10/13/2019

Macbeth Michael Fassbender

The world of William Shakespeare can be a tricky road to navigate, especially if you are not educated in his tediously difficult language that arrogantly lies in waiting, sprawled across the pages of his many plays. If you are neither a Thespian or English Literature Graduate (which I am clearly not), you will struggle to understand the famous playwrights narrative. It just might be easier to learn French or German at the local community college than it is to painfully study what Shakespeare is actually trying to say. I have seen just a handful of the Elizabethan era writers work; the tragic love story of Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar and the very puzzling comedy, A Midsummer Night's Dream. Each time I came away scratching my head, my feeble brain trying its best to piece together the events that had actually taken place. Through all the confusion, I still found myself enjoying the fragments of dialogue and story that made sense to me. This is why I was drawn to another of Shakespeare's great tragedies, even though I knew I would be sitting through nearly two hours of theatre without the use of subtitles.

Michael Fassbender has been killing it in films like '12 Years a Slave' and 'Inglourious Basterds,' and is poised to continue his successful acting streak with 'Macbeth' and 'Steve Jobs. Directed by Justin Kurzel. With Michael Fassbender, Marion Cotillard, Jack Madigan, Frank Madigan. Macbeth, the Thane of Glamis, receives a prophecy from a trio of witches that one day he will become King of Scotland.


Michael

Michael Fassbender was born in Heidelberg, Germany, to a German father, Josef, and an Irish mother, Adele (originally from Larne, County Antrim, in Northern Ireland). Michael was raised in the town of Killarney, Co. Kerry, in south-west Ireland, where his family moved to when he was two years old. Mar 06, 2016  Macbeth (Michael Fassbender), Duke of Scotland, receives a prophecy from a trio of witches that one day he will become King of Scotland. Consumed by ambition and spurred to action by his wife Lady Macbeth (Marion Cotillard), Macbeth murders his king and takes the throne for himself. We meet Macbeth (Michael Fassbender) in the muddy horrors of battle. He is a ruthless warrior and Kurzel slows down the action to emphasize plunging daggers and blood spurts amidst an ashen sky.

Michael Fassbender Celebrity Profile - Check out the latest Michael Fassbender photo gallery, biography, pics, pictures, interviews, news, forums and blogs at Rotten Tomatoes!

Macbeth is a well known story of ambition, murder, rage and tyranny but what I was looking for in Justin Kurzel's interpretation was a connection that an uneducated sloth like myself could get from a tale that had four hundred years of retelling. I wanted to feel the characters emotions and I wanted to visualise their world. I wanted to be able to identify Macbeth's tragic blind ambition and lust for power. More importantly, I wanted a tangible belief in the story being presented to me.
Kurzel knows his audience well because he has directed one of the greatest Shakespearean plays ever put onto film. The brutal and bloody world that Kurzel has visioned, creates an authentic and powerful atmosphere that never deserts the viewer, allowing the famous story to illustrate itself effortlessly across the screen. Half the battle is won. Accompanied by an outstandingly appropriate score sets the scene for a film that would not look out of place amongst the very best movie releases this year. The eerie and sombre acoustics help keep the audience fixed to their seats as the savage tragedy of Macbeth unfolds in all its brutal glory.
Michael Fassbender (Macbeth), plays the character to perfection and it is his performance alone that makes it easier for the common man to understand Shakespeare's historic language. Fassbender is thoroughly engaged in his role and every word he delivers oozes emotion. Marion Cotillard is equally impressive as the conniving Lady Macbeth. Cotillard was an interesting choice to play the femme fatal, but she has proved here that she can rise to any challenge. This performance is a very colourful feather in a exceptional cap. Her Lady Macbeth helped me to realise that she became somewhat of a victim to the King she had created. 'What is done, is done.' I am quite sure that she didn't envisage her warrior husband to become the tyrant that he became. Adding to the list of superb performances is Sean Harris, the vengeful and savage Macduff, who is hell bent on ending Macbeth's reign as the Scottish Monarch. Great little cameos by David Thewlis (King Duncan) and Elisabeth Debicki (Lady Macduff), along with brilliant visionary direction by Justin Kurzel will give the uneducated hordes a chance to witness one of Shakespeare's masterpieces.
Fassbender at the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con International
Born2 April 1977 (age 42)
ResidenceLondon, England
Lisbon, Portugal[1]
NationalityGerman, Irish[2][3]
Alma materDrama Centre London
St. Brendan's College
OccupationActor
Years active2001–present
Works
Filmography
Home townFossa, County Kerry, Ireland
Spouse(s)
AwardsFull list

