When the language is dense, the visuals guide you. When Romeo cries, “I defy you, stars!” he isn’t looking at the sky—he’s looking at a news report showing a hurricane. The universe is literally conspiring against him. Luhrmann makes the text visceral.
The soundtrack is a time capsule: Radiohead, Garbage, Everclear, Butthole Surfers, and the immortal over the end credits. It captures the 90s angst perfectly—the feeling that everything is beautiful and everything is about to explode. Why It Works (Despite the Chaos) The genius of Luhrmann is that he never winks at the camera. This is a movie where characters wear Hawaiian shirts and quote Elizabethan English, but it takes itself deadly seriously . romeo juliet 1996
Turn up the volume. And try not to cry when the choir kicks in. What’s your favorite scene? The pool scene? The elevator? Mercutio’s drag performance? Let me know in the comments! When the language is dense, the visuals guide you
Here’s why this glitter bomb of a movie still owns a piece of my soul. Forget fair Verona. Luhrmann dropped the star-crossed lovers into Verona Beach , a neon-drenched, drug-fueled mash-up of Miami Vice and Mexico City. The Montagues are a gang of bleach-blonde, Hawaiian-shirt-wearing punks. The Capulets are a slick, Latino-cowboy mafia in black leather. Luhrmann makes the text visceral
If you were a teenager in the late 90s, you had one poster on your wall: Leonardo DiCaprio shirtless, blonde hair slicked back, holding a pistol while a cigarette dangled from his lips. Or maybe it was Claire Danes in silver angel wings.
Twenty-eight years later, Baz Luhrmann’s remains the most audacious, chaotic, and heartbreakingly beautiful Shakespeare adaptation ever made. It didn’t just translate the Bard; it injected him with adrenaline, ecstasy, and a 9mm bullet.
The play is about teenage passion—fast, reckless, and all-consuming. And no movie has ever captured that feeling better than two kids falling in love behind a priest’s back while a gas station explodes behind them.