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Romeu + Julieta

Título original: Romeo + Juliet
  • 1996
  • 14
  • 2 h
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,7/10
254 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
1.670
2
Claire Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio in Romeu + Julieta (1996)
Home Video Trailer from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Reproduzir trailer2:15
4 vídeos
99+ fotos
DramaÉpico românticoRomanceRomance adolescenteRomance trágicoTragédia

A famosa obra do Shakespeare é levada a Verona com o diálogo original.A famosa obra do Shakespeare é levada a Verona com o diálogo original.A famosa obra do Shakespeare é levada a Verona com o diálogo original.

  • Direção
    • Baz Luhrmann
  • Roteiristas
    • William Shakespeare
    • Craig Pearce
    • Baz Luhrmann
  • Artistas
    • Leonardo DiCaprio
    • Claire Danes
    • John Leguizamo
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,7/10
    254 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    1.670
    2
    • Direção
      • Baz Luhrmann
    • Roteiristas
      • William Shakespeare
      • Craig Pearce
      • Baz Luhrmann
    • Artistas
      • Leonardo DiCaprio
      • Claire Danes
      • John Leguizamo
    • 650Avaliações de usuários
    • 63Avaliações da crítica
    • 60Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado a 1 Oscar
      • 15 vitórias e 30 indicações no total

    Vídeos4

    Romeo + Juliet
    Trailer 2:15
    Romeo + Juliet
    Romeo + Juliet | Anniversary Mashup
    Clip 1:27
    Romeo + Juliet | Anniversary Mashup
    Romeo + Juliet | Anniversary Mashup
    Clip 1:27
    Romeo + Juliet | Anniversary Mashup
    Three Movies That Changed Billy Porter's Life
    Clip 3:39
    Three Movies That Changed Billy Porter's Life
    What Roles Did Leonardo DiCaprio Almost Play?
    Video 4:07
    What Roles Did Leonardo DiCaprio Almost Play?

    Fotos238

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    Elenco principal41

    Editar
    Leonardo DiCaprio
    Leonardo DiCaprio
    • Romeo
    Claire Danes
    Claire Danes
    • Juliet
    John Leguizamo
    John Leguizamo
    • Tybalt
    Harold Perrineau
    Harold Perrineau
    • Mercutio
    Lupita Ochoa
    • Attractive Girl
    Pete Postlethwaite
    Pete Postlethwaite
    • Father Laurence
    Gloria Silva
    • Nun
    Paul Sorvino
    Paul Sorvino
    • Fulgencio Capulet
    Brian Dennehy
    Brian Dennehy
    • Ted Montague
    Paul Rudd
    Paul Rudd
    • Dave Paris
    Vondie Curtis-Hall
    Vondie Curtis-Hall
    • Captain Prince
    Carolyn Valero
    • Middle Age Occupant
    Miriam Margolyes
    Miriam Margolyes
    • The Nurse
    Paco Morayta
    • Middle Age Occupant
    Jesse Bradford
    Jesse Bradford
    • Balthasar
    M. Emmet Walsh
    M. Emmet Walsh
    • Apothecary
    Margarita Wynne
    Margarita Wynne
    • Station Mother
    Zak Orth
    Zak Orth
    • Gregory
    • Direção
      • Baz Luhrmann
    • Roteiristas
      • William Shakespeare
      • Craig Pearce
      • Baz Luhrmann
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários650

    6,7253.7K
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    Resumo

    Reviewers say 'Romeo + Juliet' is a bold, modern adaptation praised for vibrant visuals, energetic direction, and stellar performances by Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes. The contemporary setting and pop culture elements are lauded for making the story accessible. However, the film faces criticism for the jarring contrast between modern settings and Shakespearean language, uneven acting, and over-the-top stylistic choices. Despite these issues, many appreciate its ambition and success in introducing Shakespeare to a new audience.
    Gerado por IA a partir do texto das avaliações de usuários

