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Romeo & Juliet

  • 2013
  • PG-13
  • 1 घं 58 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
5.8/10
13 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
Natascha McElhone, Paul Giamatti, Damian Lewis, Laura Morante, Hailee Steinfeld, and Douglas Booth in Romeo & Juliet (2013)
When the star-crossed lovers of two enemy families meet, forbidden love ensues.
trailer प्ले करें2:37
21 वीडियो
99+ फ़ोटो
ट्रेजेडीड्रामापीरियड ड्रामारोमांस

अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंRomeo and Juliet secretly wed despite the sworn contempt their families hold for each other. It is not long, however, before a chain of fateful events changes the lives of both families fore... सभी पढ़ेंRomeo and Juliet secretly wed despite the sworn contempt their families hold for each other. It is not long, however, before a chain of fateful events changes the lives of both families forever.Romeo and Juliet secretly wed despite the sworn contempt their families hold for each other. It is not long, however, before a chain of fateful events changes the lives of both families forever.

  • निर्देशक
    • Carlo Carlei
  • लेखक
    • Julian Fellowes
    • William Shakespeare
  • स्टार
    • Hailee Steinfeld
    • Douglas Booth
    • Damian Lewis
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDb रेटिंग
    5.8/10
    13 हज़ार
    आपकी रेटिंग
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      • Carlo Carlei
    • लेखक
      • Julian Fellowes
      • William Shakespeare
    • स्टार
      • Hailee Steinfeld
      • Douglas Booth
      • Damian Lewis
    • 109यूज़र समीक्षाएं
    • 71आलोचक समीक्षाएं
    • 41मेटास्कोर
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      • 2 जीत और कुल 2 नामांकन

    वीडियो21

    Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:37
    Trailer #1
    International Version
    Trailer 2:31
    International Version
    International Version
    Trailer 2:31
    International Version
    Romeo and Juliet
    Trailer 2:26
    Romeo and Juliet
    Romeo and Juliet
    Trailer 2:26
    Romeo and Juliet
    Romeo and Juliet
    Clip 0:57
    Romeo and Juliet
    Romeo and Juliet
    Clip 0:48
    Romeo and Juliet

    फ़ोटो213

    पोस्टर देखें
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    टॉप कलाकार29

    बदलाव करें
    Hailee Steinfeld
    Hailee Steinfeld
    • Juliet
    Douglas Booth
    Douglas Booth
    • Romeo
    Damian Lewis
    Damian Lewis
    • Lord Capulet
    Laura Morante
    Laura Morante
    • Lady Montague
    Tomas Arana
    Tomas Arana
    • Lord Montague
    Kodi Smit-McPhee
    Kodi Smit-McPhee
    • Benvolio
    Natascha McElhone
    Natascha McElhone
    • Lady Capulet
    Stellan Skarsgård
    Stellan Skarsgård
    • Prince of Verona
    Tom Wisdom
    Tom Wisdom
    • Count Paris
    Matt Patresi
    Matt Patresi
    • First Capulet Servant
    Marcus J. Cotterell
    • Second Capulet Servant
    • (as Marcus Cotterell)
    Christian Cooke
    Christian Cooke
    • Mercutio
    Ed Westwick
    Ed Westwick
    • Tybalt
    Lesley Manville
    Lesley Manville
    • Nurse
    Anton Alexander
    Anton Alexander
    • Abraham (House of Montague)
    Clive Riche
    Clive Riche
    • Peter
    Nathalie Rapti Gomez
    Nathalie Rapti Gomez
    • Rosaline
    Angelica Ponti
    • Singer at the Ball
    • निर्देशक
      • Carlo Carlei
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      • Julian Fellowes
      • William Shakespeare
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    9Twiggerfamily

    Loved the movie

    Well I loved this version of Romeo and Juliet - the scenery is stunning, the music is beautiful, the acting authentic and Douglas Booth as the lead is incredible. Having visited Verona myself in the past it was wonderful to see the original setting used for the film. The film is full of passion and action and the young cast add to the authenticity of it.