Michael Fassbender (born 2 April 1977) is an Irish-German actor. His feature film debut was in the fantasy war epic 300 (2007) as a Spartan warrior; his earlier roles included various stage productions, as well as starring roles on television such as in the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers (2001) and the Sky One fantasy drama Hex (2004–05). He first came to prominence for his role as IRA activist Bobby Sands in Hunger (2008), for which he won a British Independent Film Award. Subsequent roles include in the independent film Fish Tank (2009), as a Royal Marineslieutenant in Inglourious Basterds (2009), as Edward Rochester in the 2011 film adaptation of Jane Eyre, as Carl Jung in A Dangerous Method (2011), as the sentientandroidDavid 8 in Prometheus (2012) and its sequel, Alien: Covenant (2017), and in the musical comedy-drama Frank (2014) as an eccentric musician loosely inspired by Frank Sidebottom.

In 2011, Fassbender debuted as the Marvel ComicssupervillainMagneto in X-Men: First Class, and went on to share the role with Ian McKellen in X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014), before reprising it again in X-Men: Apocalypse (2016) and Dark Phoenix (2019). Also in 2011, Fassbender's performance as a sex addict in Shame earned him the Volpi Cup for Best Actor at the Venice Film Festival and was nominated for Golden Globe and BAFTA Awards. In 2013, his role as slave owner Edwin Epps in the slaveryepic12 Years a Slave was similarly praised, earning him his first Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. In 2013, Fassbender appeared in another Ridley Scott film, The Counselor. In 2015, he portrayed the title role in the Danny Boyle-directed biopic Steve Jobs (2015), and played Macbeth in Justin Kurzel's adaptation of William Shakespeare's play. For the former, he received Academy Award, BAFTA, Golden Globe and SAG nominations. In 2015, he produced the western Slow West, in which he also starred.

  • 2Career

Early life

Fassbender was born on 2 April 1977[4] in Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg.[5] His mother, Adele, is Irish (from Larne, County Antrim), while his father, Josef Fassbender, is German.[6][7] According to Fassbender family lore, his mother is the great-grand-niece of Michael Collins, an Irish leader during the War of Independence.[5][8] When Fassbender was two years old, his parents moved to the Irish town of Killarney, County Kerry, where they ran the West End House, a restaurant where his father worked as a chef. His parents moved to Kerry as they wanted their children to grow up in the countryside rather than the industrial backdrop of their previous residence in Germany.[5][7] Fassbender was raised Catholic, and served as an altar boy[9] at the church his family attended. He has an older sister, Catherine, who is a neuropsychologist.[10][11]

Fassbender and his sister spent summer holidays in Germany, and he speaks German fluently,[12] though he later stated before filming Inglourious Basterds that he had needed to brush up some on his spoken German because 'it was a bit rusty.'[13][14] He attended Fossa National School[15] and St. Brendan's College, both in Killarney.[16] He decided that he wanted to be an actor at age 17 when he was cast in a play by Donal Courtney. At 19, he moved to London to study at the Drama Centre London, a constituent school of Central Saint Martins. In 1999, he dropped out of the Drama Centre and toured with the Oxford Stage Company to perform the play Three Sisters.[10][17] Before he found work as an actor, he worked as a bartender and postman.[18] Other jobs include labour work, market research for the Royal Mail and working for Dell computers.[19]

Career

Early work

Fassbender at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival

Fassbender's first screen role was that of Burton 'Pat' Christenson in Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg's award-winning television miniseries Band of Brothers (2001).[20] He played the character of Azazeal in both series of Hex on Sky One and starred as the main character in the music video for the song 'Blind Pilots' by the British band The Cooper Temple Clause. In the video, he plays the part of a man out with friends on a stag night who slowly transforms into a goat due to wearing a cowbell necklace.[20]

If you close or exit the UC browser then the UC browser automatically pauses your download. Background Download:If you left from UC browser. Uc browser can continue downloading your files. Uc browser download zip file.

Fassbender played Jonathan Harker in a ten-part radio serialisation of Dracula produced by BBC Northern Ireland and broadcast in the Book at Bedtime series between 24 November and 5 December 2003. He was also seen in early 2004 in a Guinness television commercial, The Quarrel, playing a man who swims across the ocean from Ireland to apologise personally to his brother in New York;[21] this commercial won a gold medal at the 2005 FAB Awards.[22][23]

During the 2006 Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Fassbender played Michael Collins, his great-great-grand-uncle,[24][25]in Allegiance, a play by Mary Kenny based on the meeting between Collins and Winston Churchill.[26] In addition, Fassbender produced, directed, and starred in a stage version of Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs,[20] along with his production company.

