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1!All spoilers will be unmarked ahead. Administrivia/YouHaveBeenWarned!
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3[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/img_0777.JPG]]
4
5-> ''"Two households, both alike in dignity, in fair Verona, where we lay our scene. From ancient grudge break to new mutiny, where civil blood makes civil hands unclean. From forth the fatal loins of these two foes, a pair of star-crossed lovers take their life, whose misadventured piteous overthrows doth with their death bury their parent's strife. The fearful passage of their death marked love, and the continuance of their parent's rage, which but their children's end not could remove, is now the two hours' traffic of our stage."''
6-->-- '''The prologue''', delivered via television news anchor
7
8A modern adaptation of Creator/WilliamShakespeare's ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet'' released in 1996, directed by Creator/BazLuhrmann and starring Creator/LeonardoDiCaprio and Creator/ClaireDanes in the title roles.
9
10It notably [[SettingUpdate updates the setting]] to modern California (in a fictional modern American city with heavy Hispanic influences called "Verona Beach"), but keeps most of the original dialogue from the play, creating a rather unique adaptation. For example, the Montagues and Capulets are shown as warring mafia empires, and swords are replaced with guns (with brand/model names like "Sword" and "Dagger"). Consequently, apart from the setting, the film is, surprisingly, one of the most dialogue-faithful adaptations of the play ever made. Due to its faithfulness and modern setting, [[MediaNotes/SchoolStudyMedia it has been presented in numerous high school English classes]].
11
12Of course, most of the tropes which apply to ''Romeo and Juliet'' also apply to this film. Compare the 1936 version, ''Film/{{Romeo and Juliet|1936}}'', and the acclaimed 1968 version, ''Film/{{Romeo and Juliet|1968}}''. Of course, one should not confuse this adaptation with the various others, especially the one that also uses a mathematical symbol in its title, ''Anime/RomeoXJuliet''.
13
14The Montague family is played by Creator/BrianDennehy, Creator/ChristinaPickles (Lord and Lady Montague, here named Ted and Caroline), and Creator/DashMihok (Benvolio); Creator/JesseBradford, Creator/ZakOrth, and Creator/JamieKennedy play Montague cousins. The Capulet family is played by Creator/PaulSorvino, Creator/DianeVenora (Lord and Lady Capulet, here named Fulgencio and Gloria), Creator/JohnLeguizamo (Tybalt), Creator/VincentLaresca (Abra), and Creator/MiriamMargolyes (Nurse). The supporting cast is rounded out by Creator/HaroldPerrineau as Mercutio, Creator/PaulRudd as Paris, and Creator/VondieCurtisHall as the Prince Escalus figure.
15
16A song Music/{{Radiohead}} wrote for the movie, "Exit Music (For a Film)", would later be included on their album ''Music/OKComputer'' the following year; it was excluded from the film's soundtrack album as a result, which instead contains their 1996 B-side "Talk Show Host".
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19!!This film contains examples of:
20* AdaptationalContextChange:
21** In the first scene, the lines of the servants of Montague and Capulet are changed, so it is the Montagues that offend the Capulets, not the other way around as in the original play. The lines and motives of Benvolio and Tybalt are not changed, however.
22** Romeo's line "thy drugs work quick" was originally his second-to-last words before he died from suicidal poisioning in Juliet's crypt. Here, it is moved to the ball scene, where "Queen Mab" is actually a drug--analogous to Ecstasy--given to Romeo by Mercutio. He says the line before Mercutio's big song.
23** In the original play, Mercutio said "A plague o' both your houses" immediately after being stabbed. In film, he only says it after "Ay, ay, a scratch, a scratch", upon realizing the wound is fatal.
24** Romeo originally said the line "Tempt not a desperate man" when confronting Paris in the Capulet family vault. In the movie, where Paris is SparedByTheAdaptation, he says it when taking a human shield against the VBPD SWAT cops outside the vault.
25* AdaptationalJerkass: There are a few characters who get this treatment.
26** Tybalt starts beating up Romeo when the latter refuses to fight him, forcing Mercutio to intervene.
27** Romeo as well. In the play, Tybalt returns to the scene after killing Mercutio, and Romeo kills him in a duel. Here, Romeo chases Tybalt down [[CarFu quite violently,]] and shoots him repeatedly in (more or less) cold blood. He also engages in a shoot-out with the police at the climax.
28** Lord Capulet verbally abuses Juliet when she won't marry Paris in the play, but never physically hurts her or his wife. Here, he's a full-blown domestic abuser.
