Re: MACBETH
Posted: Mon Jun 17, 2024 11:02 am
When I first saw the film on BBC TV in the 60s they ran the full version with Scottish accents. I don't believe the edited version was ever shown on any pre-cable era station.
The verbatim translation of the actual 19th century prayer is:Interestingly Welles adds a character, the Holy Man, a Catholic priest. At the beginning of the film he chases away the “three weird sisters”, waving the Celtic Cross he carries. After King Duncan arrives, the Priest leads the court, anachronistically, in the rendition of the Saint Michael Prayer...written by Pope Leo XIII some nine centuries after the events depicted in Macbeth:
"Saint Michael, the arch angel,
be our safeguard against the wiles and wickedness of the devil.
Do thou, oh prince of the heavenly host, by the divine power,
thrust into hell Satan and the other evil spirits, who wander through the world, seeking the ruin of souls.
Amen!
Thus thou renounce Satan? I renounce him.
And all his works? I renounce them.
And all his pomp? I renounce them.
Amen!"
The (108-minute version) comes in a fresh 4K restoration from Paramount Pictures that looks phenomenal, with a dramatic uptick in the depth and clarity of the image, revealing fine details like sweat-beaded brows and painted-on makeup. The omnipresent blacks of John L. Russell’s evocatively expressionist cinematography are profound and entirely uncrushed.