    Avaliações em destaque

    10Acetylcholine

    Shakespeare Worthy

    Very underrated modernization of the classic Shakespeare play. This movie has been pretty heavily criticized for the directors outlandishness in cinematography, but he understands when to tone down the often frantic pace of the storytelling during the dramatic scenes, and in fact this relationship tends to amplify their potency. Beautifully choreographed and shot, wonderfully acted by both the supporting cast and the main 2 stars, Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes, and extremely sly modernization techniques to the dialogue. All the elizabethan dialogue remains intact, yet it all seems coherent in the modern atmosphere. mostly due to good imagery and double meaning in the phrases (ex: their swords being a gun model, or the flash of money while quoting gold.). One of the best shakespeare adaptations in the multitude of which have entered the cinemas in the past few years.
    6burnzyburns

    A mixed bag attempt to a classic story

    It's not often that I've seen a movie three times and I can't give it a rating any higher then a 6.

    I think I really tried and forced myself to like this since I can appreciate the modernization of this old story and the creativeness that was attempted.

    Maybe it's unfair to say this movie is hard to follow. The dialogue is obviously a challenge for any inexperienced viewer but the story is familiar and each scene makes sense even if you're struggling to understand what each actor says. That being said, it's nothing special. Each time I finish watching this movie I just feel like it's ok. There is no gut wrenching impact it has left on me and I can probably affirmatively confirm this now after the third viewing. It's an interesting movie, a bold, perhaps unnecessary, punk-like remake that swaps swords with guns and also attempting humour. A part of movie history to say the least.
    7PyroSikTh

    A Fever Dream of Teenage Intensity

    Like many who saw this as a teenager, this was a movie that felt like the most sophisticated thing I'd ever seen, while also being accessible enough to my immature brain. And that's pretty much how I'm going to judge it today.

    This is Shakespeare. It's as much Shakespeare as any other adaptation over the centuries. And yet Baz Luhrmann went in with a very specific approach, not only to modernise it while maintaining the poetic dialogue, but to also make it enticing for a teenage audience; the audience most arguably suited to the tale of Romeo and Juliet. It's chock full of the same hallmarks of modern day teen dramas; beautiful teens from wealthy families, sudden and passionate love affairs, with a dash of violence and murder, capped off with an emotional gut-punch or two. It's a tale quite literally as old as time: Star-crossed lovers finding each other against all odds, fighting to keep what they have against the forces around them, and the near-miss of longevity, like every Rom-Com airport scene. It's the type of story that has endured so long precisely because it appeals to us at the most emotional and vulnerable time of our lives, speaking to how we feel about the world around us. It's a hormonal barrage of narrative cues.

    So Luhrmann takes this timeless classic, and decides to transplant it into a modern day setting to appeal to modern day teenagers. Or at least, the teenagers of the late 90s. You could probably trace a line from all late-90s fashions back to this movie, either creating the stereotypical aesthetic of the time, or merely doubling down and reinforcing it. This movie is garish. It opens with a newscast acting as the narrator, followed by quick-cuts and flybys of a city centre framed by two imposing skyscrapers, each with the name of a respected mafia-like family conglomerate plastered over the roof. Between them is a giant statue of Jesus himself, almost as tall as these skyscrapers. It's almost cartoonish in its aesthetic. We're then introduced to the Montague boys, clad in Hawaiian shirts left open to flap in the wind, riding a bright yellow topless jeep. They pull up to a gas station and encounter the rival Capulet boys, clad in dark blues and leather, with clean-cut facial hair and a menacing glare. If the Montagues gave the instant impression of good guys having fun, the Capulets give the immediate impression of brooding and serious antagonists. After an exchange of insults, they break out in a gun fight. The saturation is turned way up, the camera shakes and zooms uncontrollably, the editing cuts every second or two. It's beautiful and ugly all at the same time, as Tybalt, the Prince of Cats falls on his knees dramatically, pulls out his pistols, attaches an excessive sight, and takes aim at the fleeing Montagues. It's big, it's bombastic, it's completely lacking in subtlety. There's bright colours and shouting, and emphasis put on every footstep and gun cocking. It's so bad. It's so 90s.