29* AdaptationalJobChange: Since America doesn't have titled nobility, Escalus is changed to Verona Beach's chief of police. He is referred to as "Captain Prince".
30* AdaptationDyeJob: In the poem Shakespeare's play was based on, Juliet was described as blonde. This version of Juliet is brunette.
31* AdaptationInducedPlotHole: At the end, Captain Prince claims to have "lost a brace of kinsmen", as he does in the play, in reference to Mercutio's death. But Paris is (apparently) [[SparedByTheAdaptation still alive]] and [[UnrelatedInTheAdaptation doesn't seem to be related to him]], which raises the question of who the other "kinsman" he lost is. Although, since there is no real indication that Mercutio is related to Captain Prince, it is possible that, through [[AdaptationalContextChange context change]], "a brace of kinsmen" might mean "some fine officers".
32* AdaptationNameChange: Abra (originally Abram or Abraham, a servant of Montague in the original play), [[RelatedDifferentlyInTheAdaptation now associated with the Capulets]].
33* AgeLift: The 13-year-old Juliet in the play is now a 16-year-old; Lord Capulet's mention of her being less than 14 is noticeably cut. Romeo's age was unspecified in the play, but he's also 16 years old in this movie.
34* AKA47: Justified. Guns carry brand names like "Dagger", "Sword", "Rapier" and "Longsword" to keep within Shakespeare's original script.
35* AlmostKiss: The second time Romeo and Juliet try to kiss, they are interrupted by the ding of a bell. Quickly subverted seconds later as the two enter an elevator and kiss in there.
36* AmbiguouslyGay: Mercutio. He plays a drag queen to boot. Tybalt manages to provoke Mercutio into hostilities with a homophobic taunt of "Mercutio! Thou consortest with Romeo!", removing a considerable amount of ambiguity to many viewers.
37* AnachronismStew: One of the most memorable parts of this adaptation is that the setting has been modernized but everyone [[FloweryElizabethanEnglish still speaks in Shakespeare's famous flowery dialect.]]
38* ArtisticLicenseLaw: Captain Prince is a modern police chief, but seems to have unlimited authority, threatening to execute the families' leaders over a street brawl, and Romeo is "exiled" for killing Tybalt, rather than arrested.
39* ATeamFiring: When Romeo returns to Verona, neither he nor the police land a shot on each other.
40* BadGuysPlayPool: Well, the rivaling Montague clan plays pool while watching news reports on TV.
41* BalconyWooingScene: Spoofed when Romeo climbs up to Juliet's balcony for the famous scene... only for her maid to appear instead. Romeo quickly ducks out of sight, but then Juliet exits an elevator on the ground floor, so he doesn't have to climb anywhere. When Romeo tries to introduce himself, he startles her so much they both fall into the pool.
42* BigBrotherWorship: Romeo's feelings towards Benvolio, who is actually his cousin and not his brother.
43* BigNo: Romeo after Mercutio's death.
44* BlackDudeDiesFirst: You got it -- Mercutio.
45* BlingBlingBang: Sampson, Mercutio and Tybalt carry some of the most elaborately decorated pistols in film history with gold plating, custom magazines with family crests and decorated grips. Tybalt's Rapier 9mm particularly stands out. Even his pistol's magazines have the Capulet family crest on them. Sampson's P-13 is gold-plated.
46* BossSubtitles: Every time a new character is introduced, their name and role within the houses are shown (likely for the benefit of those who haven’t seen the play before).
47* BrokenRecord: The "either thou, or I, or both must go with him" line said by Romeo to Tybalt ''once'' in the original is screamed over and over again in this version.
48* BulletproofVest: Most, if not all, of the younger Capulets wear bulletproof vests styled to look like waistcoats. Notably, the Montagues ''don't'' wear vests, favoring unbuttoned Hawaiian shirts, as a sign that they're not intimidated by the Capulets.
49* {{Camp}}: Guess who? Especially when Mercutio performs in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DivPsjOi8jU&feature=related drag at the Capulets' party]].
50* CarFu: Romeo and Tybalt's fight involves this.
51* CharacterNarrator: The intro and ending statements are made as a television news broadcast. It counts as this trope, as the same reporter also takes the lines originally associated with an unnamed Capulet servant which announces the party that Mercutio later helps Romeo and his kinsmen crash.
52* ChaseScene: As part of the modernized setting, there are several high-speed car chases, often pursued personally by Captain Prince in a police helicopter:
53** Benvolio and Tybalt do this for the opening quarrel.
