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Romeo and Juliet (1968)

 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
type
TVTItem
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
label
Romeo and Juliet (1968)
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
page
RomeoAndJuliet1968
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
comment
Romeo and Juliet is a 1968 film directed by Franco Zeffirelli, based on the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare.It stars Leonard Whiting as Romeo and Olivia Hussey as Juliet, and was the first major production to cast actual teenagers in the roles.The supporting cast included Michael York as Tybalt. Laurence Olivier giving the opening and closing narration, and also dubbed the voice of the Italian actor who played Lord Montague. Bruce Robinson, who plays Benvolio, went on to a long career as a screenwriter and director of movies like Withnail and I. Nino Rota composed the score.The film gained a measure of infamy at the time for featuring teen-aged Romeo and Juliet partially naked during a scene (the urban legend that Hussey was refused entry into the film because she wasn't old enough is almost certainly false).It was nominated for four Academy Awards, winning for cinematography and costume design. Compare the 1936 version, Romeo and Juliet, and the 1996 version, William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
fetched
2023-09-18T14:35:53Z
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
parsed
2023-09-18T14:35:54Z
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_108c268e
type
Hotter and Sexier
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_108c268e
comment
Hotter and Sexier: This film cast two attractive young actors and then took advantage of the end of The Hays Code to include brief nudity from Juliet and rather more prolonged nudity from Romeo, and also restaged their last scene together to show them in bed, when the play's stage directions only say "at the window". As a result it's Hotter and Sexier than any stage or screen adaptation of Romeo and Juliet that preceded it.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_108c268e
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_108c268e
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_108c268e
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_121b3725
type
Age Lift
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_121b3725
comment
Age Lift: Juliet is subtly aged up to be played by a sixteen-year-old actress (though dialogue about her being nearly fourteen was kept). The Nurse if compared to other adaptations, which cast older grandmotherly women. Pat Heywood was only 36, though that's actually most likely the correct age for the character in the original text.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_121b3725
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_121b3725
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_121b3725
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_16d14f03
type
Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_16d14f03
comment
Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks: Friar Lawrence has a desk covered in quite a few interesting-looking (and impractical) retorts and bottles, shown prominently during the scene where he is giving Juliet the sleeping potion. The shots of Juliet from Lawrence's P.O.V. make a point of showing her surrounded on all sides by the Italian Renaissance-era style glassware. Interestingly one of the items is a very anachronistic modern Erlenmeyer flask filled with blue liquid.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_16d14f03
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_16d14f03
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_16d14f03
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_1d0b6a7b
type
Insert Cameo
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_1d0b6a7b
comment
Insert Cameo: During the Sword Fight, when Mercutio throws a sword at Tybalt's feet, Mercutio's shadow is actually Franco Zeffirelli's shadow standing in for him because John McEnery was sick that day (according to Michael York's autobiography).
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_1d0b6a7b
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_1d0b6a7b
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_1d0b6a7b
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_1e1aa82a
type
Diabolus ex Machina
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_1e1aa82a
comment
Diabolus ex Machina: Straight from the play. The final tragedy only plays out because the Friar by random chance gets stuck in a plague-stricken town that has been put under quarantine, and as a result can't get his crucial message to Romeo.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_1e1aa82a
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_1e1aa82a
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_1e1aa82a
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_21d47bb7
type
Nouveau Riche
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_21d47bb7
comment
Nouveau Riche: This is how the Capulets (Juliet's family) are depicted, reflected in their stylistic choices. The Capulets and their retainers are dressed in loud, bright colors, while the Montagues (the older and more respected family of Romeo) favor more conservative clothing hues.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_21d47bb7
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_21d47bb7
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_21d47bb7
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_23473ae7
type
Adaptation Expansion
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_23473ae7
comment
Adaptation Expansion: The film adds extra scenes not in the text. At the masquerade, a Capulet singer called Leonardo sings a song called "What is a Youth", which segues into the lovers' first lines together. Before he leaves Verona, Romeo is seen bidding goodbye to Benvolio. Juliet's first funeral is shown, and Balthasar witnesses the burial. The ending adds in a funeral scene for Romeo and Juliet, showing the reactions of characters like Lady Capulet, Benvolio, the Nurse and Balthasar.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_23473ae7
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_23473ae7
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_23473ae7
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_29718d62