    Fortunately this style isn't maintained throughout the movie's runtime, but it never entirely leaves either. We get another frenetic array to the Capulet party, whereby a sexually-ambiguous Mercutio laces Romeo with Ecstasy creating a fever dream of visuals. And then there's that iconic meet-cute. The meet-cute to end all meet-cutes. And the movie slows to a halt. It remembers this isn't a story about the outlandish gang war between two mafia families, but a story about teenage love. Its garish and frenetic nature gives way to something more brooding and enthralling. Things turn serious, characters start dying, the prospect of marriage and a new life become real entities.

    Judging this movie literally is a recipe for disaster. Literally it's an over-edited series of scenes full of shouting and bad judgment, about a young boy and girl falling in love immediately, getting married the next day, and then committing suicide over one another a mere four days later. Literally this movie makes no sense. It's ridiculous. But the movie knows that. It's painfully self-aware of how ridiculous this story actually is when you boil it down, so it embraces it. And this is why the prose was kept largely intact: It's poetry. The whole movie is poetry. This isn't a movie about plot points and character development. It's a movie about feelings and moments, about capturing that teenage urgency in a glowing, multi-coloured bottle. I know I had these moments as a teenager, where everything felt like the most important thing ever, where I fell in love with pretty girls without even knowing their names, where anger and joy, love and hate were all so painfully intense. Every scene is bathed in this intensity, including that opening of garish colours and overemphasised sound effects. It's a movie so chock full of hormonal energy it's intoxicating.

    Leo is still a fairly young and inexperienced actor here, and his ego shines through his performance. He delivers his lines which such ferocity, like he too felt he was participating in the most sophisticated thing he'd ever done. But at this level his line delivery loses all emphasis, causing it all to merge into a mumble of Shakespearian vocabulary. That said, he's just about as perfect for Romeo as you could get. Claire Danes doesn't fare much better, seemingly struggling with the emotions of it all. It's like they were both put on auto-pilot while delivering their lines. Honestly I can't really blame them. Shakespeare's dialogue is in poetic verse, written for a different time with different dialects and slangs. We the audience are encouraged to just feel what's going on rather than follow and dissect every single word spoken. That said there are some genuinely fantastic performances her that prove that dialogue as outdated and wordy as this can be engaging and emotive. Harold Perrineau plays Mercutio with a fire in his eyes, like he poured over the script and accurately pinpointed which words needed more emphasis, and where he could embellish with gestures and intonation. John Leguizamo is also electrifying as Tybalt, grasping the over-the-top antagonism of his character and having fun with it, creating a whole new style of gun-fu to portray Tybalt's apparent fancy fighting style.

    And of course, I couldn't talk about this movie without talking about the soundtrack, which gave us one of the best Radiohead songs ever written (which is a bold claim, I know). It captures the 90s the same way the rest of the movie does, with OK Computer-era Radiohead, Garbage, Des'ree, Butthole Surfers, and The Cardigans. It's rocky, it's ravey, it's as garish and frenetic as the movie's cinematography, and if you're at all a fan of 90s pop music, this soundtrack is a snapshot of that exact taste. Of course this ages the movie horrendously, but hey, we're approaching the time of 90s nostalgia, so now's the time to embrace it.

    Romeo + Juliet is an interesting movie to judge, because it's a strictly terrible movie. The modern setting and 16th century dialogue goes together as well you'd imagine, despite some imaginative transpositions (like each gun's brand being a type of blade; Sword 9mm, Dagger .45, Rapier 9mm, or in the case of shotguns; a Longsword). It's so intensely bright and colourful, the editing so frenetic and hard to follow, and the story being somewhat nonsensical by modern standards, but its self-awareness makes up for it, making it all feel deliberate and purposeful. We hold Shakespeare up on a pedestal these days, as some form of high art, but in his time he was basically writing the best soap operas, aimed at entertaining the commoners (the exact same trajectory as actual operas, incidentally, which are nowhere near as sophisticated or intelligent as modern high society would have you believe). With that in mind, and Luhrmann's attempt to make what Shakespeare would've made today (in 1996), I think this movie nails every goal it aims for. It's pure visual poetry, encouraging you to feel the story than follow it intently, blasting you with the intense emotional highs and lows of hormonal teenagedom. I give Romeo + Juliet a bizarrely successful 8/10.
    9neon47

