Why should you read "Macbeth"? - Brendan Pelsue

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  • Опубліковано 1 лис 2017
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    View full lesson: ed.ted.com/lessons/why-should...
    There’s a play so powerful that an old superstition says its name should never be uttered in a theater. A play that begins with witchcraft and ends with a bloody, severed head. A play filled with riddles, prophecies, nightmare visions, and lots of brutal murder. But is it really all that good? Brendan Pelsue explains why you should read (or revisit) "Macbeth."
    Lesson by Brendan Pelsue, directed by Silvia Prietov.
    Thank you so much to our patrons for your support! Without you this video would not be possible.
    Delene McCoy, Sammie Goh, Kathryn J Hammond, Ded Rabit, Sid, Jonathan Reshef, Tracey Tobkin, Jack Ta, Megan Whiteleather, Paul Coupe, Grant Albert, David Douglass, Ricardo Paredes, Bill Feaver, Eduardo Briceño, Arturo De Leon, Christophe Dessalles, Jeff Hanevich, Janie Jackson, Dr. Luca Carpinelli, Muhamad Saiful Hakimi bin Daud, Heather Slater, Patrick leaming, Martin Lõhmus, Joris Debonnet.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,1 тис.

  • @nivob3404
    @nivob3404 3 роки тому +5785

    "what is done is done" -------> years later adaptation: "IT IS WHAT IT ISSSSSSSSSS"

    • @bryan6040
      @bryan6040 3 роки тому +154

      Damn; what if a few centuries later this becomes the official Shakespeare quote and WAP becomes the new Macbeth oh lord

    • @bluemoonyoru8069
      @bluemoonyoru8069 3 роки тому +36

      PERIODT SIS💅

    • @Damonistique
      @Damonistique 3 роки тому +7

      or Tenet :D

    • @DoomerDarling
      @DoomerDarling 3 роки тому +114

      Or another variation: “it be like that sometimes”

    • @EasyEnglishWithBharti
      @EasyEnglishWithBharti 3 роки тому +61

      And now it is more like "You gotta do what you gotta do."

  • @TheScienceBiome
    @TheScienceBiome 6 років тому +18826

    Someone give the animator a raise.

    • @uniqueusername_
      @uniqueusername_ 6 років тому +326

      a BIG one

    • @paxonite-7bd5
      @paxonite-7bd5 6 років тому +273

      A really BIG one!

    • @glasshoes9337
      @glasshoes9337 6 років тому +93

      The Science Biome does anybody know who the animators are?

    • @sunspot5080
      @sunspot5080 6 років тому +187

      a small raise of a million dollars

    • @jacrooki9560
      @jacrooki9560 6 років тому +94

      GOD DAMN IT WAS GORGEOUS

  • @kentondickerson
    @kentondickerson 6 років тому +1987

    The great mistake that many schools make is making students read these plays before they see them on stage or in a movie.

    • @leticiasantiago7159
      @leticiasantiago7159 2 роки тому +248

      Yep, I've read it once but I honestly don't think I even got the message right. I mean, I understood it, but I didn't feel it. And I'm a Literature student, so... I agree with you. The book is fine but plays were meant to be PLAYED, not READ.

    • @hunterbarwary010
      @hunterbarwary010 2 роки тому +17

      Agreed

    • @JacobMinger
      @JacobMinger 2 роки тому +34

      I only survived Hamlet in school because I had Kenneth Branagh’s 4 hour film production that I watched as a study aide. I recently rediscovered a love of Shakespeare thanks to a Manga adaptation of the full text as well as Kurosawa’s Throne of Blood

    • @notazula
      @notazula Рік тому +8

      you said it. if not for the plays and movies made of the things they've made us read, i don't think i would have ever fully understood the story. it makes it more fun and educational too

    • @AfroLion01
      @AfroLion01 Рік тому +7

      I unfortunately did Macbeth in 2020 and the English teacher we did it with insisted there was no movie but we were 'voice-acting' it out in class before COVID struck and I loved it. Then she left and we did Things Fall Apart(a great book by Chinua Achebe) with the new teacher but yeah we weren't assessed on Macbeth. I felt so jealous of the Grade 11s who got to do it last year in my school.

  • @unclebayek8923
    @unclebayek8923 4 роки тому +2515

    3:29 "Shakespeare provides viewers with some of the most memorable passages in English literature: "
    *_WHAT, YOU EGG!_*

  • @vraos4240
    @vraos4240 6 років тому +4052

    The voice of this narrator is gold

    • @apolloholmes208
      @apolloholmes208 5 років тому +25

      Yes...his voice (Mr. Adrian Dannatt) and Mr. Jack Cuthmore- Scott is the best for me...

    • @karenstrong6734
      @karenstrong6734 4 роки тому +15

      Apollo Holmes I love to see this narrator narrate a book.

    • @jordanoswald8648
      @jordanoswald8648 3 роки тому

      At first I thought it was Terrence Stamp doing the narration

    • @elwn.
      @elwn. 3 роки тому

      Vraos you mean divin

    • @vjekokolic9057
      @vjekokolic9057 3 роки тому +2

      The narrator has an amasing voice, he should be an audiobook reader

  • @Redpuff101
    @Redpuff101 6 років тому +8495

    You know what else is a tragedy ? My grade after the Macbeth essay.