type
Accent Adaptation
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_29718d62
comment
Accent Adaptation: Despite being set (and filmed in) Italy, the majority of characters speak with English RP accents - the Capulets all speaking much posher than the Montagues. The Nurse as a servant is given a light cockney accent, while Friar Lawrence is given an Irish one.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_29718d62
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_29718d62
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_29718d62
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_2ccdff6c
type
Mortal Wound Reveal
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_2ccdff6c
comment
Mortal Wound Reveal: Mercutio's death is played as this, although it's Romeo who reveals the mortal wound after Mercutio is dead.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_2ccdff6c
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_2ccdff6c
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_2ccdff6c
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3322e9cd
type
Hollywood Old
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3322e9cd
comment
Hollywood Old: A justified example. The Nurse is played by Pat Heywood at 36...which is actually the age she most likely is in the text.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3322e9cd
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3322e9cd
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3322e9cd
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3be1cf38
type
Gag Haircut
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3be1cf38
comment
Gag Haircut: At one point during his duel with Mercutio, Tybalt cuts a chunk of his hair with a sword and draws laughter from the onlookers.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3be1cf38
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3be1cf38
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3be1cf38
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3ec27f76
type
Costume Porn
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3ec27f76
comment
Costume Porn: The Renaissance costumes are absolutely breathtaking and absolutely period-accurate, with hundreds of yards of elaborately pleated cotton velvet on the women and raunchy, colourful tights and codpieces on the men. It deservedly won an Oscar for Best Costume Design.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3ec27f76
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3ec27f76
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3ec27f76
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3f45f1e6
type
Adaptational Heroism
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3f45f1e6
comment
Adaptational Heroism: A mild case with Tybalt. Tybalt is often played as a dead-eyed killer out for Montague blood, as he is in both the 1936 and 1996 films. But in this movie he's more of a boisterous youth. He is laughing and having fun during the duel with Mercutio, and he has a My God, What Have I Done? look of horror on his face when he sees blood on his sword and realizes that he has stabbed Mercutio for real.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3f45f1e6
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3f45f1e6
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3f45f1e6
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3f89452c
type
Sad Clown
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3f89452c
comment
Sad Clown: Mercutio. He's the jokester among Romeo's friends, cracking jokes that amuse them and is constantly sarcastic. At heart though he's troubled for unspecified reasons, and briefly shows it during his speech on Queen Mab, covering this with humor. When he's mortally wounded, he angrily denounces both Montagues and Capulets. The Nurse becomes this by the final scene. We see her ashen-faced and trying to comfort Benvolio as she accompanies the funeral procession inside.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3f89452c
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3f89452c
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_3f89452c
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_444fdea2
type
Balcony Wooing Scene
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_444fdea2
comment
Balcony Wooing Scene: You can't make a Romeo and Juliet movie without one. This particular staging of the famous balcony scene uses the setting so that Juliet can bend over the balcony in a low-cut dress and dangle her cleavage for the camera. This, in combination with Letting Her Hair Down (in previous scenes Juliet wore prim dresses and kept her hair in a braid), adds sexual tension to the scene where Romeo woos her and they proclaim their love.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_444fdea2
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_444fdea2
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_444fdea2
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_4de1a4f7
type
Improvised Weapon
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_4de1a4f7
comment
Improvised Weapon: Mercutio and Tybalt briefly fight with farm tools.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_4de1a4f7
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_4de1a4f7
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_4de1a4f7
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_603f1a80
type
Pragmatic Adaptation
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_603f1a80
comment
Pragmatic Adaptation: The film removes large chunks of dialogue from key scenes to better get across the passion and intensity of the moment (more dialogue works better in theatre rather than film) - including most of the lines after the two lovers die. Paris's death in the tomb was also cut to better serve the running time. Juliet is also played by a sixteen-year-old actress and portrayed as older, rather than thirteen as in the text.note The tale the play was inspired by actually had Juliet at this age, and Shakespeare made her younger supposedly to give An Aesop about the evils of child marriage. As that was pretty much a thing of the past by 1968, there was also no need to have a thirteen-year-old Juliet.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_603f1a80
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_603f1a80
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_603f1a80