He appeared in Angel (UK title: The Real Life of Angel Deverell), about the rise and fall of an eccentric young British writer (played by Romola Garai) in the early 20th century. Fassbender plays her love interest, an average painter named Esmé.[20] The drama—the first English-language effort by French director François Ozon and based on the novel by Elizabeth Taylor—premiered on 17 February 2007 at the Berlin International Film Festival and on 14 March 2007 in Paris. He then made a brief appearance in Dean Cavanagh and Irvine Welsh's Wedding Belles as Barney, speaking with a Scottish accent.

Mainstream success

In 2006, Fassbender played Stelios, a young Spartan warrior, in 300, a fantasy action film directed by Zack Snyder. The film was a commercial success.[27] In preparation for his role as Provisional Irish Republican Army prisoner Bobby Sands in Steve McQueen's 2008 film Hunger, Fassbender underwent a crash diet that restricted him to 600 calories a day. He received the British Independent Film Award for his performance.[28] One year after his success at the Cannes Film Festival with Hunger, he appeared in two films. The first was Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds, in which he played the British officer Lieutenant Archie Hicox. The other film was Fish Tank directed by Andrea Arnold. Both films were critically acclaimed and Fassbender's work in them also well received.[weasel words]

Fassbender
Fassbender at the premiere of 12 Years a Slave, 2013 Toronto International Film Festival

In 2010, Fassbender appeared as Burke in Jonah Hex, a Western film.[29] In an interview at San Diego Comic-Con International, a comic book convention, Fassbender commented of the role: 'I kind of developed this character and really pushed it – I'll see how far I pushed it .. I had this idea about the character, he’s kind of psychotic, he gets his kicks in perverted ways. I didn’t want to make it very obvious or like something you've seen before.'[30] Hex received predominantly negative reviews.[31] Responding to criticism of Jonah Hex in 2011, Fassbender commented: 'Pretty awful, was it? I haven't seen it myself.'[32] He portrayed Quintus Dias in Neil Marshall's bloody Roman war-thriller-drama film Centurion.[33] and was cast as Richard Wirth in the Joel Schumacher film Blood Creek alongside Dominic Purcell. The story centres on a West Virginia man who comes to terms with his moral qualms and helps his brother wipe out a family that had been protecting a Nazi occultist and who had kept his brother captive for him to feed off for years.Fassbender portrayed Edward Rochester in the 2011 film Jane Eyre, featuring Mia Wasikowska in the title role, with Cary Fukunaga directing.[34]

Fassbender portrayed Magneto in the superhero blockbuster X-Men: First Class, the prequel to X-Men. Set in 1962, it focuses on the friendship between Charles Xavier (played by James McAvoy) and Magneto and the origin of their groups, the X-Men and the Brotherhood of Mutants. The film was released on 3 June 2011 to general acclaim and financial success and promoted Fassbender to being more of a popular movie star. In 2011, Fassbender starred in A Dangerous Method by director David Cronenberg, playing Swiss psychiatrist and psychologist Carl Jung. The film premiered at the 2011 Venice Film Festival.[35]

He also starred in Shame, as a man in his thirties struggling with his sexual addiction. Shame reunited him with director Steve McQueen and premiered at the 2011 Venice Film Festival, where Fassbender won a Volpi Cup Best Actor Award for his portrayal of Brandon.[36] Fassbender was a serious contender for an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, but he was not nominated, and according to various sources his full-frontal nudity and depiction of sexual encounters inspired voters 'to fantasize, and not actually vote.'[37][38] Fassbender achieved critical acclaim for his portrayal in Shame and received nominations for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama and a BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. Starring in the film raised Fassbender's profile leading to roles in larger films.

In 2012, he appeared as an MI6 agent in Haywire, an action-thriller directed by Steven Soderbergh,[29] and in Ridley Scott's science fiction film Prometheus. Reviews praised both the film's visual aesthetic design and the acting, most notably Fassbender's performance as the android David 8. Fassbender played the title role in Ridley Scott's The Counselor, a 2013 film based on the Cormac McCarthy script.[39][40] In 2013, he starred in 12 Years a Slave, his third collaboration with Steve McQueen. Fassbender's portrayal of Edwin Epps earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Fassbender reprised the role of Magneto in X-Men: Days of Future Past (released 23 May 2014), the sequel to X-Men: First Class.[41] Fassbender stars in the title role in Frank (released late summer 2014),[42] a comedy loosely inspired by Frank Sidebottom, a comic persona created by English comedian Chris Sievey.