    • @mike2x437
      @mike2x437 4 роки тому +93

      U right

    • @amaaneeismail5256
      @amaaneeismail5256 4 роки тому +106

      dude, same here lol

    • @NynZhan
      @NynZhan 4 роки тому +16

      @Espada kurosaki I am, and I did it

    • @user-dp9yn7zf4l
      @user-dp9yn7zf4l 4 роки тому +25

      easy C- for me

    • @micahtshibangu7402
      @micahtshibangu7402 3 роки тому +12

      AsianNinjaNation Bridge to terabithia was tragic essay. Maybe only canberrans read it

  • @poojasbehaviour8530
    @poojasbehaviour8530 3 роки тому +622

    honestly, everyone's saying "what, you egg" but my favourite quote is actually the witches calling some lady a "rump-fed ronyon", it's just 👌

    • @joshuamark9316
      @joshuamark9316 3 роки тому +83

      Mine is probably that one time when lady macbeth uses an analogy of smashing a baby against a wall to get her point across

    • @notverypog
      @notverypog 2 роки тому +23

      @@joshuamark9316 lmao she got no chill

    • @z.siblings9055
      @z.siblings9055 2 роки тому +3

      AHAHAHHA NO WAIT WHAT I HAVE TO READ THAT

    • @poojasbehaviour8530
      @poojasbehaviour8530 2 роки тому +5

      @@joshuamark9316 oh dude that was brutal

    • @ohivonmenisunuoya
      @ohivonmenisunuoya 2 роки тому

      @@joshuamark9316 lol 😆 I need to read this book again

  • @SRoy-rk3tj
    @SRoy-rk3tj 5 років тому +562

    My favorite quote from the play
    “What, you Egg”!
    [Stabs Him]

    • @blueace1000
      @blueace1000 2 роки тому +33

      "He has killed me, mother"

    • @z.siblings9055
      @z.siblings9055 2 роки тому +8

      THIS IS THE LITERAL FUNNIEST VERSION OF "WHAT YOU EGG" I HAVE SEEN IN THIS ENTIRE COMMENT SECTION

  • @amonickerofprofoundpretention
    @amonickerofprofoundpretention 6 років тому +6377

    Animation's bloody gorgeous. And the Tragedy of Macbeth is bloody, gorgeous.

    • @sansamman4619
      @sansamman4619 6 років тому +36

      Georgia S. seriously mate! your are so bloody right.

    • @deanjohnson6120
      @deanjohnson6120 6 років тому +3

      Georgia S. Just because you say “gorgeous” does not make you seem literate. Nor does it make you seem intelligent.

    • @FightingTorque411
      @FightingTorque411 6 років тому +83

      Dean Johnson does Georgia need to "seem" literate and intelligent? I don't see how you deduce that using that single word makes one a try-hard.

    • @PutYoRhymeOn
      @PutYoRhymeOn 6 років тому +31

      Dean Johnson uhhh you're taking the wrong memo from his comment, mate.

    • @gambithd59
      @gambithd59 5 років тому +2

      Nice use of antanaclasis

  • @omaralmubayd
    @omaralmubayd 6 років тому +13032

    I would love to see the whole play in this style of drawing ...that would be divine.

    • @QUARTERMASTEREMI6
      @QUARTERMASTEREMI6 6 років тому +214

      You know what, you're right; that would most [agreeably] be an absolutely brilliant request.

    • @omaralmubayd
      @omaralmubayd 6 років тому +19

      QuartermasterEM16 Thank you

    • @alfredthepatientxcvi
      @alfredthepatientxcvi 6 років тому +15

      Omar Almubayd there are some recent movies about it like around 2015. Check them

    • @omaralmubayd
      @omaralmubayd 6 років тому +6

      Alfred Acar I will, thank you.

    • @emmytweetie2177
      @emmytweetie2177 6 років тому +9

      Omar Almubayd
      [insert posh laughter]

  • @dantelu7652
    @dantelu7652 3 роки тому +187

    We need an audiobook voicing the whole play with this magical sound 2:53
    Can't stop re-listening to him...

  • @ruchipeiris1663
    @ruchipeiris1663 5 років тому +539

    Sees this video
    Thumbnail: why should you read Macbeth?
    ME: cuz it's in my syllabus !

    • @adrianasaba7344
      @adrianasaba7344 3 роки тому +2

      literally

    • @chietrinidad1753
      @chietrinidad1753 2 роки тому +1

      😂

    • @youtubeuser4028
      @youtubeuser4028 2 роки тому +1

      And the tragedy for me is that I am an English literature student and don't like to read 😭 because I never got time in school years to read for fun so now I don't like it 😭 that's how Indian education system works

    • @Perririri
      @Perririri 2 роки тому +1

      "Out, damned syllabi!"

  • @mahmoodabdulrazzaq5033
    @mahmoodabdulrazzaq5033 6 років тому +2443

    This is my favorite animation and voice-over pair for any TED Ed video so far. Absolutely surreal.

    • @RICE-lq1zc
      @RICE-lq1zc 5 років тому +1

      900 likes, no comment?
      Here, have one

    • @Kaseus-lq7cj
      @Kaseus-lq7cj 5 років тому

      A third!

