Macbeth

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Out damned spot! Out, I say!

Macbeth is a subsidary of Mcdonalds. Macbeth is the slutty register chick who tricks you into buying way more burgers than you really need.Ten years before Shakespeare wrote the tie-in play that was to make his name, Nintendo released Macbeth as a game for the Nintendo Revolution. Featuring state-of-the-art control mechanics, especially when controlling the witches, the game shot to the top of the charts. Queen Elizabeth reportedly said of it: "This doth rock."

Macbeth was written by Samuel L. Jackson 230 years before he appeared in the film/musical "Fiat Punto make the best Hard Disk Drives" and 650 years to the day after he wrote and starred in "BathWars: The Adventures of Vance Miller"

Contents

[edit] History of the Game

The game took many years to even get off the ground. The visionary behind the project, Shigeru Miyamoto found every move that he made to write the background story blocked. His house was burgled, his kitten huffed, and his only son was revealed to be a daughter. In 1823, the Freedom Of Information Act revealed that Oprah was behind the campaign to prevent the game being made. She had feared that it would open a vortex in the space-time continuum, allowing the flying spaghetti monster access to her source of power. After four years of work, Miyamoto revealed his game. Involving a planatery high emporer from another universe who attempted to take over the planet McDougal, it was an instant hit. Two films, Macbeth:King of Dreams, and Macbeth II:This time it's personal were made, each picking up an oscar for their special effects.

[edit] The Backlash

Two months after the game came out, troubling reports began to emerge. According to a lawsuit brought against Nintendo, the three inter-stellar clairvoyants meant to help the player had the ability to teleport into the real world when the name of the game was uttered aloud. After two years of legal wrangling, it was ascertained that the word Macbeth was an ancient Aztec incantation, summoning doom and death upon the enemies of the utterer if said in the correct tone of voice. There was a brief fashion for utterly destroying your enemies, but the tragic death of Walter Raleigh put an end to it.

[edit] The Play

William Shakespeare, having bought the rights, spent three weeks on this. It was released to a general outcry, but has slowly become more popular, especially since 1854, when the controversial sex scene was re-introduced. It had originally been cut out after no-one could find an actor willing to be sodomised with a coronet onstage. Fanboys often hold that the original game is much better, and hold the following list of changes Shakespeare felt compelled to make as proof:

  • Action changes from space to Scotland
  • Lady Macbeth who, in the game, is a symbol of Lord Macbeth's frustration and, yes, has big breasts, is turned into a rather ugly small-breasted weirdo
  • Mario's part was removed
  • Complete and utter lack of pornography

Except the last gripe, all of these remain true today.

The plot of the play can basically be summed up as a man kills another man and is killed by another man whose family was killed by the other man. The man's wife is killed by herself before the man is killed by the other man. The man who killed another man also kills another man. (Say that ten times quickly!)

At the end of the play Macbeth is killed by bears because according to prophecy he is not killed by one born from woman, and bears are born from mother bears, which are not women.

The true reason for the decline of Macbeth was his addiction for the Purple Drank, which isn't born from woman. He just couldn't get enough of that Sizzurp. By the end of the game, the player is allowed to shout "PURPLE DRANK, BITCH!", or else a space/time vortex will open in their living rooms, releasing hundreds of thousands of small green midgets.

[edit] List of Key Characters

"Is this a photon torpedo I see before me?"

Macbeth - High Emperor of the Plannet Cawdor - In the play, Cawdor is merely a settlement in Scotland. To conform to Shakespeare's ignorance to the fact that such a place did not exist, the government had to rename a part of Scotland to stop people from asking questions.

Lady Macbeth - Macbeth's taskmaster in the game and the play... with an altering cup size and a special mini-dress up game.

Banquo - Macbeth's comrade. In the game he was controlled by rubbish AI but was a popular choice for multiplayer because he was really hard to see and had the ability to teleport, rise from the dead and go through solid objects and liquids as well. Ironically he could not travel through gasses and therefore if his teleportation wasn't charged, he could only move if a wall came up to him which was a very rare occurance. In the play he was replaced by a duffus in a bedsheet standing over a trapdoor.

King Duncan - Has an accident a third of the way through the game, which involved impaling himself on Macbeth's sword. This resulted in Lady Macbeth attempting to clean up the godawful mess (see below). It was so bad, that Lady Macbeth often ended up having nightmares for many years afterwards. Quite tragic really. This is probably the main reason why this game has an 'R' rating.

Porter - Arguably the main character in the game. Unlocking him activates certain hidden sections of the game, such Lady Macbeth's dress-up minigame and being able to control those ent-like creatures from The Lord of the Rings, an ability vital later on in the game. It also allows you to be able to control hobbit-like green midgets, who are all gay. These are a very important part of the game, as without being able to control them,you cannot hide under Lady Macbeth's dress, which is the point of the game.