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_64e975cf
type
Manly Tears
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_64e975cf
comment
Manly Tears: Benvolio in an added scene where he says goodbye to Romeo after the latter is banished.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_64e975cf
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_64e975cf
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_64e975cf
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_680bb6b1
type
Hot-Blooded
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_680bb6b1
comment
Hot-Blooded: Most of the main characters. This film was famous for averting the invokedDawson Casting that was near-universal in earlier Romeo and Juliet adaptations and actually casting young people in the main roles: 17-year-old Olivia Hussey, 18-year-old Leonard Whiting, 25-year-old John McEnery (Mercutio), 26-year-old Michael York. This choice makes a big difference onscreen, making the whole story more natural, a play about impetuous Hot-Blooded youth getting carried away with hormones and clan rivalries.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_680bb6b1
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_680bb6b1
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_680bb6b1
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6a157a14
type
Color-Coded Patrician
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6a157a14
comment
Color-Coded Patrician: The Prince wears deep purple, setting him apart from the blue Montagues and red Capulets.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6a157a14
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6a157a14
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6a157a14
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6a3bedce
type
Modesty Bedsheet
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6a3bedce
comment
Modesty Bedsheet: Juliet in the bedroom scene, although she does give the audience a brief flash of her nipples when she gets up to change.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6a3bedce
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6a3bedce
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6a3bedce
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6dbd3711
type
Affectionate Gesture to the Head
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6dbd3711
comment
Affectionate Gesture to the Head: The Nurse comforts Benvolio this way in the end scene.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6dbd3711
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6dbd3711
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_6dbd3711
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_740f59b4
type
ColorCodedForYourConvenience
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_740f59b4
comment
Color-Coded for Your Convenience: The Capulets wear red and the Montagues blue (or sometimes green), and the Prince's family wear somber, dark browns. That is, until the final scene of Romeo and Juliet's funeral, when the newly reconciled Capulets and Montagues both wear black instead.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_740f59b4
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_740f59b4
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_740f59b4
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7453bc5b
type
Spared by the Adaptation
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7453bc5b
comment
Spared by the Adaptation: Paris' death is omitted. It was filmed but cut from the final piece. This adaptation leaves out Lady Montague's Death by Despair and lets her mourn Romeo's death with her husband in the final scene. If you go by the Quarto, Benvolio dies off-screen and is normally absent from the play's final scenes. The film shows him mourning Romeo and Juliet in the ending.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7453bc5b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7453bc5b
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7453bc5b
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_772e049b
type
Maid and Maiden
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_772e049b
comment
Maid and Maiden: Juliet is the maiden and her nurse is the old maid who is her caretaker and confidante.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_772e049b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_772e049b
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_772e049b
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_78d0ebcf
type
Crying Wolf
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_78d0ebcf
comment
Crying Wolf: Mercutio is a melodramatic jokester, so when he gets into a mock fight with Tybalt and screamed that he is dying, while making witticisms about his injury, all of his friends laugh at him. He is, in fact, dying.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_78d0ebcf
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_78d0ebcf
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_78d0ebcf
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_78dc9821
type
Doesn't Know Their Own Child
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_78dc9821
comment
Doesn't Know Their Own Child: After she sends the Nurse out so she can talk to Juliet about an arranged marriage, Lady Capulet realizes that she doesn't really know how to talk to her and calls the Nurse back.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_78dc9821
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_78dc9821
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_78dc9821
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_794f3589
type
Adaptation Explanation Extrication
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_794f3589
comment
Adaptation Explanation Extrication: Rosaline is not mentioned in Benvolio and Romeo's first scene, and most of the dialogue relating to her is cut. This makes it look like the Montagues decide to crash the masquerade ball for no particular reason. Rosaline does appear onscreen; Romeo is briefly taken aback to see her (actress Paola Tedesco, uncredited) at the Capulet party, only to pay her no more heed when he sees Juliet behind her. The scene where Romeo goes to the apothecary and procures some poison is cut from the movie. Instead, he simply produces it out of nowhere and drinks it in the Capulet tomb. At the end, the Prince laments that he has lost "a brace of kinsmen." A "brace" is a pair, but the Prince has seemingly lost only one kinsman, Mercutio, leaving the audience to wonder who the other kinsman was. This is because the adaptation has cut the death of the Prince's other kinsman, County Paris, but neglected to change the Prince's speech accordingly.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_794f3589