    • @mincao8003
      @mincao8003 5 років тому

      You pull out words out of my thoughts! I was thinking exactly the same thing but had not gotten a chance to articulate it and then saw your comments!

    • @pops1878
      @pops1878 4 роки тому

      Yep

    • @Gadget-Walkmen
      @Gadget-Walkmen 4 роки тому

      yeah

  • @supercanadian0640
    @supercanadian0640 6 років тому +4179

    Macbeth is what stopped me from overthrowing the government

    • @ShauryamAkhoury
      @ShauryamAkhoury 6 років тому +48

      The Ace Of Spades I see you in every comment section

    • @ifurkend
      @ifurkend 6 років тому +31

      We need Sibyl System, but without that bloody Dominator.

    • @golammorshed9082
      @golammorshed9082 6 років тому +31

      The Ace Of Spades Macbeth is what got me in politics. I want bloodlust

    • @EmilReiko
      @EmilReiko 6 років тому +13

      In other words, Im only here for the violence.

    • @Crispr00
      @Crispr00 6 років тому +1

      The Ace Of Spades nooo

  • @taun96
    @taun96 2 роки тому +158

    There's also an Indian version of Macbeth called Maqbool. It's part of the Shakespeare Trilogy by this famous Indian director, Vikas Bharadwaj. He adapted Macbeth into Maqbool, Othello into Omkara, and Hamlet into Haider.
    Each story borrows themes from the original story, but places them in scenarios similar to Indians.

    • @inkyboy88
      @inkyboy88 6 місяців тому +5

      Sounds cool. I’ll look into them.

    • @lou626
      @lou626 6 місяців тому +3

      Kinda ruined it tbh

  • @zainab4132
    @zainab4132 5 років тому +386

    My God - this was insanely beautiful. The voice, the content, the animations. Thanks so much for this! I wish I could give the video a million thumbs up.

  • @rea8585
    @rea8585 6 років тому +3633

    The more I read the old classics, the more I am realizing we might have progressed in so many areas, but the way we think and handle our emotions and instincts has stayed pretty much the same. We have similar problems as people living centuries before us and are asking ourselves the same existential questions that exist since a loooong time ago.
    Power changes people in different ways and if the person doesn't have a clear vision of what they want to achieve, it is easy to miss the right turn and just keep going deeper and deeper into darkness. :)

    • @idib1739
      @idib1739 6 років тому +72

      indeed, No matter how much we learn throughout history, human nature is till human nature. I'm not optimistic about how it'll all en though.

    • @guesswhoami4723
      @guesswhoami4723 6 років тому +9

      Quick Fix loved what you said and I myself so much agree...

    • @scrap8660
      @scrap8660 6 років тому +9

      Quick Fix naaaaah now everyone’s obsessed with memes

    • @sagarsaxena6318
      @sagarsaxena6318 6 років тому +24

      Yes! That's one major reason a lot of these books are relevant even today.I would go so far as to say that any form of well-made art that evokes or touches upon such issues becomes timeless.So,Macbeth will stay relevant as long as humanity exists.

    • @pooshpoosh9232
      @pooshpoosh9232 6 років тому +3

      Quick Fix back then they were said because they couldn't eat high class sugar. Now we get said because we can't have a Ferrari , same emotions with different aspects

  • @wadeslovick2815
    @wadeslovick2815 6 років тому +2962

    What, you egg?
    *He stabs him*

    • @tidebleach9667
      @tidebleach9667 6 років тому +126

      Sentic Memes best line in the entire play

    • @derekvigil9788
      @derekvigil9788 6 років тому +34

      Sentic Memes *I’m dying*

    • @tracewyrm
      @tracewyrm 6 років тому +24

      Y O U. E G G

    • @annag6400
      @annag6400 6 років тому +17

      Superior Vigil So was he

    • @weiyin8046
      @weiyin8046 6 років тому +77

      my personal favourite shakespeare line is romeo and juliet “You are a saucy boy. Is't so, indeed?”

  • @SydTom2021
    @SydTom2021 3 роки тому +216

    Ted-Ed: Why you should read Macbeth
    Year 9 English: Allow me to introduce myself

    • @LorddirtGaming
      @LorddirtGaming 2 роки тому +10

      Year 10 English for me right at this moment.

    • @alizaubaid2784
      @alizaubaid2784 2 роки тому +1

      year 8 for me 😭

    • @Robin-eq7uz
      @Robin-eq7uz 2 роки тому +1

      Year 12 for me, but I'm German so as a secondary language, I think Macbeth counts as being more advanced material.

    • @Violetgalaxyshimmer33
      @Violetgalaxyshimmer33 2 роки тому

      @@LorddirtGaming same

    • @cheeseboi8769
      @cheeseboi8769 2 роки тому

      me learning it in year 6 0

  • @marvelfangirl3328
    @marvelfangirl3328 5 років тому +145

    *"By the pricking of my thumbs,"*
    *"Something wicked this way comes."*
    - William Shakespeare, _Macbeth_

  • @troy6164
    @troy6164 6 років тому +728

    the animation was gorgeous

  • @sm6756
    @sm6756 6 років тому +1658

    Lady Macbeth
    “Who would have thought the old man to have so much blood in him?”
    “Will these hands never been clean?”
    Outstanding story!