    As a lover of Shakespeare I thoroughly enjoyed the film and feel it's a good introduction for youngsters.

    it's a fabulous movie if you love romance and drama and I would thoroughly recommend it.
    7beatroute-star

    Let's face it, Shakespeare would have written a different script for a film

    Everyone seems to get their panties in a twist over the fact that Fellowees changed the dialogue. While I admit that this seems a tad egotistical, it's not altogether illogical. The real problem isn't even that he left things out (indeed, unlike many adaptions, Rosalind and Paris were kept, as well as the death of Paris). But rendering and adding things is not seen as appropriate.

    But let's face it; Elizabethan Theatre is an entirely different writing medium to modern film adaption. There are a number of things that had to happen in those days. Notice they say 'I die' every time someone dies? They talk about their feelings an exceptional amount? And there are other near invisible things that would be entirely different. Shakespeare may have been a genius, but if you pulled up an unknown script of a similar level of genius from this era and made a word for word film, I doubt you could expect a great audience reaction. I've seen kids literally sleep through Polanski's Macbeth and even shrug at Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet (except when they were noting the lead's similarities to Zefron), yet be highly engaged by the stage performance of the play.

    Visually, this film is utterly gorgeous. Whoever chose the locations deserves a french kiss from the world. From the first shots of Juliet running in her orange dress, the audience is stunned by the use of colour and scenery. The costumes were great (I don't think anyone was complaining when we saw a gorgeous Douglas Booth is an open white shirt chiseling away). The hair was to die for and the acting wasn't so bad as everyone makes out. Fact is, everyone's used to it being acted VERY Shakespearean. Which isn't how films work. If you're asking for that style of acting, you ought to see the play and burn the movie. The actors here took a more naturalistic approach, which seems flat, but that's probably because it's naturalistic and this is Elizabethan theatre in a period adaption for a 21st century audience. Are we seeing where some things are bound to get tangled?

    That all said, there are two things that I can't justify:

    • Far too much kissing. Like all the time. It felt like too much sometimes. A lot. This is probably where people see the lack of chemistry, because the kisses seem to come out of nowhere, are accompanied with virtually no crescendo musical masterpieces or great camera shots, and are usually cock-blocked by the nurse.


    • Unless your students are well versed in the play, this shouldn't be the go to for schools studying Romeo and Juliet. Let's face it; a lot of kids don't exactly read the whole play, might write things in their essays that only happened in the movie if they watch it. The thing that everyone complains about (the adding of lines) is only truly detrimental here. The other versions (Baz's and Zeffirelli's) only omitted things, rather than adding things, and is a lot safer for educational purposes.


    If you're not studying it; if you haven't studied it to the point at which added lines would make you feel ill; if you aren't an absurd prat about purist R&J (keep Shakespeare Shakespearean? I don't even...), then this is a good movie. And Booth is delectable. Always.
    jandesimpson

