- Obligate note that everyone is hot and I am
having A Rough Time. Especially Romeo
and Rosaline. Damn. Relatedly, I’d die for Rosaline. DAMN.
Lovin’ that character interpretation
and her friendship with Juliet. I
couldn’t give less of a damn about Benvolio/Rosaline, but give me all of
Escalus cutting out his own heart to save Verona and Rosaline hating herself
for not being able to hate him. The
scene of them in the church was some good shit.
- This was EXACTLY the overwrought historically
inaccurate Shakespeare nonsense I hoped it would be, frankly. Sweeping beautiful visuals, sudden closeups
for theatrical one-liners, slightly confused plotline timing, and The Drama™. Good stuff.
- I don’t generally care for versions of Romeo and
Juliet where the love story is played straight (Shakespeare wrote it as a
tongue-in-cheek tragedy, a lot of the narrative makes more sense with that
perspective, and the love-at-first-sight angle is kind of desperately overplayed
and therefore I Do Not Care) but I’m willing to roll with it because I knew
what I was getting into. And like they
do a decent job with it, it’s very tragic, Juliet is good, I like her, Romeo’s
death is nicely done. Kinda annoyed that
Juliet poisons herself rather than stabbing herself because I like the tragedy
of “I will kiss thy lips//Haply some poison yet doth hang on them.”
- That being said, I think it was a narratively
good move to add some additional weight to the Montague/Capulet feud. Like, on the one hand, yes, folks are being
murdered in your streets, that is Not Good, but also let’s…have a solid reason
for the Prince to care, seeing as
that’s the whole plot of this show. And
it being Italy in the 16th century, concerns about a power grab by
the winning family are pretty legit. (I’ve
watched a lot of Borgias lately.)
- ANTHONY. STEWART.
HEAD. AS LORD CAPULET. Aw man y’all the part of me that really
enjoyed the first two and a half seasons or so of Merlin (another show I have
Opinions on) as a terrible romp through somewhat bastardized Arthuriana is real
excited right now.
- Glad to see Paris is a dick. Very pleased.
- The all out riotous brawl at the funeral was
honestly the top thing on my wish list for this show and I feel intensely
gratified to have gotten it.
- The line “Escalus, Verona is burning” was my fucking shit to be
honest. Like, damn, son, Isabella is
Athena, the clear-eyed goddess of wisdom and war, and I feel like the world
deserves to see her with a sword in her hand.
- Here is my #1 Complaint: they seem to have
accidentally switched Benvolio and Mercutio’s personalities. This is not to say that Benvolio is
necessarily the voice of reason in the play (it’s a play of Bad Choices), but
Mercutio is 100% the “I am drunk at 10 AM,” Do It For The Vine friend. I got to the scene where Mercutio dies before
I realized that the other guy wasn’t Mercutio, and I was solely tipped off by
the fact that I knew Mercutio died. I
get it that they clearly wanted some sort of bad boy thing to be happening
here, but I’m so salty about this. Like,
why WOULDN’T you want Benvolio to be loyal and honest and grief-stricken and desperate
to do right by his best friends’ deaths for this thoughtless crusade? Romeo, the hopeless romantic, and Mercutio,
the laughing rogue, both dead from this hopeless feud, and Benvolio, true and dependable
as good steel, the last one left alive, who will see it mended if it kills him
but who can’t quite forget his friends’ voices enough to marry a woman he doesn’t
love. Like, what part of that DOESN’T
sound like good shit.
- ….I mean…personal headcanon that he’s drowning
himself in alcohol and misery because Mercutio doesn’t love him, and that he
doesn’t care what happens to him afterward because Mercutio is dead. Like, that’s the only way I can reconcile the
dude in the show and the play character.
But whatever that’s just me.
Ultimate conclusion: 10/10 on The Drama™, but it ain’t exactly Sense8 for structure or narrative cohesion. Will I show my Shakespeare nerd parents? Jury’s out. Will I continue watching it? HELL YES.