    • @geronimohayauxdutilly2136
      @geronimohayauxdutilly2136 6 років тому +117

      Sarah Mortada don't forget
      " All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand"
      Tbh I like Lady Macbeth more than Macbeth as a character

    • @sm6756
      @sm6756 6 років тому +16

      Geronimo Hayaux du Tilly
      Ah , I liked Macbeth as well.
      All the characters felt so real and deep

    • @Tombee2
      @Tombee2 6 років тому +4

      Geronimo Hayaux du Tilly honestly she's the coolest character.

    • @franziska9260
      @franziska9260 6 років тому +4

      Geronimo Hayaux du Tilly Agreed, she is in my opinion the most memorable character from the play

    • @kadijahamad9862
      @kadijahamad9862 5 років тому +6

      Good god she is one of the most interesting characters Shakespeare ever created

  • @lenkngomez8451
    @lenkngomez8451 4 роки тому +97

    This book, plus lord of the flies and other books you have mentioned I have never read them in school mainly because I thought it was boring and never wanted to do a project on them. I felt like they were forced on , I felt like they didn’t wanted to teach you the actual meaning of it, just read do the exam and blah blah blah so we can move on. This video alone makes me want to read and dive in the human psyche and consciousness especially the lord of the flies one. I’m going to read all of them.

    • @bbilal111
      @bbilal111 2 роки тому +1

      I’m guessing you still didn’t?

  • @user-dz2hj6jo5h
    @user-dz2hj6jo5h 5 років тому +125

    “Why you should read Macbeth”
    Me: Read it to pass the aqa gcse literature exam🗿🗿🗿🗿

  • @Vulkrein
    @Vulkrein 6 років тому +585

    "What? You Egg!"
    (Stabs him)
    -Macbeth

    • @Vulkrein
      @Vulkrein 6 років тому +14

      The reference was macbeth but she did not say this line, i apologize

    • @Lulu-fq8xw
      @Lulu-fq8xw 3 роки тому +7

      @@Vulkrein Macbeth never said this line himself
      The first murderer did

  • @idib1739
    @idib1739 6 років тому +603

    The animation in here is next level. So well made, and probably not cheap to produce though. Keep up the good work guys.

  • @aliserkansar335
    @aliserkansar335 5 років тому +56

    This play made my heart pulped faster than ever before happened. Lady and Lord Macbeth's ambigiuties are quite philosophical. You should think that why a man commits a horrible betrayal even if he know that he would be regret. Lord Macbeth is the mirror of many politicians throughout the history.

  • @LEGENDSREIMAGINED17
    @LEGENDSREIMAGINED17 4 роки тому +125

    Macbeth is one of the masterpieces of Shakespeare. It's universality is marvellous as it is nearly the story of every Dictator ever ruled.

  • @Merrypaws
    @Merrypaws 6 років тому +384

    One of TED-Ed's finest videos to date. Gorgeous animation, riveting voice over and excellent pacing, making for not only educational, but truly dramatic telling, which makes learning a captivating experience.

  • @juniormachado4456
    @juniormachado4456 6 років тому +438

    Shakespeare leaves a class looking like the end of Macbeth

    • @gregg6077
      @gregg6077 6 років тому +4

      Junior Machado too true

    • @firewall5189
      @firewall5189 6 років тому +24

      if this is an ERB reference that i wasnt expecting, im eating my shoe

    • @juniormachado4456
      @juniormachado4456 6 років тому +11

      The Overlord | Yes it is. Shakespeare vs Dr. Seuss right? :D

    • @woden__
      @woden__ 5 років тому +2

      I was waiting for this

  • @sumbulnasim45
    @sumbulnasim45 5 років тому +25

    Great job!!! This is a very good series. How beautifully you compressed the 5-Act play in 6 minutes. That's a fantastic job! Keep it up!

  • @noahconley867
    @noahconley867 4 роки тому +56

    The best part of Macbeth is the fact that j.r.r Tolkien was so disappointed that the trees didn't actually move, he made the Ents.

  • @ananya.a.
    @ananya.a. 6 років тому +1103

    My dearest, Angelica. Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day. I trust you'll understand the reference to another Scottish Tragedy without my having to name the play-

    • @darvog1983
      @darvog1983 6 років тому +36

      I was looking for this

    • @joshuaterania9071
      @joshuaterania9071 6 років тому +53

      Hamilfans gotta unite 😂

    • @sandrarivera1262
      @sandrarivera1262 6 років тому +28

      On The Wall Ah, I knew I would find Hamilton fans here😎

    • @kiwireeds5883
      @kiwireeds5883 6 років тому +7

      OMYWORD! THIS JUST SHED A NEW LIGHT!

    • @romysuter9642
      @romysuter9642 5 років тому +9

      when we started macbeth at school all i could think of was this quote lmao

  • @d_wang9836
    @d_wang9836 6 років тому +831

    To read or not to read. That isth thy question

    • @matthewblairrains6032
      @matthewblairrains6032 6 років тому +24

      [Yoshikage_Kira] aka Handy Man, Duwang Man, *chew* that's the wrong quote your using Hamlet instead

    • @d_wang9836
      @d_wang9836 6 років тому +14

      Matthew Blairrains I know

    • @mirwaizuzair6386
      @mirwaizuzair6386 6 років тому +14

      To read the manga or to wait 1000 years for part 5?