    A dummy's reply

    Of all the clever-clever barbs fired at the 2013 "Romeo and Juliet", "Shakespeare for Dummies" has probably given the film's detractors the most satisfaction. But, as anyone who has read my user reviews of the 1940 "Pride and Prejudice" and the 1999 "Mansfield Park" will quickly realise, I am no purist as far as literary adaptations for cinema are concerned. I suppose therefore I must be something of a dummy, but a dummy who would like to take the floor to confess to finding this recent version of literature's most famous youth-love-death cocktail rather wonderful. Not that it hasn't been well done before. I haven't seen Castellani's but Zefirelli's later version was a thoroughly worthy attempt, certainly of a standard to raise a question as to whether further interpretations were needed. I experienced serious unease fuelled by all those truly awful reviews before even the opening credits. Give it half an hour perhaps. Not that it started particularly well. A horseback contest between a Montague and Capulet reminded that we might well be entering "Ben Hur" country with all the boredom of that gargantuan epic. I suppose it was the entry of Douglas Booth's Romeo chipping away at a stone figure of Rosaline, his current love, in an artist's workshop that raised more than a glimmer of interest. Was ever a portrayer of the role more handsome! And this coming from a pretty 'straight' viewer! Just imagine his effect on all those Juliets in the audience! I have to admit to finding him the more engaging partner, hardly matched by a no more than pretty Juliet, who rather gabbles her lines and is, well, little more than average school dramatic society material. By now I am aware that I am hardly writing a review of something of a terrific film, so what makes it so outstanding? It can be summed up in the one word - passion. This version concentrates on the lovers to the exclusion of much else such as the groundings humour of Mercutio here played absolutely seriously as is Lesley Manville's pragmatically intelligent Nurse. For once,in Paul Giametti's outstanding portrayal, we can really feel the tragedy of Friar Lawrence's ghastly misguided solution to saving the young lovers which serves to drive the action forward to those tragic deaths presented with such moving intensity. It all culminates in a truly great moment when the young Benvolio clasps the dead lovers hands together. Not Shakespeare but nevertheless a masterstroke. As a bonus we are treated to beautifully shot locations. At one point where the lovers depart from one another on a riverbank the image is ravishing. The main quarrel of its detractors seems to be copious liberties with the playwright's text. There is no question but this is an adaptation in the same way as Kurosawa's "Throne of Blood" and "Ran" both of which are reverenced by cineastes yet contain not a line of Shakespeare. Why all the furious reactions to this version? Remembering the derision than was heaped against Powell and Pressburger's marvellous "Gone to Earth" when it first appeared in the early 1950's but has now achieved deserved recognition, I put it that Carlo's Carlei's "Romeo and Juliet" is possibly a film before its time. Sadly I shall not be around in a few decade's time to say, "I told you so."
    7dave-mcclain

    This "Romeo & Juliet" is one that's tough to forget.

    Many films, not all alike in quality, In fair cinema, where we lay our scene, From ancient story to new screen idolatry, Where repetition makes some critics mean.

    Shakespeare's tragic young lovers on screen oft before, for each generation and all others, in '36, '68, '96 and more.

    This time Hailee Steinfeld plays Juliet, With Douglas Booth, her devoted Romeo, She, an Oscar nominee for the film "True Grit". And for a handsomer man, you'd have far to go.

    The cast includes Natasha McElhone, The long-suffering muse on "Californication", And Damian Lewis, who starred on "Homeland", As a Congressman and a threat to our great nation.

    Ed Westwick as hotheaded Tybalt is perfectly cast, having played the scheming Chuck on TV's "Gossip Girl". The rest of the actors, from the first to the last, All well-cast in their roles, from countries around the world.

    The language they all speak is truly Shakespeare's own, With some speeches omitted or just changed. The words in the script, to Americans not unknown If you miss a few, the acting keeps you engaged.

    I'd be remiss in this review if I failed to mention This retelling of the story is not without invention. The settings and scenery, share a common beauty And with innocence and fragility, Juliet's a cutie.

    To conclude, I move on to other plays from which I dare to paraphrase. I hope to close this review on a helpful note, And maybe even give you something to quote.

    When deciding on a film for popcorn ingestion, To see or not to see, that is the question. You could just choose to get thee to a nunnery, But that wouldn't be nearly as much… funnery.

    Okay, I'm out. Let's see YOU find rhymes for question and nunnery. (Not to mention Stellan Skarsgård and Paul Giamatti, who are great as the Prince of Verona and Friar Laurence, respectively.) The earlier versions of this story are mostly very good, each in its own way, and this one definitely holds its own. If you enjoy love stories with drama, see 2013's "Romeo & Juliet". "B+"
    9filipemanuelneto

    A very misunderstood film.

