American bad hombres whose sense of nakedness before cosmic judgment is rooted in our age-old Puritan fear of God. Steve Rojack, the narrator hero of Norman Mailer\u2019s&nbsp;<em>An American Dream<\/em>, says he was \u201cburied in fear\u201d after killing his wife, since \u201cI no longer had the confidence my thoughts were secret to myself &#8230; a killer attracted the attention of the gods; then your mind was not your own, your anxiety ceased to be neurotic, your dread was real.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"BlockContent col-12 lg:col-10 xl-wide:col-8 mxauto\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">An America where dread is real and summed up in the dispossessed mind of the outlaw\u2014perhaps Joel Coen will return from his Shakespearean bloodbath ready to film an acid new world nightmare. After all, James M. Cain is your favorite novelist, right, Joel?<\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><em><strong><a style=\"color: #808080;\" href=\"http:\/\/davidmikics.com\/\">David Mikics<\/a><\/strong>&nbsp;is the author, most recently, of&nbsp;<a style=\"color: #808080;\" href=\"https:\/\/yalebooks.yale.edu\/book\/9780300224405\/stanley-kubrick\">Stanley Kubrick<\/a>&nbsp;(Yale Jewish Lives). He lives in Brooklyn and Houston, where he is John and Rebecca Moores Professor of English at the University of Houston.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<hr style=\"height: 15px; background: #d0e6fa; width: 100%;\">\n<div id=\"content\" class=\"content-alignment\">\n<div id=\"watch-description\" class=\"yt-uix-button-panel\">\n<div id=\"watch-description-text\" style=\"text-align: center;\">\n<p><em>Zawarto\u015b\u0107 publikowanych artyku\u0142\u00f3w i materia\u0142\u00f3w nie reprezentuje pogl\u0105d\u00f3w ani opinii Reunion&#8217;68,<\/em><em><br \/>\nani te\u017c webmastera Blogu Reunion&#8217;68, chyba ze jest to wyra\u017anie zaznaczone.<br \/>\nTwoje uwagi, linki, w\u0142asne artyku\u0142y lub wiadomo\u015bci prze\u015blij na adres:<br \/>\n<\/em><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong><em><a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"mailto:webmaster@reunion68.com\"><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">webmaster@reunion68.com<\/span><\/a><\/em><\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<hr style=\"width: 100%;\">\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A Coen Brother\u2019s Brilliant Macbeth DAVID MIKICS Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand in \u2018The Tragedy of Macbeth\u2019A24 FILMS Joel Coen\u2019s new film is a surprising capstone to the brothers\u2019 razor-sharp oeuvre. . The director Sam Raimi once remarked that the Coen brothers\u2019 movies obey three rules\u2014the innocent must suffer, the guilty must be punished, and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[6],"tags":[26,24],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/91625"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=91625"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/91625\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":91770,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/91625\/revisions\/91770"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=91625"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=91625"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=91625"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}