Inhalte(1)

Die beiden mächtigsten Familien von Verona Beach - die Capulets und Montagues - liegen schon seit Generationen miteinander im Streit. Bandenkriege sind in der lauten Küstenmetropole an der Tagesordnung. Während rauschender Partys stellen die Familienoberhäupter ungeniert ihren nicht immer legal erworbenen Reichtum zur Schau. Bei einem Maskenball im Hause des verfeindeten Clans lernt Romeo, der einzige Montague-Sohn, die junge Julia Capulet kennen und verliebt sich unsterblich in sie. Das Mädchen erwidert seine Gefühle, doch ihr Vater hat sie gegen ihren Willen bereits dem reichen Geschäftsmann Dave Paris versprochen. Pater Laurence, ein alter Freund Romeos, findet sich jedoch bereit, das junge Paar in geheimer Zeremonie zu trauen. Schon kurz nach der nächtlichen Eheschließung müssen die beiden sich allerdings wieder trennen, denn Julia muss bis zum Morgengrauen wieder in ihr Schlafgemach zurückgekehrt sein. Traurig allein am Strand umherwandernd, wird Romeo kurz darauf überraschend von Tybalt, einem Neffen und brutalen Schergen der Capulets, provoziert und zum Duell herausgefordert. Die Auseinandersetzung eskaliert Romeo tötet Tybalt und muss fliehen... (20th Century Fox Home Entertainment)

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Kritiken (7)

Lima 

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Englisch I don't buy Luhramnn's attempt to be original at all costs in this film. I loved Moulin Rouge but here those annoying disco numbers irritated me, they didn’t move the plot forward, they were utterly unnecessary. Some have disliked the setting of the Shakespearean classic to the modern era, but I think the film benefited from it. The film is worth watching if only for the performances of Di Caprio and Danes. ()

novoten 

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Englisch The film that was given to me by Baz Luhrmann and Claire Danes. And an incredible treasure that is not for everyone to my immense pleasure. From machine gun editing and intoxicating zooms at the pump to the grand interpretation of the most romantic story the world knows - that is art. ()

JFL 

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Englisch Luhrman created a captivatingly timeless adaptation of an immortal classic. His version is not the insane plan of an unreasonable formalist, but rather an inventive reflection of Shakespeare and the principles of Elizabethan theatre. He directly stated that his aim was to shoot Romeo and Juliet in the manner that the bard himself would have done it if he’d had access to film. Let’s at last leave aside the distorted view of Shakespeare – that he was an untouchable genius – that has been beat into our heads since elementary school. His mastery consists in the fact that he was able to appeal to all layers of Elizabethan theatre, where the upper crust came into contact with ordinary people (albeit in separate sectors of the playhouse) and at that time it was mere entertainment whose competition was murder ballads and jugglers. Shakespeare was simply the era’s leading pop-author, who constructed even his most fragile romance as a roller coaster of emotions, where the infatuation and clarity of great love at first sight run up against a humorous perspective (it is too often forgotten that this is not about first love and Romeo’s broken heart from a previous relationship is superbly commented upon by other characters), dramatic conflicts, bombastic skirmishes, heart-rending tragedy, exaggerated wisdom and delicate declarations of emotions. Furthermore, all of this is accompanied by dialogue in which new love is carried to romantic heights, but does not look beyond its physical dimension. Luhrman was able to create an ideal framework for Shakespeare's verses by bringing the story into a hyper-stylised and kitschy overwrought world reminiscent of music videos, where the aesthetics of the wealthy’s tastelessness are blended with the sweatiness of beach bums and the self-adoring pomposity of hip-hop videos. Like the libretto, the film’s style perfectly mixes together kitschy wisdom, tense theatricality and fragile emotions. The genius of Luhrman’s approach consists in the roughly half-hour introduction, when he literally hurls viewers into a tempest of total passion, which, however, lays the groundwork for the subsequent soothing of the romantic passages, whose sincere youthful naïveté is not such an assault on the eyes. At the same time, the small details (especially in the characters’ gestures – see, for example, Juliet’s entrancing initial sequence with her mother) and the fresh approach give new life to the classic and makes it exactly what it is supposed to be – a story for teenagers. Not an insipidly superficial story as when cynical adults and eternal adolescents make films for teenagers such as American Pie, but rather an absolutely empathetic story that understands the agitated emotional state of youths and the feeling that one is the star of one's own video or film, as John Hughes superbly managed to capture. Under Luhrman’s direction, DiCaprio and Danes created what is indisputably the best version of the star-crossed lovers ever. The scene in which they first meet abounds with mutual enchantment, romantic fragility and adorableness, as well as the horniness that is usually omitted elsewhere. After more than twenty years, the film still works just as perfectly and seeing it in the cinema was a dream come true and proof of its qualities – while at the beginning viewers fidget and laugh at the pompousness of the entourages of the Capulets and Montagues, the next two hours are filled with alternating emotions, enchantment, amusement and emotional tension, and at the very end in the church, you could hear a pin drop and the tension could be cut with a knife. Luhrman simply managed to fulfil the master's words: After all, eternally will the heart receive Juliet’s grief and Romeo’s pain. () (weniger) (mehr)

Pethushka 

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Englisch Clearly the strongest aspect here is the beautiful (!!!) music. Hearing it must make all love look beautiful. The other win is of course young DiCaprio and partly Claire Danes. But I can't give much more praise than that. The setting of the amazing and familiar romantic story of Romeo and Juliet this time almost didn't work for me at all. Although I understand that it’s probably more palatable for the younger generation this way. 3 stars. ()

gudaulin 

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Englisch I wouldn't go to see the classical adaptation of Shakespeare's drama "Romeo and Juliet" in the movie theater and I wouldn't waste my time watching it on television either, that's for sure. It's too well-known and I would feel like the proud princess after watching the same movie for the twelfth time. These dramas call for a modern approach and alternative perspectives. I had the opportunity to see Romeo and Juliet on stage as a comedy, where, among other things, marijuana was smoked and I had a great time. The problem is that Luhrmann made his Romeo and Juliet a popcorn story for teenagers, namely American teenagers raised on Xena or Buffy. I won't moralize or get upset about it, I'm just saying that this way of adapting a classic seems unfortunate to me and it completely misses the mark. If the director wanted to make something like this, he should have at least given up on the classical verse and made a modern film with everything that entails. The second star is solely for DiCaprio and Danes in the lead roles, but even so, it's only an overall impression of 35%. ()

NinadeL 

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Deutsch Luhrmanns Version von "Romeo und Julia" ist lange Zeit an mir vorbeigegangen. Während DiCaprio schon vor Titanic akkurat war, war Danes die Reinheit in Person, das moderne Setting und die härteren Kämpfe kamen gut an. Ich mochte auch die Auflösung der klassischen Balkonszene, aber was mir nicht gefiel, war die Kombination von Moderne und Shakespeare-Sprache. Dann schon lieber West Side Story. ()

Remedy 

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Englisch The first Luhrmann film that’s bothered me with its superficiality. That fabled need for visual masturbation was present in this case too, of course, but it doesn't work in any positive way, because this time it's too "colorized", insanely over-stylized altogether, and some of the characters are at the very least begging for a beating (the opening scene at the gas station is the height of awkwardness and I had a strong urge to turn it off... ) Fortunately, it's then saved by Leo and Claire, whose intimate scenes are quite successful, but considering that the source material is the great William Shakespeare, there was tragically little emotion for my taste. The soundtrack was ok, the level of the visuals was not great for Luhrmann, the emotions were lacking, the central duo was all right. But overall nothing more than average. ()