    From time to time, a film director decides to adapt Shakespeare's plays. In all fairness, it's great stuff and deserves to be taken to the screen. However, when this happens, the people (particularly those whose mother tongue is English) don't like it and have great difficulty in understanding that, when a book is adapted to cinema, it has to be adapted or adjusted. Its a necessary job, and does not spare any book or author. It can be hard to accept, especially for the purists, who see Shakespeare as a kind of untouchable "sacred cow", but the truth is that cinema can be based on literature but its not literature. I say this because I realized that this film was the target of massive criticism for the way the book was adapted. The writers were so incompetent? They cut something important to the understanding of the story? They have profoundly altered it? No. But they sought to adapt the text a little, for dramatic purposes. The essential was there, untouched, and this does not shock me. This is cinema, not theater, and people have to understand that the public goes to the cinema to see a movie, not a recorded play. Do you want the original text, ipsis litteris? Read the book or go see the play. Cinema is concerned in keeping the story, not the text. Almost all movies are so, this is no different. Now let's talk about the movie.

    The movie is interesting, keeps the essence of the original story, but changes the dialogues and interpretation, abandoning the artificial tone of Shakespearean theater and taking a more natural posture. The idea is good, its a breath of fresh air, but I think the posture adopted is too "XX century" and something is missing in the way the characters act that remind us the fifteenth century. One of the most reprehensible things is the amount of kisses and touches. This does not fit the historical period depicted, much more puritanical than ours. The actors did a decent job, engaged and committed to the story itself. Douglas Booth was by far the best Romeo I've seen in the movies, much more credible than Leo was in "Romeo + Juliet". Hailee Steinfeld was not bad either, but her acting has seemed a little forced in some scenes. Everything else is absolutely impeccable: the bright, colorful picture is magnificent, in harmonious combination with the great scenery and locations chosen for filming, and that depict faithfully what have been Verona during this time. The costumes also fit into the historical period and are exquisite. The soundtrack, discrete but present, fulfills her role with great skill.

    Far from being a bad movie, this movie will never be understood by the public who are not able to see the difference between literature, theater and cinema. Despite some minor flaws, the film is well done and does not deserve at all, in my opinion, the severe criticism it has received.

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    कहानी

    बदलाव करें

    क्या आपको पता है

    बदलाव करें
    • ट्रिविया
      Lily Collins was the original choice for Juliet but dropped out due to scheduling conflicts. Hailee Steinfeld later replaced Collins.
    • गूफ़
      Just before the balcony scene Romeo says "He jests at scars that never felt a wound" which is an original line from the play. However, in the play this line is in reference to a series of jests Mercutio shouts at this time about his love for Rosaline. All the jests were cut from the movie, so having Romeo comment about them doesn't make sense.
    • भाव

      Romeo: If I profane with my unworthiest hand, This holy shrine: my lips, two blushing pilgrims, ready stand, to smooth that rough touch with a tender kiss.

      Juliet: Good pilgrim, you do wrong your hand too much. Which mannerly devotion shows in this, for saints have hands do touch. Palm to palm is holy palmers' kiss.

      Romeo: Have not saints lips and holy palmers too?

      Juliet: Ay, pilgrim, lips that they must use in prayer.

      Romeo: O, then, dear saint, let lips do what hands do. They pray, grant thou, lest faith turn to despair.

      Juliet: But, Saints do not move their palms for prayers' sake.

      Romeo: Then move not. While my prayer's effect I take.

      [kiss]

      Romeo: Thus from my lips, by yours, my sin is purged.

      Juliet: Then have my lips the sin that they have took.

      Romeo: Sin from thy lips? O trespass sweetly urged! Give me my sin again.

      [kiss]

    • कनेक्शन
      Featured in Weekend Sunrise: 8 फ़रवरी 2014 को प्रसारित एपिसोड (2014)
    • साउंडट्रैक
      L'Amor Dona Ch'Io Te Porto
      Anonymous, late 15th Century

      Performed by Ensemble La Rossignol

      P 2003 Tactus Records - Licensed by

      Machiavelli Music Publishing

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    Natascha McElhone, Paul Giamatti, Damian Lewis, Laura Morante, Hailee Steinfeld, and Douglas Booth in Romeo & Juliet (2013)
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    What is the French language plot outline for Romeo & Juliet (2013)?
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