    • @esomoi7197
      @esomoi7197 6 років тому +3

      [Yoshikage_Kira] aka Handy Man, Duwang Man, *chew* you mean the question. Thy means your.

    • @d_wang9836
      @d_wang9836 6 років тому +2

      kingjojo I also know that
      I thought someone would correct me sooner

  • @puru397
    @puru397 5 років тому +95

    Another excellent line from Macbeth:
    "Blow, wind, come, wrack,
    At least we'll die with harness on our back."
    Another perspective on Macbeth would be to look on him as a brave and intelligent man, misled bt a conspiracy of circumstances and misguided by his own frailties. His courage and honesty are obvious in the beginning, obscured and tainted in the middle, and come out again in the end. This is clear from the two great soliloquies towards the ending:
    1) My life has fallen into the sere and the yellow leaf
    And all that should accompany old age
    Such as love, honour, troops of friends
    These I must not look to have, but in their stead
    Mouth-honour, breath, curses not loud but deep
    Which the poor heart would fain deny, but dare not."
    2) The famous soliloquy beginning : Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow....
    These two monologues show him to be an essentially decent man trapped in a dreadful situation.

    • @jennymacallan9071
      @jennymacallan9071 3 роки тому +7

      As a retired English teacher, I couldn't agree more. Many of Macbeth's lines show his soul-searching and ambivalence. The "yellow leaf" speech is my favorite. You point out all this quite nicely.

    • @jeannadysart5243
      @jeannadysart5243 3 роки тому +11

      English teacher, too. I agree with you, generally, except for your reluctance to put the consequences of Macbeth's life upon himself. If he was "trapped in a dreadful situation," it was one of his own making. Yes, he has heroic qualities, but his ambition overcame his conscience, his integrity, and his dedication to duty. He dishonored himself, the very definition of a tragic hero.

    • @njrom2975
      @njrom2975 2 роки тому +3

      @@jeannadysart5243 not a hero anymore , he is now the villain , the protagonist villain

    • @jeannadysart5243
      @jeannadysart5243 2 роки тому +4

      @@njrom2975 In Shakespeare's history plays, you can use the term "protagonist villain," though in all my years of teaching Shakespeare, I've only seen that term in a few scholarly papers. But Richard III does comes to mind. In Shakespeare's tragedies, however, you misunderstand the meaning of "tragic hero" if you don't recognize Macbeth (or Hamlet, King Lear, Othello . . . ) as a tragic hero. There are villains in the tragedies, to be sure: Iago, Goneril and Regan, Claudius, Lady Macbeth ...

    • @nix.i
      @nix.i Рік тому +2

      @@njrom2975 ‘Protagonist villain’ sounds pretty clunky, and only Shakespeare tragedy in which ‘protagonist villain’ is truly applicable is Richard III (but I would still rather call Gloster a Machiavellian Villain than a protagonist villain, because it‘s more accurate and sounds better). He revels in his villainy and his downfall is glorious. Macbeth, on the other hand, is a tragic hero rather than a villain.

  • @naokihunter7252
    @naokihunter7252 4 роки тому +738

    *In scottish voice*
    "WHAT YOU EGG"
    *stab*

    • @fivetimesyo
      @fivetimesyo 4 роки тому +12

      Without a doubt a high school highlight

    • @Eh-kw1sp
      @Eh-kw1sp 3 роки тому +2

      would that make him a... scotch egg!?

    • @elizabethharris3445
      @elizabethharris3445 3 роки тому

      With a side of small fry...

  • @MinecraftSinss
    @MinecraftSinss 6 років тому +518

    Macbeth was forced upon me in school, I can't avoid it.

    • @AWKWAKAE
      @AWKWAKAE 6 років тому +6

      MinecraftSinss yessss like I had no choice if I wanted to read it or not

    • @mattparker7932
      @mattparker7932 6 років тому +2

      I was actually drawn to it as a youth after seeing a more historical take on Macbeth featured in the animated series Gargoyles. Good stuff.

    • @youssefabdelrahim972
      @youssefabdelrahim972 6 років тому +7

      it's forced upon me right now , but i am glad with it

    • @theevokeruser2356
      @theevokeruser2356 6 років тому +3

      MinecraftSinss school pretty much forced us to read it. However Romeo and Juliet was the one we looked at constantly. Year after year it was always Romeo and Juliet and I got sick of it.

    • @NM-cl6um
      @NM-cl6um 6 років тому

      I have just complete reading it

  • @siddjoshi2053
    @siddjoshi2053 6 років тому +311

    *_W.Shakespeare is the original Q.Tarantino._*

    • @adren4306
      @adren4306 6 років тому +14

      I never thought about it that way. Interesting.

