1968's Romeo and Juliet: Articles/Reviews

1968's Romeo and Juliet: Articles/Reviews

Articles/Reviews

Below is some information that you may want to use to update your info on Leonard Whiting. He is not living with a male flatmate, and he is not gay. I don't know how the person who sent you the People information on your page ever got that impression from the earlier People article, as that's not what it implied at all.

---Mary Ann
"People Magazine", 03-16-1992, pp 58.
Special thanks to Melina for providing me with this article.

SATURDAY REVIEW. "By playing his new production of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet against settings in Tuscany and Umbria that have changed but little in the past 500 years, but peopling them with teen-agers of today, director Franco Zeffirelli has succeeded in making this venerable work immediate, without recourse to West Side Story extremes...To a generation brought up on Katharine Cornell Juliet's and Leslie Howard Romeo's, this version may seem wanted the soaring poetry and aural splendors to which we have become accustomed; indeed, John McEnery's rendition of the 'Queen Mab' speech is literally grating to the ear, while neither Leonard Whiting, as Romeo, nor Olivia Hussey, as Juliet, ever manage to do more than merely deliver their lines, never to plumb them. And yet, such is the difference between stage and screen that, except for the purest purist, this matter precious little. Because these kids are authentic teen-agers, just as Shakespeare had envisaged them, they take on a vitality and poignance that no middle-aged actor could project. This Romeo and Juliet, sumptuously mounted, excitingly imagined, lives on the truth of its characters rather than on simply the splendor of its lines. Somehow, I think Shakespeare would have preferred it that way."

Arthur Knight (10/5/68)
Article published in Filmfacts

Renata Adler (10/9/68)
Article printed in Filmfacts

"Romeo and Juliet - 1968 - Paramount Pictures - By Douglas Brodie"

The major problem in translating drama to the screen has always been destroying the heavy-handed act divisions and singleness of locale which dominates most theatrical work. Shakespeare, by all means, should be the easiest dramatist to film successfully: he used the scene, not the act, as his basic unit for plot development and, considering the abrupt changes of locale and wide diversity of action, his plays bear far more resemblance to a film scenario than they do to a modern work of the theatre. Ironically enough the successful Shakespearean films are few and far between.
But in 1968, Italian filmmaker Franco Zeffirelli offered a new version of Romeo and Juliet which sparkled as brightly as any Shakespeare ever done on the screen. After the prologue was solemnly recited while travelogue shots set the scene, audiences were whisked into the marketplace, where the ancient feud is first seen on the level of pranks between the servants, leading up the social chain until the heads of both households are involved. Shakespeare could not have asked for more perfect visual metaphor for his perpetual theme as, in a matter of seconds, jokes turn into serious insults and a prank undergoes an unintentional metamorphosis into pure chaos in the public streets.
Zeffirelli's cast was magnificent to behold. Pat Heywood, as the nurse, provided low comedy at its highest range of intelligence. Teenagers Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey didn't so much play Romeo and Juliet as they lived out the parts. Although each proved perfect in his role, Hussey was the standout of the two only because she looked to be precisely the right person for Juliet, while he was exactly the right type for Romeo. Whiting was natural, honest and never ruined the show trying to act; probably dozens of the other young men could have fared as well. Hussey, however, seemed irreplaceable; in the balcony scene her face changes in a matter of seconds from the innocent smile of a child to the mature stare of a woman.
But rather than waste a great actor in the role of Romeo, Zeffirelli wisely saved his young talent for the part of Tybalt: Michael York brought the "prince of cats" to life, ad his eyes burned with a brooding feline intensity and his ears actually seemed to be as pointed as Mr. Spock.
Zeffirelli's most masterful touch came in his use of montage. Unlike so many modern moviemakers, who employed it promiscuously and continually in fear that their films might look either static or old-fashioned, Z. reserved it for the proper moments. At the Capulet's dance the camera carries the viewer into the action with a pace which would the viewer into the action with a pace which would have made even Richard Lester dizzy and double duels occupy a central place in the pacing of this picture not unlike the chase sequence in Bullit.
But the film's appeal went beyond aesthetic quality. During the opening days of the decade Wise and Bernstein had re-interpreted S. for the early sixties by transplanting the star-crossed lovers to NY tenements in West Side Story; now, as the decade neared its end, Zeffirelli showed that R&J could prove equally relevant to the Free Love generation. Despite the exquisite period costumes, this 350-year-old tale appeared amazingly in tune with the current situation. Rome in his first appearance is introduced as a flower child; Juliet as a naive teen who has not yet been radicalized against the insensitivity of the elders. Never before had actual teenagers been permitted to play the protagonists. but in an era when Hair had become the most successful show on Broadway, it made sense that R and J were at last depicted as teens who want to drop out of the establishment run by their parents. Their fight is with an unfeeling system and, by the end, they are destroyed by their idealistic actions. Zeffirelli clicked clearly not only because of his admirable artistic qualities, but also because he re-interpreted a time-honored tale in light of what was happening to society in 1968.
---vatteroni_romano@iol.it
Judith Crist (10/14/68)
Article publish in FilmFacts

heartThis has also been written about the tragedy

ROMEO AND JULIET 138 M. 1968 Paramount Rated: R Italian director Franco Zeffirelli stunned the screen world when he cast two young unknowns to portray the star-crossed lovers in Romeo and Juliet, but it was a gamble that resulted in one of the most popular motion pictures of all time, winning international acclaim and four Academy Award nominations. Shakespeare's classic romance comes to stunning visual life in a refreshingly modern interpretation, bringing new vitality and insight in to the most durable love story ever written. .i.FEATURE: Romeo and Juliet;.i.SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM: Romeo and Juliet;.i.LOVE STORIES: Romeo and Juliet;.i.VENDETTA: Romeo and Juliet;.i.FICTION: Romeo and Juliet;

heart ROMEO AND JULIET (1968 2h32) Franco Zefferelli Zefferelli took a great risk in casting two unknowns as the star-crossed lovers, especially as his Taming of the Shrew the previous year had not been a huge success. The gamble paid off, and although Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting achieved no subsequent successes, their Juliet and Romeo are very impressive. Hussey was fifteen, and as such was the closest to the age of Juliet that any actress has ever come. Filmed in Tuscany before that region became popular with filmmakers and British tourists, Zefferelli produces an extremely beautiful film, with stirring crowd scenes, action-packed fights and some surprisingly romantic moments. Michael York is excellent as the dashing Tybalt, and Laurence Olivier provides a suitably stirring narration. This is most definitely a film for romantics, and although everyone knows (or thinks they know) the story, it seems new and original in this version, right to the tragic, tear-jerking ending. (VNC)

heartDid you know?

  • Apparently, a guy named Dino Martin, son of the actor Dean Martin, saw the movie and literally fell in love with Olivia Hussey. He arranged to meet her, and they ended up getting married! Maybe that will give some hope to Leonardo DiCaprio fans!
  • Sunday is the day that the tragedy of Romeo and Juliet began, and it ends on a Thursday. Juliet's birthday would have been July 31 because August 1st is Lammas Tide.


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