Christopher Jacobs wrote: I actually really liked his ROMEO + JULIET as one of the best adaptations of the play ever put on film.
Better, anywhere near, or even in the same universe, as Zeffirelli's? Oh, say it ain't so, Chris! As with all "contemporary" Shakespearean adaptations, such as Richard Burton's
Hamlet, how is one supposed to surmount the absurdity of 16th C. English in the mouths of people dressed like oneself, or references within the dialog to 16th C. household furnishings, weapons, etc.? Why don't directors with a taste for the "theater of the absurd" direct their talents to productions of Beckett, Ionesco, & the like, and keep their mitts off Will?