    • @Motofanable
      @Motofanable 6 років тому +2

      Just watch movie version en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titus_Andronicus

    • @komalahayes1535
      @komalahayes1535 5 років тому +6

      I almost picked English for grad school over Sociology. I wanted to study how Shakespeare, Hitchcock and Tarintino were linked😋NERRRD!!!! 😛😛😛

    • @charliechaplin7959
      @charliechaplin7959 5 років тому +2

      Komala Hayes Did you read Erich Fromm?

    • @mattj.7756
      @mattj.7756 4 роки тому

      That would be a great “Change My Mind” challenge

  • @somyajindal
    @somyajindal 4 роки тому +32

    Dear TedEd, your team is doing literally magical work, please never stop!

  • @Hattes
    @Hattes 5 років тому +8

    This video is so frickin' amazing it gives me shivers multiple times viewing it. I am in awe.

  • @a.a2697
    @a.a2697 6 років тому +715

    You wouldn't be applauding it so much if you had to learn this play in your exam

    • @firewall5189
      @firewall5189 6 років тому +81

      Studied it for 4 weeks straight with 2 essays on it, still applauding it lol

    • @tubthungusbychumbungus
      @tubthungusbychumbungus 6 років тому +22

      The Overlord I have to study it for 2 years. Its getting pretty tedious now...

    • @firewall5189
      @firewall5189 6 років тому +3

      sorry to hear Karina, paying my respects

    • @tubthungusbychumbungus
      @tubthungusbychumbungus 6 років тому +3

      The Overlord Thank you... I get through it

    • @dakshinibhattacharya996
      @dakshinibhattacharya996 6 років тому +10

      Read it for an entire year, doing multiple essays on a number of different aspects and characters in the play... and still could not get enough of it :) Can't decide which one I love more though, this one or Julius Caesar!

  • @mariazia9407
    @mariazia9407 6 років тому +137

    oh my..the animations are stunning 😍

  • @godhimself7708
    @godhimself7708 4 роки тому +5

    Along with the animation and the perfect voice over, the background score is on point!

  • @martincisternas4889
    @martincisternas4889 2 роки тому +2

    Not only the animations are incredible, but the background music as well. Very good job 👍🏻

  • @Star-gt1uu
    @Star-gt1uu 6 років тому +161

    Fairplay to the narrator.That was magnificent

  • @GabrielKnightz
    @GabrielKnightz 6 років тому +376

    Suggestion: *Niccolo Machiavelli's Prince.*

  • @ijeleo92
    @ijeleo92 6 років тому +8

    This animation is amazing!!!!!🙌 I wish there was a series like this.

  • @kc-gr9rj
    @kc-gr9rj 3 роки тому +26

    pov: it’s 10:25pm and i- your watching this for m- your honors english assignment

  • @TomSistermans
    @TomSistermans 6 років тому +183

    Come on you guys, I love these literature recommendations but I can't keep up! I haven't even started the Aeneid yet

    • @omaralmubayd
      @omaralmubayd 6 років тому +9

      omg... "Aeneid" by Virgil would take a lot of your time ...but trust me it is worth every second ...

    • @TomSistermans
      @TomSistermans 6 років тому +7

      Omar Almubayd definitely, I just recently started reading these classics, I mean Ulysses sounds really interesting as well, but so do the tale of Genji, in search for lost time, the divine comedy, Don Quixote, the Canterbury tales, crime and punishment, Oedipus Rex and the epic of Gilgamesh! All books worth a video like this, all books I own, but all monsters worth a lot of time!

    • @charliechaplin7959
      @charliechaplin7959 5 років тому +1

      Have you read the Essays of Montaigne? It is by FAR my favorite of the "classics."

    • @gabrielallen6896
      @gabrielallen6896 4 роки тому

      Fyuch I'm hot. By,

  • @IAm-IAm-
    @IAm-IAm- 6 років тому +68

    I read Macbeth at Uni and instantly got hooked to it. The gripping drama and tale of deceit was told in a way i had never come across in classic English literature before. Shakespeare's Macbeth was way ahead of its time exploring the depths of human psychology. I loved it.

    • @Finarphin
      @Finarphin 2 роки тому

      I can't agree Macbeth is ahead of its time; it's more like it's behind its time. Although it is psychological, psychology as a science hadn't been developed yet. It's main focus is spiritual, and specifically Christian, which, for the most part, has gone out of fashion these days. Has drama improved since Shakespeare? Has sculpture improved since Michelangelo?

    • @znn4125
      @znn4125 4 місяці тому +2

      @@Finarphin You trying to be different so bad

  • @Suranjan_Malik
    @Suranjan_Malik Рік тому

    Wow how beautifully this video is created.
    Narration, animation, music ,sound , everything is perfect..

  • @patriciasmith1091
    @patriciasmith1091 7 місяців тому +1

    This is an incredibly well done intro to Macbeth and exactly what my students need in this video centric world. I show it to my students every semester and it really piques their interest. Seriously - great job! Thank you so much for this video!

  • @hashaborgonja
    @hashaborgonja 6 років тому +154

    The essence of McBeth, man's rebellion against nature is an eons old one. Think of something so ancient as the Babylonian creation myth, and you'll see the same themes repeated again and again.

    • @htoodoh5770
      @htoodoh5770 6 років тому

      hasábburgonya What rebellion?

