Romeo & Juliet (1968)
Facts
| Directed by | Franco Zeffirelli |
| Cast | Leonard Whiting, Olivia Hussey, John McEnery, Milo O'Shea, Pat Heywood (II), Vittorio Gassman, John Mcenery, Natasha Parry, Robert Stephens, Richard Warwick and Michael York |
| Theatrical Release | October 8, 1968 |
| DVD Release | May 23, 2000 |
| Running Time | 138 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | G (General Audience) |
| UPC Code | 097360680942 |
| Buy this item | $4.99 at Amazon.com As of May 11 23:07 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Paramount Home Video, Usually ships in 24 hours, Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Unknown - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), English (Subtitled), English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono) Or 47 new from $3.44, 22 used from $4.47 |
About Romeo & Juliet
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User Reviews
Average user review:The DVD was of high grade and quality. The color, picture and sound were of high quality as well. April 17, 2008
A Classic!
I first saw this movie when I was just a teen, but have loved it for years.
Its a classic love story (Shakespeare) movie and I think everyone should see it. It brings William Shakespeares play to life and stands the test of time. Keep tissues handy, its a tear jerker. My 15 year old son is studying it in high school and the movie made it come to life for him and he got an A on his test!
I give it 5 stars! April 16, 2008
Romeo and Juliet
This is one of the best films ever produced. It truly captures the amazing literature of the great William Shakespeare. The movie is worth viewing and the actors play their parts very accurately and wonderfully. April 14, 2008
Zeffirelli's adaptation is still the definitive film.
Romeo and Juliet (Franco Zeffirelli, 1968)
Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet has long been considered the definitive film adaptation of Shakespeare's play, and is considered by a number of critics one of the thousand best films ever made. It took two Oscars, for cinematography and costume design (both well deserved), and was also nominated for both Best Picture and Best Director. Despite cutting the play to less than two and a half hours (and making some risky decisions therein, most famously cutting a great deal of the "...it is the east, and Juliet is the sun..." monologue), Zeffirelli captured, at least in my opinion, most of what Shakespeare was on about here. Another risky move was casting two young, untried actors in the lead roles, Leonard Whiting (whose career in film was surprisingly brief, after which he went back to live theater) and Olivia Hussey (who is, of course, still in the midst of a long and busy film career). They're backed up by a number of other young and equally talented actors who have since gone on to remarkable film careers, most notably Michael York (Tybalt) and John McEnery (Mercutio). The acting here is sublime; there's nothing else to be said about it. The passion and the pageantry are exquisitely depicted, albeit in a more subdued manner than in Baz Luhrmann's more recent film version (which, unlike most admirers of this film, I am also quite fond of).
As an introduction to Shakespearean drama, I'm not sure there's anything to rival this. Wonderful. **** March 25, 2008
Great for my students
Shakespeare is hard for any student to grasp- especially while reading it out of a textbook. These plays were meant to be seen and heard! This classic version of Romeo and Juliet is fairly accurate to the play, and aside from a little nudity after Romeo and Juliet consummate their marriage, perfectly appropriate for the classroom. I like to show clips of the Romeo and Juliet staring Leonardo and Claire for a little compare/contrast. For the most part, students prefer this more traditional portrayal. February 24, 2008





