I am confused as to what you wrote
The unspoilered bit? Well, it was intended to be a little Russells's Paradox in composition, so you're excused.
And I'm
not going into the spoilered bit. It was waffle. And you obviously didn't read to the end, anyway (don't blame you) because "Also you didn't have to be Shakespear [sic] to essentially write his plays." is something I actually pointed out, as is the fact that I
also don't consider him a god, so you're not getting an argument from me. I just happen to like him, feel free to not do so. (I
still think that
not liking him is a herd-following behaviour, but I don't live where you live, etc, and individual cattle can easily be making up their own mind to go where the herd happens to want to head to anyway, so you could be an individual who just
appears to be going with the apparent flow.)
But there's no mileage to be made of discussing this further, especially about "movies about Shakespeare where his first working draft happens to be the complete play as we read it now", given that the version where there were three milkmaids on the flowery meadow (or whatever) never got handed down, whereas the doubtless later more dramatised version with three witches on the blasted heath is the one that we know and 'love'. What's can a modern semi-biographical screenplay writer
do, though, when portraying this guy? (Yeah, some make him fall in love, some make him a secret agent for the crown, some just send time-travellers at him to bring out the anachronisms of the favoured medium, and then the scripts are peppered by loads of almost 'brick joke' references, if one were watching the production before actually experiencing his plays.)
Please, don't like Titus Andronicus (or any other of his works, or any at all) just because some people
apparently treat him as a god (assuming that's not just your hyperbole). TA (and most of his works that weren't politically-biased, and even some of
them) were always intended as comedy pieces or tear-jerkers or (in TA's case) a bit of a slash-horror precursor, and I doubt he knew we'd just
happen to still be putting them on stage, or gutting in order to power one plot-strand or other of a popular TV soap-opera, after so many hundred years. (Besides, they're all much better "In the original Klingon".
)
See what you're doing to me. I stridently strive to stay neutral, as I feel I should, but your imprecise arguments needle me. If you're so anti, you must have a wierd Shakespeare cult in your locale, of some kind. Most of the rest of the people who haven't just been put off by not understanding it either merely
like his stuff (or some of it) or are all <meh> about it, in my experience, but in your corner of the world there's doubtless rituals atop castle ramparts as people talk to 'ghosts', suicide pacts conducted in tombs, a policy of horses on demand (for a 'small' fee of just
everything one owns), and cross-dressing aplenty (especially amongst identical twins). Must be a strange place to live.
So, anyway, Eric Blair. What's your problem with him? You're one of the ones who would have him burnt at the stake rather than canonised, I presume?