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_794f3589
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_794f3589
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7b4cbce1
type
Headbutt of Love
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7b4cbce1
comment
Headbutt of Love: Romeo and...Mercutio, actually, after Romeo snaps Mercutio out of the babbling nonsense which is his "Queen Mab" rant, by grabbing him and saying "Peace, Mercutio, peace...thou talkst of nothing." They do this again when a dying Mercutio puts his arm around Romeo's neck and asks why he came between Mercutio and Tybalt.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7b4cbce1
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7b4cbce1
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7b4cbce1
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7febc23b
type
Establishing Character Moment
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7febc23b
comment
Establishing Character Moment: When Romeo is first seen, he's walking back to town from the forest...and he's smelling a wildflower that he picked. He's established as a sensitive sort.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7febc23b
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7febc23b
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_7febc23b
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_8042e814
type
Actually Pretty Funny
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_8042e814
comment
Actually Pretty Funny: When the Nurse is listing through things Juliet did when she was three, and makes inappropriate jokes, Lady Capulet is scandalized. But Juliet just giggles. When Mercutio mocks the Nurse, and spins her around, the other men joined in on the teasing, and both Romeo, and the Nurse's servant Peter, just stood by and laughed along. When the Nurse later asked why neither Romeo nor Peter did anything to help her, both men responded with just this.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_8042e814
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_8042e814
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_8042e814
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_81a1960f
type
Silence Is Golden
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_81a1960f
comment
Silence is Golden: The ending has very little in the way of dialogue compared to the original text's ending.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_81a1960f
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_81a1960f
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_81a1960f
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_82a64c4b
type
Adaptational Nice Guy
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_82a64c4b
comment
Adaptational Nice Guy: Tybalt is more of a bioisterous fun-loving youth and has a look of horror on his face when he realizes he stabbed Mercutio, suggesting that he never intended to hurt anyone. In the play, he stabs Mercutio with a cheap shot.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_82a64c4b
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_82a64c4b
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_82a64c4b
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_86025d8f
type
Irish Priest
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_86025d8f
comment
Irish Priest: Friar Lawrence is given an Irish accent, the only character with such an accent in the film. He's actually played by Irish actor Milo O'Shea.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_86025d8f
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_86025d8f
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_86025d8f
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_9bfb2f41
type
Dead Guy on Display
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_9bfb2f41
comment
Dead Guy on Display: Both the Capulets and Montagues bring their freshly dead relations (namely, Tybalt and Mercutio) and lay them out in the square, in the scene where the two families are both demanding vengeance from the Prince.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_9bfb2f41
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_9bfb2f41
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_9bfb2f41
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a1b141f4
type
My God, What Have I Done?
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a1b141f4
comment
My God, What Have I Done?: Tybalt looks shocked when he actually kills Mercutio.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a1b141f4
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1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a1b141f4
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a1b141f4
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a4414a05
type
Adaptation Dye-Job
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a4414a05
comment
Adaptation Dye-Job: According to the text of Arthur Brooke’s poem, Shakespeare’s source, Juliet is golden-haired. Here she has dark hair.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a4414a05
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a4414a05
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a4414a05
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a91078ea
type
Adaptational Jerkass
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a91078ea
comment
Adaptational Jerkass: In the play, Mercutio merely mocks the Nurse. Here, he grabs onto her dress and spins her around, mocking her as she falls. Benvolio qualifies too, as he joined in on the teasing. Technically all of the guys in that scene, including Romeo qualify as they all laughed and played along with it. In the play, Tybalt returns to the scene after killing Mercutio, and Romeo kills him in a duel. Here, Romeo chases Tybalt down in almost a berserker rage.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a91078ea
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a91078ea
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_a91078ea
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_adf84dea
type
What Beautiful Eyes!