[edit] Quotes From The Play

"Double double toil and trouble. Fire burn and dot-com's are a bubble" -- Warren Buffet (Act 1 Scene 1)

"It is a tale told by an idiot!" -- Macbeth on Shakespeare (Act 5 Scene 5)

"What... Is this that stands before me???" -- Ozzy Osbourne (Black Sabbath song 1)

"Out, damp spot!" -- Lady Macbeth (Act 9 Scene 20)

"I grew up in a house with Monica, okay. If you didn't eat fast, you didn't eat!" -- Ross (Season 2 Episode 14)

"Hail" -- First Witch (Act 3 Scene 1) "Hail!" -- Second Witch (Act 3 Scene 1) "Hail? SHIT! My car's parked out front and the insurance lapsed!" - Third Witch (Act 3 Scene 1)

"I've got a brand new combine harvester, and I'll give you the key" -- King Duncan (Act 63 Scene 72)

"Oh, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo... Oh fuck, wrong play. Sorry!" -- Confused Actress (Act 6,255 Scene 9,104)

"Ding dong the witch is dead, which old witch, the wicked witch" -- Midget #243 (Act 69 Scene 44)

[edit] Quotes From The Game

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For those without comedic tastes, the so-called experts at Wikipedia have an article about Macbeth.

"Is this a dagger I see stuck in your chest? You dead, bitch" -- Macbeth

"Oh no, I've lost my bra! Please go and find it!" -- Lady Macbeth

"Yeah, sure, in a minute. Wow, they're so huge, aren't they?" -- Macbeth

"Pervert! *slap*" -- Lady Macbeth

"Please, m'lady, stop fighting so I may gaze upon thine beautiful bosom" -- Ghost of Banquo

"You're all perverts! *jumps out of window*" -- Lady Macbeth

"Oh, that was kinda bad. I think...I think she's dead" -- Macbeth

"Let us grope her bosom" -- Ghost of Banquo

"But she's dead!" -- Macbeth

"Never stopped me" -- Ghost of Banquo

"You sick fuck!" -- King Duncan

"You're meant to be dead." -- Macbeth

"Oh, right. Yeah." -- King Duncan

"Macbeth shall be harmed by none of woman born" -- Apparition

"Oh, good-o *gets crushed by falling piano*" -- Macbeth

"Sorry down there!" -- Macduff

"OWNEDIZZELED!" --Macbeth on top of King Duncan

[edit] Study Questions

  • All in all, do you think Lady Macbeth was a lesbian? Justify your position.
  • Using your interpretation of the play, make an estimate of her Breast Size and draw a flowchart in the shape of breasts to support your opinion. Do any characters 'appreciate' her endowment? If yes, how so? (provide a very detailed explanation. Pictures are highly recommended)
  • If you answered yes to the above questions, would you like to see her do a porno? Justify your position.
  • Las Vegas bookies give modern day Duncan 4-1 over Macbeth. Do you agree or disagree? Would you place the bet?
  • Do you wish the word 'Thane' was banned from the English language? Explain.
  • What is the point of wishing for "double, double, toil and trouble"? Can the witches be considered masochistic?
  • Discuss coup d'etats in light of what we now know about transfers of government power in ancient Scotland. How would Machiavelli relate to this?
  • Modern day soothsayers use Tarot cards and crystal balls. Are these more accurate than boiling cauldrons? Discuss.

[edit] Macbeth:The Musical

Announced in 2004 by Andrew Lloyd-Webber, Macbeth:The Musical promises catchy show tunes, high-class production values, and hours of memorable pornography for all the family.

It has recently been outlawed due to the combination of music, Shakespeare and burlesque pornography. You'll be glad to know, however, that Romeo and Juliet: The Musical Uncovered is still in production and will be released disguised as a French version of Tetris.

Shakespeare 2.jpg
The complete works of William Shakespeare
Tragedies: Romeo and Juliet | Macbeth | King Lear | Hamlet | Othello | Titus Andronicus | Titus Androgynous | Julius Caesar | Antony and Cleopatra | Coriolanus | Troilus and Cressida | Timon of Athens
Comedies: A Midsummer Night's Dream | All's Well That Ends Well | As You Like It | Cymbeline | Love's Labour's Lost | Measure for Measure | The Merchant of Venice | The Merry Wives of Windsor | Much Ado About Nothing | Pericles, Prince of Tyre | Taming of the Shrew | The Comedy of Errors | The Tempest | Twelfth Night | The Two Gentlemen of Verona | The Two Noble Kinsmen | The Winter's Tale
Histories: King John | Richard II | Henry IV, Part 1 | Henry IV, Part 2 | Henry V | Henry VI, part 1 | Henry VI, part 2 | Henry VI, part 3 | Richard III | Henry VIII
Poems and Sonnets: Venus and Adonis | The Rape of Lucrece | The Passionate Pilgrim | The Phoenix and the Turtle | A Lover's Complaint | Sonnet 18

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