54** Romeo and Tybalt do this, with Romeo gunning Tybalt down in a fountain; also involves some CarFu.
55** Romeo's flight to Juliet's crypt becomes this as well, with Romeo at one point taking a human shield before making it to the crypt.
56* ChewingTheScenery: Vondie Curtis Hall as Captain Prince. He seems to be channeling Creator/SamuelLJackson, and doing so [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools magnificently]].
57* ChristianityIsCatholic: Loads and loads of Catholic iconography is in this movie -- to the point of being over-the-top. Partially justified as it revolves around feuding Italian mafia families living in a Latin American community.
58* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: What happened to Paris? In the original story he was killed by Romeo, but in this version, he disappears without explanation. The Prince's line about having "lost a brace of kinsmen" is a reference to the deaths of Mercutio and Paris.
59* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: Montagues wear Hawaiian shirts, while Capulets mostly wear summer suits and bulletproof vests bejazzled with Catholic iconography.
60* CreatorCameo: In Friar Lawrence's church there's a large mural of Jesus on one of the walls which is based on the likeness of screenwriter Craig Pierce.
61* DeathWail: Juliet forgoes her final speech for one of these.
62* DiedInIgnorance: Only ''just'' subverted for dramatic effect in. The film twists the knife even deeper by having Juliet wake up and touch Romeo's face ''just'' as Romeo has consumed poison, believing Juliet to be dead. He visibly realises his mistake as he [[DiedInYourArmsTonight dies in her arms]].
63* DiedInYourArmsTonight:
64** Mercutio dies in Romeo's arms.
65** After Juliet wakes up just too late to stop Romeo taking the poison, he dies in her arms.
66* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation:
67** In the original play, Mercutio stumbles into a nearby building while spitting out his DyingCurse and dies off-stage. In this film, he dies in Romeo's arms.
68** Due to the modernization of this film replacing the swords with guns, instead of stabbing herself in the heart at the end, Juliet shoots herself in the head.
69* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: Romeo and Juliet die in the same positions they were in just after they had sex a couple of nights before.
70* DownerEnding: [[ForegoneConclusion But of course.]]
71* DramaticWind: Mercutio's death happens as the Sycamore Grove beach is getting hit with winds so strong it nearly tears the characters' clothes off.
72* DrivenToSuicide: Romeo and Juliet, [[ItWasHisSled but you should know that already.]]
73* DyingCurse: From Mercutio, [[DoomedByCanon of course]].
74* TheDyingWalk: Mercutio does this after his DyingCurse, walking away from the site of his fight with Tybalt, and shoving away Romeo when he tries to help Mercutio. Then he collapses on the beach and dies there.
75* ElevatorGoingDown: During the ball scene.
76* EmpathicEnvironment: The wind begins to pick up as Mercutio lays down his DyingCurse.
77* EveryoneIsArmed: It's fair to say that most characters are carrying [[BlingBlingBang pimped out guns]] at all times. In many cases, the characters are openly carrying firearms.
78* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: Music/{{Radiohead}}'s song that plays over the end credits is named "Exit Music (For a Film)".
79* TheFilmOfThePlay: In spite of the Setting Update, this adaptation largely keeps the original dialogue, with only relatively minor switches in motive and timeframe.
80* FingerTwitchingRevival: Juliet is revived '''just''' [[DrivenToSuicide as Romeo is preparing to drink the poison!]]
81* FloweryElizabethanEnglish: Despite taking place in modern times, everybody speaks in the same dialect as Shakespeare's time.
82* GunFu: This particular version of the Shakespearean play is pretty big on the gunplay, both in the opening scene and in the shootout between Romeo and the cops near the end. Interestingly, guns in this movie are given the names of swords, since the Shakespearean dialogue is almost completely intact.
83* GunPorn: Benvolio, Tybalt, and Mercutio sport some of the most [[https://www.imfdb.org/images/f/fe/Benvoliogun.jpg beautifully]] [[https://www.imfdb.org/images/1/1c/Tybaltgun.jpg awesome]] [[https://www.imfdb.org/images/0/02/RJ-02092.jpg pistols]] to ever grace the silver screen. Even guns that belong to nameless extras and only get maybe a second of screen time are decked out with gold detailing and the like.
84* TheGunslinger: Most of the characters use guns, but Tybalt in particular gives this impression.
85* GunTwirling: Tybalt does this briefly during the gas station shootout.
86* HappierTimesMontage: Shown after their mutual suicide.