    • @hashaborgonja
      @hashaborgonja 6 років тому +1

      The King represetns the natural state of things. KIlling him is rebelling against what's natural and makes you unnatural.

    • @htoodoh5770
      @htoodoh5770 6 років тому +1

      hasábburgonya What make him natural?

    • @hashaborgonja
      @hashaborgonja 6 років тому +1

      Htoo Doh adhering to the existing power-structures. The video quite clearly states why that theme was relevant when the play was written.

    • @htoodoh5770
      @htoodoh5770 6 років тому

      hasábburgonya The nature of things are always changing.

  • @boldandbrash1990
    @boldandbrash1990 6 років тому +15

    Recently read Macbeth in school. Although many of my classmates were probably disinterested, I couldn't get enough of the story and was completely sucked in. Although I probably wouldn't be able to understand the language without my teacher's help, I'm in love with it. I did, however, accidentally curse my school theater by absentmindedly saying to a friend, "You know, I love Macbeth." One of my favorite hobbies is reading lines of the play when I'm alone (I'm an amateur actor). Anyway, great video. I highly recommend Macbeth to anyone interested in literature!

    • @jeannadysart5243
      @jeannadysart5243 3 роки тому

      Macbeth is my favorite tragedy. King Lear is a close second.

    • @boldandbrash1990
      @boldandbrash1990 3 роки тому

      @@jeannadysart5243 I don't remember ever writing this comment wtf

    • @jeannadysart5243
      @jeannadysart5243 3 роки тому

      @@boldandbrash1990 You know what they say about the Internet . . . you words live on forever!

  • @i_am_me1238
    @i_am_me1238 5 років тому +30

    2:12
    Did people do this (🤘🏻) in Shakespeare's time?

  • @amisfitsdiary4489
    @amisfitsdiary4489 6 років тому +4

    omg the art in this is so beautifu!!

  • @Careless-Scholar
    @Careless-Scholar 6 років тому +185

    the Gunpowder Plot...
    and today is 2nd November...The timing could not be more perfect...
    'Remember, Remember the 5th of November...'

    • @user-rn8yy4vy1i
      @user-rn8yy4vy1i 6 років тому +14

      Priyank Jain Would it be more perfect on the 5th of November?

    • @Careless-Scholar
      @Careless-Scholar 6 років тому +16

      *Wouldn't
      and yes, It would be. But What's done is done ;)
      (Now who is witty) :P :P

    • @Kitisuneh
      @Kitisuneh 6 років тому

      Priyank Jain what is that from?

    • @Careless-Scholar
      @Careless-Scholar 6 років тому +4

      The Poem? www.potw.org/archive/potw405.html
      visit the link. Its an English Folk Poem

    • @reginaphalange3537
      @reginaphalange3537 6 років тому +1

      Priyank Jain today is

  • @sophiemontecalvo7503
    @sophiemontecalvo7503 6 років тому +119

    Because it's AWESOME
    Okay Ted-Ed, now for your more in-depth answer

  • @erpollock
    @erpollock 5 років тому +6

    "Something wicked this way comes" - didn't know that was from MacBeth! We must have studied this play in high school, as I can recall the Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow speech and subsequent lines from it. How chilling!

  • @luisagf1385
    @luisagf1385 3 роки тому +32

    “Some of the most memorable passages in English literature”
    Me: “what, you egg [he stabs him]”

  • @saurabhbanik7811
    @saurabhbanik7811 6 років тому +22

    The animation style is just amazing!!!!
    Also i love how the dialogues are said in a Scottish accent!!

  • @jivonne1991
    @jivonne1991 6 років тому +8

    Love these literary recommendations! Please keep ‘Em coming!

  • @divyasingh_1186
    @divyasingh_1186 5 років тому

    Breath-taking and gorgeous i could watch this video all day
    A perfect combination of the voice over and animation

  • @marsilene
    @marsilene 9 місяців тому

    That was so cool . The animation, the sound effects and the voice are just wow

  • @sweetnsourpotatoes3323
    @sweetnsourpotatoes3323 6 років тому +34

    What a mesmerising voice

  • @ravynneblack4114
    @ravynneblack4114 6 років тому +3

    Seriously love the animation. Love the narration as well. I have a copy of it, but never got around to reading it, cause I thought it would be boring, this completely changed my mind! Definitely reading it now!

  • @antidepressant11
    @antidepressant11 4 роки тому

    such high quality presentation is much appreciated

  • @dhanishhamdhan769
    @dhanishhamdhan769 2 роки тому +3

    I absolutely love the way he recites the prophecies and curses

  • @remixtheidiot5771
    @remixtheidiot5771 6 років тому +40

    School gives me a bad impression on these stories the channel recommends because of how school forces us to read and memorize them without any give on the matter, but I might just give them another chance thanks to these videos...

  • @SuicideBunny6
    @SuicideBunny6 6 років тому +15

    Never read or seen the play, but it surely sounds interesting. I loved the animation!

  • @TrangNguyen-pz3fo
    @TrangNguyen-pz3fo 5 років тому +1

    I love his voice so much. So calm

  • @divine.reveries4256
    @divine.reveries4256 5 років тому +6

    This is so beautifully portrayed. More like these videos please. Let the literature live and breathe into life. Thanks.