Fassbender co-starred in Slow West, a western starring Kodi Smit-McPhee and Ben Mendelsohn, in 2015. He played Silas, an enigmatic traveller.[43]

Fassbender, Marion Cotillard, and Justin Kurzel at the Cannes premiere of Macbeth in 2015

Fassbender played late Apple founder and CEO Steve Jobs in the Danny Boyle-directed film Steve Jobs, which began filming in January 2015, in San Francisco, U.S., and premiered in September of that year. The film is an adaptation of Walter Isaacson's book Steve Jobs.[44] The screenplay was written by Aaron Sorkin. Fassbender became attached after Christian Bale dropped out of the project.[45] His performance saw him nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor.[46]

Fassbender took on the Shakespearean role of Macbeth in a film directed by Justin Kurzel, where he teamed up with Academy Award winner Marion Cotillard as Lady Macbeth and David Thewlis as King Duncan.[47] Filming for the production began in January 2014 and the film premiered at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival.[48]

In 2016, Fassbender once again played Magneto in the film X-Men: Apocalypse.[49] He next starred in The Light Between Oceans, based on the novel written by M. L. Stedman, and directed by Derek Cianfrance; the movie began filming in New Zealand in late September 2014, and was released on 2 September 2016.[50][51] Also in 2016, Fassbender starred in the thriller Trespass Against Us, with fellow Irishman Brendan Gleeson.[52] His final film of the year was the adaptation of video game Assassin's Creed, which he co-produced through his DMC Film banner.[53] It was released on 21 December 2016. Macbeth helmer Justin Kurzel directed, and co-star Marion Cotillard had a leading role, working with Fassbender again.[54][55] In May 2017, Fassbender reprised his role as the android David, and played another character, in the sequel to Prometheus, Alien: Covenant.[56] Principal photography for the film was completed in 2016.[57] In 2015, Fassbender was cast as Harry Hole (become the first ever actor portraying the character) in The Snowman, an adaptation of Jo Nesbø's novel, directed by Tomas Alfredson and co-starring Rebecca Ferguson and Charlotte Gainsbourg. Filming began in January 2016 and the film was released in October 2017.[58] It was planned by critics, but received moderate commercial success.

Fassbender reprised his role as Magneto in the 2019 film Dark Phoenix.[59]

Future projects

In February 2018, Fassbender and Arnold Schwarzenegger were confirmed to star alongside David Hasselhoff in a full-length movie sequel of 2015 short film Kung Fury.[60][61]

Together with screenwriter Ronan Bennett, Fassbender has formed a production company, Finn McCool Films. Fassbender and Bennett are currently developing a film about the Irish mythological hero Cú Chulainn.[62]

Personal life

Fassbender lived in London, England from 1996 to 2017.[63][64][65] He had lived in the same flat that he has owned in Hackney, London since he was in his late 20s.[66]

Fassbender is fluent in German and has expressed interest in performing in a German-language film or play.[67] He is a lapsed Catholic, though he still goes to church to light candles.[16][68] He is a supporter of Liverpool football club.[69][70]

In 2010, Fassbender's then ex-girlfriend, Sunawin Andrews, filed a restraining order against him in Los Angeles County Superior Court, alleging that he 'threw me over a chair breaking my nose' in 2009, and that he had also dragged her alongside his car, injuring her ankle and knee, as well as causing her to burst an ovarian cyst.[71]The Daily Beast repeated the allegations, to which Fassbender had not publicly responded, in 2018 in the wake of the Me Too movement.[72]

Although he prefers to keep his personal life private,[73] Fassbender stated in a 2012 interview in GQ that he was seeing actress Nicole Beharie 'as much as possible', after they worked together on the movie Shame.[74] In December 2014, he began dating Swedish actress Alicia Vikander, whom he met on the set of The Light Between Oceans.[75][76] The two married in a private ceremony on 14 October 2017 in Ibiza, Spain.[77] As of 2017, they reside in Lisbon, Portugal.[78][79][80]

Filmography

Awards and nominations

See also

James Mcavoy

References

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  3. ^Murphy, Sarah-Jane (15 December 2015). 'Backlash as Colin Farrell, Saoirse Ronan and Michael Fassbender named as 'British' stars at London film awards'. Irish Independent. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
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External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Michael Fassbender.

Macbeth Michael Fassbender Trailer

  • Michael Fassbender on IMDb
  • Michael Fassbender on Box Office Mojo

Macbeth Michael Fassbender Trailer

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