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_adf84dea
comment
What Beautiful Eyes!: The film makes a point of underscoring this on behalf of Olivia Hussey's Juliet. When she and Romeo first meet, we get a mind blowing close-up shot of Hussey's bright grey eyes.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_adf84dea
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_adf84dea
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_adf84dea
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_af338274
type
Gendered Insult
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_af338274
comment
Gendered Insult: After Romeo is sobbing over being exiled from Verona and then grabs a dagger to kill himself, Friar Lawrence slaps him down, rebuking him for "womanish" tears, saying he needs to act like the man he is.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_af338274
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_af338274
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_af338274
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_b4c406a6
type
Death by Despair
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_b4c406a6
comment
This adaptation leaves out Lady Montague's Death by Despair and lets her mourn Romeo's death with her husband in the final scene.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_b4c406a6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_b4c406a6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_b4c406a6
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_b691c1e5
type
Come Back to Bed, Honey
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_b691c1e5
comment
Come Back to Bed, Honey: Staging Act III, Scene V as Romeo and Juliet lolling in bed together makes the scene into this. Juliet's "Wilt thou be gone?...Stay yet" becomes her telling Romeo to come back to bed for more sex.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_b691c1e5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_b691c1e5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_b691c1e5
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_bc3b029b
type
Impairment Shot
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_bc3b029b
comment
Impairment Shot: A camera shot from Mercutio's POV blurring and then coming back into focus is used to show that he is dying.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_bc3b029b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_bc3b029b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_bc3b029b
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_bf9163d9
type
Blonde, Brunette, Redhead
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_bf9163d9
comment
Blonde, Brunette, Redhead: Male example. Mercutio (blond), Benvolio (brunet) and Romeo as light brown substituting redhead.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_bf9163d9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_bf9163d9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_bf9163d9
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_c4286511
type
For Doom the Bell Tolls
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_c4286511
comment
For Doom the Bell Tolls: A tolling bell ushers in the dead lovers' bodies in the final scene. Early in the film, when Romeo has his "for my mind misgives" speech in which he feels that something is going to go wrong that night and lead to "some vile forfeit of untimely death", a bell tolls ominously. Then he goes into the party where he meets Juliet.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_c4286511
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_c4286511
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_c4286511
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_c676a2f8
type
Blah, Blah, Blah
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_c676a2f8
comment
Blah, Blah, Blah: A scene starts with Mercutio saying "Blah blah blah" instead of engaging with the conversation Benvolio's trying to have with him.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_c676a2f8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_c676a2f8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_c676a2f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_cbaa9102
type
Signature Headgear
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_cbaa9102
comment
Signature Headgear: Lady Capulet is never seen without a fancy headdress on.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_cbaa9102
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_cbaa9102
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_cbaa9102
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_ccfc0535
type
Letting Her Hair Down
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_ccfc0535
comment
Letting Her Hair Down: Juliet is introduced with her hair braided and wears it so for the masquerade. The first time we see it down is for the balcony scene.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_ccfc0535
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_ccfc0535
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_ccfc0535
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_cf511248
type
All Part of the Show
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_cf511248
comment
All Part of the Show: Everyone thinks at first that Mercutio, the local Sad Clown, is joking around after being injured by Tybalt; it is only when they check on him they realize that his injuries are fatal.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_cf511248
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_cf511248
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_cf511248
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_dc031fde
type
Inelegant Blubbering
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_dc031fde
comment
Inelegant Blubbering: Both Romeo and Juliet cry this way.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_dc031fde
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_dc031fde
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_dc031fde
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_e2cd1428
type
Widow's Weeds
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_e2cd1428
comment
Widow's Weeds: Juliet's mother wears a black veil during Juliet's staged funeral. In the final scene, all the Capulets and Montagues alike wear black during the real joint funeral of the two lovers.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_e2cd1428
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_e2cd1428
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_e2cd1428
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_ed503b22
type
Match Cut
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_ed503b22
comment
Match Cut: From Lord Capulet embracing Juliet as she pretends to agree to the wedding with Paris, to Lady Capulet doing the same.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_ed503b22
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_ed503b22
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_ed503b22
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_f0508c08
type
Decomposite Character
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_f0508c08
comment
Decomposite Character: The Prince doesn't say the "for never was a story of more woe" line in the end, which is given to the narrator.
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_f0508c08
featureApplicability
1.0
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_f0508c08
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_f0508c08
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_name
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 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_name
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Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_name
 Romeo and Juliet (1968) / int_name
itemName
Romeo and Juliet (1968)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Adaptational Skimpiness / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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All Part of the Show / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Blah, Blah, Blah / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Color-Coded Patrician / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Costume Porn / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Doesn't Know Their Own Child / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
For Doom the Bell Tolls / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Gendered Insult / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Inelegant Blubbering / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Mid-Suicide Regret / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Multiple Demographic Appeal / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
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Nipple and Dimed / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
One-Take Wonder / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Sad Clown / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Silence Is Golden / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Spared by the Adaptation / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Spared by the Cut / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Spoiler Cover / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
The Film of the Play / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
What Beautiful Eyes! / int_9d60e7f8
 Romeo and Juliet (1968)
hasFeature
Widow's Weeds / int_9d60e7f8