    Moderized Without Losing the Shakespeare

    I'm a sucker for William Shakespeare even though I like it done better in the theatre. This one however, kept my attention and seemed to do a great job with modernizing the whole quarreling families thing. The movie kicks off with a street brawl between the Montegues and Capulets. The Prince forewarns them that if they ever disturb the peace again their "lives will pay the forfeit of the peace." We are then introduced to the character Romeo who is played by Leonardo DeCaprio. Leo does a great job as Romeo, but that's because Leo is a good actor in this film. Soon after that we are introduced to Juliet who is played by the beautiful Claire Danes, someone I haven't seen in too many movies. Danes does a great job playing the flirty Juliet. The movie follows the original script very accurately. The symbolism is also used very well throughout the movie. If you look at the guns you'll notice that some say sword, some say rapier, and I believe some say dagger. The Montegues always wear a Hawaiian style shirt. The Capulets dress more like mobsters or thugs even though both sides could be viewed as thugs in some sort or another. In either case each family wears a certain kind of clothing that makes it easy to tell who's who. One great part I absolutely love is the party. Juliet wears angel wings and Romeo wears a knight outfit. Romeo's best friend (and I wish I could spell his name but I'd rather not butcher it) dresses up as a women. So to explain this form of symbolics, for those who aren't getting it, it's Romeo is the "knight in shinning armor," Juliet is the angel of Romeo's dreams, and Romeo's best friend is the comic relief. There's other things you'll notice at the party also, like Tybalt wears devil horns(i.e. he's a villain). Both families you'll also notice are rich, which also follows the script accurately. Overall, if you're a Shakespeare fan, a fan of romantic movies, a fan of tragic movies, or a fan of artistic movies then make sure to look into this one. It'll sweep you off you're feet, make you laugh, make you cry, and make you fall in love.
    7rosetta_milner

    Leo is stunning

    As a 12 yo girl I don't understand Shakespeare one bit. It's like a different language that u just get bored of trying to translate. But this movie - I understood every bit of it. And I loved it. Why is there all this hate? Especially for Leonardo, his performance was beautiful and I'm not just saying that bcs of his face but it was genuinely moving and Clare Danes was great in it too. It's not the greatest movie I've ever seen no. But in 2021 I don't care if this movie is gonna change my life or not or if it's a masterpiece or a flop, I wanna watch a movie that I'll be entertained by and moved by. And that was this movie.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Key hair stylist Aldo Signoretti was kidnapped by gang members and held for $300 ransom which Baz Luhrmann paid.
    • Erros de gravação
      When on the beach preparing for a duel, Abra ejects all the bullets from Tybalt's magazine except one. Romeo uses that same gun, in a new location, to kill Tybalt, shooting him 6-7 times. However, Tybalt carries two guns. The one Romeo uses is the second gun, which at this point was not unloaded.
    • Citações

      Romeo: [upon first sight of Juliet] Did my heart love 'til now? Forswear its sight. For I never saw true beauty 'til this night.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      The film opens and closes with the Chorus, appearing as an anchorwoman on a TV screen, narrating the prologue and the closing lines.
    • Conexões
      Edited into Nothing Is Truer Than Truth (2018)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      #1 Crush
      Performed, Written and Produced by Garbage

      Garbage appears courtesy of Almo Sounds, Inc./Mushroom Records UK Ltd.

      Shirley Manson appears courtesy of Radioactive Records

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    Perguntas frequentes19

    • How long is Romeo + Juliet?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 10 de janeiro de 1997 (Brasil)
    • Países de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
      • México
      • Austrália
      • Canadá
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Official Facebook
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Romeo + Julieta
    • Locações de filme
      • Chapultepec Castle, Chapultepec Park, Cidade do México, Distrito Federal, México
    • Empresas de produção
      • Bazmark Films
      • Estudios Churubusco Azteca S.A.
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 14.500.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 46.351.345
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 11.133.231
      • 3 de nov. de 1996
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 147.554.998
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 2 h(120 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Proporção
      • 2.39 : 1

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