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The BBC Television Shakespeare
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Romeo & Juliet

  • Episode aired Mar 14, 1979
  • TV-14
  • 2h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
475
YOUR RATING
Patrick Ryecart and Rebecca Saire in Romeo & Juliet (1978)
Drama

Two teenagers fall in love, but their feuding families and fate itself cause the relationship to end in tragedy.Two teenagers fall in love, but their feuding families and fate itself cause the relationship to end in tragedy.Two teenagers fall in love, but their feuding families and fate itself cause the relationship to end in tragedy.

  • Director
    • Alvin Rakoff
  • Writer
    • William Shakespeare
  • Stars
    • Patrick Ryecart
    • Rebecca Saire
    • Celia Johnson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    475
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alvin Rakoff
    • Writer
      • William Shakespeare
    • Stars
      • Patrick Ryecart
      • Rebecca Saire
      • Celia Johnson
    • 19User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos21

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    Top cast29

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    Patrick Ryecart
    Patrick Ryecart
    • Romeo
    Rebecca Saire
    Rebecca Saire
    • Juliet
    Celia Johnson
    Celia Johnson
    • Nurse
    Michael Hordern
    Michael Hordern
    • Capulet
    John Gielgud
    John Gielgud
    • Chorus
    Joseph O'Conor
    Joseph O'Conor
    • Friar Laurence
    Laurence Naismith
    Laurence Naismith
    • Prince Escalus
    Anthony Andrews
    Anthony Andrews
    • Mercutio
    Alan Rickman
    Alan Rickman
    • Tybalt
    Jacqueline Hill
    Jacqueline Hill
    • Lady Capulet
    Christopher Strauli
    Christopher Strauli
    • Benvolio
    Christopher Northey
    Christopher Northey
    • Paris
    Paul Henry
    • Peter
    Roger Davidson
    • Balthasar
    John Paul
    • Montague
    Zulema Dene
    Zulema Dene
    • Lady Montague
    Esmond Knight
    Esmond Knight
    • Old Capulet
    David Sibley
    David Sibley
    • Sampson
    • Director
      • Alvin Rakoff
    • Writer
      • William Shakespeare
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.6475
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    Featured reviews

    davidandpamlee

    Loved it

    Saw this Movie in College about 10 Years ago now in a Shakespeare class and Absolutely loved the movie and have been looking for this movie. It's an Old Movie and yes the special effects are not great but is very true to Shakespeare and what you see would be more like what it would have actually been like when Shakespeare wrote the Play. And I believe this is what the Director was trying for and accomplished. A movie true to Shakespeare true nature not a Hollywood version. So in essentially you have almost gone back in time and watch it as if Shakespeare himself was directing it. But your not going to get great special effects so if that what you looking for look more but if your looking for something that has stayed with the Nature and the spirit of Shakespeare this is your movie.
    Nozz

    Romeo, Romeo, who cast you as Romeo?

    At times I wasn't sure if this was Romeo and Juliet or Dudley Do-Right and Juliet. Sometimes Romeo seemed wooden, sometimes awkward, sometimes trying woodenly to be awkward. He seemed much older than Juliet, too, which would be interesting if it were part of the play but it isn't.

    Much more affecting were Juliet herself, the Nurse, and old Capulet. Some of the staging was notably well handled, including the whole Capulet ballroom scene. I couldn't help comparing Mercutio and Friar Laurence unfavorably with their Zeffirelli counterparts.

    It was nice to get more of the dialogue than some other film versions preserve, but on the other hand some of the cuts took away familiar lines and such cuts are always jarring.
    master_d

    Alan Rickman is the man

    I watched this in high school and thought it was okay, not great, a little over-acted, but okay. I am reviewing this because I just found out that Alan Rickman plays Tybalt in this. In my opinion Alan plays the role with gusto and power. Not over-acting like the other characters. God bless RickMAN. God bless you for saving this show. Too bad he had to die early...
    9wdavisterry

    Another good performance of the greatest play ever written

    Rebecca Saire and Patrick Ryecart and quite interesting as the leads. Saire gives a very good interpretation of Juliet and owns her scenes. She is beautiful, and her costumes are affective. Wearing clothing patterned after authentic period costumes adds a lot. She looks a little like Elsa Lanchester in "Bride of Frankenstein" in the heavy full-length dress of the day. Ryecart uses a more contemporary style, along the lines of England in the era of the Beatles and the Stones while remaining intellectually honest. It is unusual now to have a Romeo not be a teen-dream. Saire and Ryecart have some, not a lot of, chemistry. What the actors accomplish is to bring to the fore some of the questions in the plot. Why do they think springing their marriage on their families in the middle of a vendetta will not be received with horror? Or why doesn't Friar Lawrence see the likely outcome? They try to out-Machiavellian the rulers of a renaissance Italian city-state and the outcome is also predicable. The play is not the romantic tragedy it is reputed to be.

    Perhaps the production values could have been better if it had not been filmed in the style of a 1970s BBC program. Too many crane shots. The sets are variable. Very good background music in the credits and the musicians in the party scene are playing authentic instruments.

    This performance is from the first two seasons of BBC Shakespeare and is shows the original purpose which seemed to be to sell the package to school libraries from class discussion. Later they did more original interpretations of the plays and some of the actors in this are in the later plays; Ryecart, Michael Hordern, and Vernon Dobtcheff are the ones I saw.
    4tonstant viewer

    Not Good

    Celia Johnson is good as the Nurse. Michael Hordern is good as Capulet, though it's his usual neighing and whinnying and not a patch on his King Lear. John O'Conor reads the verse well as Friar Laurence though he never takes it anywhere. Alan Rickman is good as Tybalt, in the first of his "yuk" roles that would make him famous. Christopher Strauli's Benvolio is sympathetic.

    The sets are pretty, if not stunning as in some of the other BBC Shakespeare's.

    And that's it. The rest is weak to dreadful. Rebecca Saire turned 15 during production, and hasn't a clue about how to act Juliet - she opens her eyes real wide and whines every line in exactly the same way. Patrick Ryecart is poorly matched to her, and his self-regard is inexplicable. The Balcony Scene flows smoothly and uneventfully with zero emotional or erotic impact. Their deaths come as a relief. If I had a dagger, I would have offered it to them hours earlier.

    Anthony Andrews is unspeakable as Mercutio, a great shock if you remember his fine work in "Brideshead Revisited." He breaks the mirror of Shakespeare's verse into a thousand shards of two or three words each, and then shouts the fragments in as disconnected and unintelligible manner as possible. In this production, Queen Mab abdicates. Awful.

    The director, Alvin Rakoff, shows only an intermittent gift of putting the camera where it will show us what we want to see. The opening brawl is notably incoherent. However there is humor when in a later fight, Romeo apparently knees Tybalt right in the cobblers. Tybalt then grabs the offended region. However did that get through?

    R&J is a long play. This version is not recommended for classroom use, or much else.

    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Television debut of Alan Rickman (Tybalt).
    • Goofs
      When Juliet stabs herself, she thrust the dagger into her belly. In the next shot, the dagger is in her breast.
    • Connections
      Featured in Nostalgia Critic: Does Romeo and Juliet Suck? (2013)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 14, 1979 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Latin
    • Also known as
      • The Complete Dramatic Works of William Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet
    • Production companies
      • BBC Studios
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Time-Life Television Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 48m(168 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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