87* HaveAGayOldTime: Drag queen Mercutio plays up the potential for this in his lines wherever possible.
88* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Tybalt is shot with his own gun by Romeo.
89* HollywoodKiss: Guess who?
90* InCaseYouForgotWhoWroteIt: Baz Luhrmann's ''William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet''
91* InelegantBlubbering: Romeo.
92* InterplayOfSexAndViolence: Romeo and Juliet die in the same pose as their post-coital embrace.
93* {{Irony}}: The slogan for the Phoenix gas station which gets blown up in the opening gunfight is 'Add more fuel to your fire' (it also is a [[GeniusBonus quotation]] from ''Henry VI part 3'').
94* KnightErrant: Romeo is dressed up in armor at the Capulet's party and he calls himself a pilgrim who has traveled to the shrine of Juliet.
95* LargeHam: Half of the cast just can't seem to resist being hammy. The hammiest of all is definitely Mercutio, though.
96* LuckyCharmsTitle: "Romeo + Juliet" rather than "Romeo and Juliet."
97* MadnessMantra: As Romeo goes to town on Tybalt after the latter has killed Mercutio, he repeatedly shouts "Either thou, or I, or both must go with him!" as he punches away.
98* TheMafia: While they're never actually described as such, the Montagues and Capulets operate like classic gangland families, engaging in dubiously legal activities and engaging in turf wars for control of the city.
99* MasqueradeBall: The Capulets' party is more like a costume party, though.
100* MeetCute: Instead of going the DanceOfRomance route, this adaption has Romeo and Juliet meet from opposite sides of a fish tank in a giggle-inducing scene.
101* MindScrew: Romeo takes drugs before the party and sees Tybalt kissing his own aunt, Mercutio singing in drag and the room spinning. Considering [[Creator/BazLuhrmann who directs the film]], it should be expected.
102* MistimedRevival: Juliet wakes up ''just'' too late to stop Romeo killing himself. This adaptation makes the timing almost unbearable.
103* ModestyBedsheet: Juliet wears one the morning after she sleeps with Romeo. Its strategic placement also helps conceal Romeo putting his pants back on.
104* MushroomSamba: Mercutio gives Romeo a hit of "Queen Mab" (MDMA, a.k.a. ecstasy) before the party. The line "thy drugs are quick" is moved from the suicide scene to here for added effect.
105* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: After Romeo loses the initial buzz of anger-fueled adrenaline during his [[spoiler:killing Tybalt]], his face quite notably changes to an expression of shock and regret as Romeo begins to become horrified with what he's done.
106* NoIndoorVoice: About half of the dialogue is screamed in an apparent attempt to make it more exciting for younger audiences.
107* NoisyGuns: Romeo finds himself looking down the barrel of a double-barrelled shotgun... accompanied by the sound of a shell being pumped into the chamber.
108* NoMoreForMe: Romeo takes drugs before the party and thinks he’s hallucinating when he sees Tybalt kissing his own aunt and Mercutio singing in drag.
109* OhCrap: Romeo, in a dramatic moment that doesn't occur in the original play.
110** Also the woman [[HandbagOfHurt who had repeatedly hit Sampson in the head with her handbag]] when he pulled his gun on her.
111* OrbitalKiss: Romeo and Juliet share a kiss in an elevator -- which was actually too small to fit cast and crew inside. There were a lot of breathless grips running around the outside of the tiny lift set, removing and replacing panels to allow the steadicam to move freely around the couple.
112* PeriodPieceModernLanguage: Inverted. The film is set in the 1990s, but keeps the original play's dialogue down to the Elizabethan dialect, with only a few minor changes.
113* PhonyNewscast: The Prologue (as well as [[BookEnds epilogue]]) are reinterpreted this way.
114* PrettyLittleHeadshots: Juliet's suicide.
115* PrinceCharmless: Paris is a preppy pompous ass.
116* PromotedToLoveInterest: There are hints throughout the movie that Tybalt and Lady Capulet are having an affair. They smoke the same brown cigarettes, they make out during the costume party, and [[spoiler: Lady Capulet weeps over Tybalt's dead body and shouts "Romeo killed Tybalt, Romeo must not live!"]]
117* RaceLift: The play takes place in Italy, so both families are Italian. Here, the Montegues are exclusively Anglo, [[note]]Mercutio doesn't count, he's actually related to The Prince/Captain Prince.[[/note]] while the Capulets are a mix of Italians and Latinos, with a few black people sprinkled in.