  • @ruthydrawsalot1979
    @ruthydrawsalot1979 6 років тому +19

    This was a great story and has some of the best plot twists ever.I read it for literature class in grade nine in my high school and most people thought it was boring but I loved it

    • @cr3ations
      @cr3ations 2 роки тому +4

      I hope literature has stayed with you since then!

  • @chibimena
    @chibimena 6 років тому +15

    Absolutely beautiful. I got chills multiple times watching this and am wondering how it has taken me so long to read this since I am an English major after all.

  • @LeviAckerman-xz6mi
    @LeviAckerman-xz6mi 2 роки тому +2

    1:22 the way they placed the crown was beautiful

  • @pinkcloud390
    @pinkcloud390 5 років тому

    the video is so well done!! amazing!

  • @ComputerChris2
    @ComputerChris2 6 років тому +188

    *_WHAT, YOU EGG?_*

    • @heliotropezzz333
      @heliotropezzz333 6 років тому

      There's also another nice bird based quotation after one character's family is murdered and he finds out "What, all my pretty chickens and their dam in one fell swoop?" and another about night time when "birds take wing to the rooky wood" ( I may not be wholly right as this is from memory.)

  • @andrequevedopacheco1027
    @andrequevedopacheco1027 6 років тому +14

    3:27 "The Shinning" reference

  • @ma3.ma3
    @ma3.ma3 4 роки тому

    Wow, the animation and voiceover is top tier amazing!

  • @karensaar9465
    @karensaar9465 4 роки тому

    Fantastic! Thank you Patreon and TED-Ed.

  • @csl9843
    @csl9843 6 років тому +8

    This and the riddles are my favorite series

  • @ninetynine_not_out
    @ninetynine_not_out 4 роки тому +7

    The switches in the accents are just too good. Mad respect.

  • @jimsgirl1465
    @jimsgirl1465 4 роки тому +1

    Animation and narration are perfect!

  • @Salma-oq6oz
    @Salma-oq6oz 5 років тому

    Fantastic video!! Please make more and specifically so on Hamlet!!!

  • @alextrahan6400
    @alextrahan6400 3 роки тому +13

    my English teacher keeps assigning videos like this (Julius Caesar) and little does she know I’ve already seen these..

  • @rustyshackle8000
    @rustyshackle8000 2 роки тому +2

    Probably my favorite play ever, besides the Crucible. It got to the point I was once able to read Macbeth's monologue off the top of my head, and was overjoyed when ig ot to be him during a reading of it in high school.

  • @steffywilmart7461
    @steffywilmart7461 6 років тому

    Your videos are so amazing, interesting and beautiful. Thank you for that.

  • @britishparisian6846
    @britishparisian6846 6 років тому

    Everything you guys produce is genius. Please please do one of these on Hamlet. Would love to see your take on it!

  • @Paulkuriansunny
    @Paulkuriansunny 3 роки тому +9

    It's been adapted into a Malayalam film called JOJI and it's freaking amazing.

  • @valmid5069
    @valmid5069 6 років тому +36

    Anyone see the Shining reference 3:30 ?

    • @sohamdutta4381
      @sohamdutta4381 3 роки тому +1

      I was searching for this comment 😂😂

    • @paribhandarkar3503
      @paribhandarkar3503 3 роки тому

      What!? I don't get it!!

    • @Finarphin
      @Finarphin 2 роки тому +1

      @@paribhandarkar3503 The blood gushing out of the walls.

  • @SwfanredLotr
    @SwfanredLotr 3 роки тому

    I can't stop watching these animations and the sound effects of the beginning.

  • @samarthashori9410
    @samarthashori9410 5 років тому

    Read this play in school and after watching this superb video wanna read it again. Loved the way you presented it👏💓

  • @LadyoftheDreamless14
    @LadyoftheDreamless14 4 роки тому +4

    I had to take my grade 10 english class 3 times and so i got to read this play 3 times. I adore it!!

  • @AloisAgos
    @AloisAgos Рік тому +3

    If you wish to poison a noble man, do not gift him a snake, gift him power.

  • @twangerrrrrr
    @twangerrrrrr 3 роки тому +1

    The animations and art is soooooooo good!

  • @malhadari
    @malhadari 6 років тому

    Amazing animation and sound effects!

  • @saumyadipnandy2060
    @saumyadipnandy2060 6 років тому +91

    Please continue the 'history on trial' series

  • @MonkeyWhoWouldBeKing
    @MonkeyWhoWouldBeKing 6 років тому +7

    Just one correction:
    the succession of James VI and I was not a surprise move. He was the next in the line of succession and (in the immediate aftermath of the war of the roses) the english nobles were very heavily invested in sticking to the rules as written.
    He had been receiving a pension from the english crown for years prior to Elizabeth Tudor's death to incentivise him not to do anything that would make his succession politically inconvenient.
    Everyone knew he was going to be king basically since Elizabeth got to menopause.

  • @salma4193
    @salma4193 5 років тому

    Make more of these types of videos they’re great

  • @ramachandran-od8mg
    @ramachandran-od8mg 5 років тому

    The Best Animation with sound effects and useful adtional informations on various Adaptations . thank you so much
    we expect more vedioes like this