118** Captain Prince and his kinsman Mercutio are black in this, but oddly Paris (who in the play is related to the Prince and Mercutio) is Anglo. This explains why the family relationship between Paris and Prince is not mentioned -- but that leaves hanging a line mentioned where Prince explains that he lost two family members as well -- that line was referring to Mercutio and Paris. This could also be a simpler plot hole since Paris is SparedByTheAdaptation.
119** Some viewers interpret this as the Montagues being NORTHERN Italians, [[RealityIsUnrealistic who had a lot of French and German influence compared to southern Italians.]]
120* ReallyDeadMontage: After Romeo and Juliet die there is a montage of their happiest moments together, complete with tragic background music.
121* RelatedDifferentlyInTheAdaptation: In the film, Sampson and Gregory are associated with the Montagues, and Abra (see AdaptationNameChange) is with the Capulets. In the original play, Sampson and Gregory are with the Capulets, and Abram is with the Montagues.
122* RedOniBlueOni: The Capulets and Montagues are differentiated this way, with the Capulets being angry and sharply dressed, while the Montegues are more clownish and wear casual Hawaiian shirts.
123* RingOnANecklace: Following his secret forbidden marriage to Juliet and his banishment for killing Tybalt, Romeo wears his wedding ring on a chain. When he visits the supposedly dead Juliet in her tomb, Romeo pulls the necklace off to place the ring on her finger, with the chain still attached.
124* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Romeo goes on one after Mercutio dies.
125* RuleOfCool: Half of what Tybalt does can only be described as this.
126* SayMyName:
127-->"JULIEEEEET! JULIEEEEEET!"
128* SecretStabWound[=/=]MortalWoundReveal: Mercutio, after being stabbed, pretends his injury is not that serious.
129* SeriousWorkComedicScene: This film has Mercutio dressed in drag at the party scene, along with Tybalt roaring. The rest of the film is as serious as the original play, albeit set in a modern era.
130* SettingUpdate: From Late Medieval[=/=]Renaissance Italy to Modern-Day Southern California.
131* SexySoakedShirt: Both Juliet (wearing a white dress no less) and Romeo fall into her pool in the balcony scene. Romeo later gets drenched by rain after leaving Juliet's room.
132* ShotgunsAreJustBetter: Capulet's line in I.i. of "Give me my long sword, ho!" now refers to his shotgun.
133* SkywardScream:
134** Romeo, on realising [[spoiler: Tybalt]]'s death and its consequences. "I AM FORTUNE'S FOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL!"
135** Also 'THEN I DEFY YOU, STAAAAARS!'
136** "A plague, ON BOTH YOUR HOUSES!" (Mercutio, right before his death)
137* SparedByTheAdaptation:
138** Paris isn't killed by Romeo in this version of the story.
139** This adaptation leaves out Lady Montague's DeathByDespair and lets her mourn Romeo's death with her husband in the final scene.
140* StarCrossedLovers: Guess who.
141* SunshineNoir: There's a good amount of influence from ''[[Film/Scarface1983 Scarface]]'' and ''Series/MiamiVice'' on the film's aesthetic, in addition to dovetailing with the similar aesthetic of pop stars such as Music/RickyMartin and Music/GloriaEstefan who were popular when the movie came out.
142* SymbolicWings: Juliet wears an angel costume at the party. This costume is her most iconic and is shown prevalently in promotional material.
143* ToplessnessFromTheBack: Juliet on her wedding night.
144* {{Undercrank}}: Used for stylistic effect.
145* UnrelatedInTheAdaptation: Implied to be the case with Dave Paris and Captain Prince. They have different surnames, the lines mentioning them to be blood relatives are cut, and while Prince is [[RaceLift made into a black man]], Paris notably isn't.
146* WalkingShirtlessScene: Benvolio primarily, but most of the Montague boys can't seem to button their shirts.
147* VirginInAWhiteDress: Juliet, the young romantic heroine, wears a white dress until after losing her virginity. She is even wearing a white angel costume when she first meets Romeo.
148* WhiteShirtOfDeath:
149** In addition to being introduced as a VirginInAWhiteDress, Juliet dies wearing a white dress as well.
150** Mercutio is also wearing a white shirt when he's fatally slashed by Tybalt.
151* WidowsWeeds: Juliet's mother wears a black veil during Juliet's staged funeral.
152* WorldOfHam: The film is basically Shakespeare reimagined in an overwrought 90s style.
153* WouldHurtAChild: In his first scene, Tybalt shows no compunction about threatening a young child by putting a gun in his face.

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