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.10 Things I Hate About You (1999)The Taming of the Shrew (New Folger Shakespeare Library) Discovering Shakespeare: The Taming of the Shrew - A Workbook for Students (1997), Fredi Olster (Editor) |
10
Things I Hate About You, the feature film debut of TV veteran Gil Junger, has the feel
of a TV sitcom. If you've turned on your tube in the last ten years you've run into this
formula over and over again: kids who seem sex crazed and loony on the outside but are
world wise, conservative and sensitive at heart, ruled by parents and teachers who are
imbeciles on the surface and deviants just below it.
"Think Taming
of the Shrew," the kind publicist said, as we sat down in the theater. Did she
mean "There's small choice in rotten apples?" (Taming of the Shrew,
Act I, Scene 1)
This production,
these situations and characters, are to Shakespeare what advertising is to truth. Kat, the
girl we are supposed to hate (Julie Stiles - the "Shrew''), is the only person in the
cast with a brain. Cameron, the hero for whom we are supposed to cheer (Joseph
Gordon-Levitt), is a wimp with no redeeming characteristics. Patrick (Heath Ledger), the
man/boy who tames the shrew, is asked to convince us that he didn't really do a year in
San Quentin for selling his own liver, like all the kids think, but instead was in
Milwaukee caring for his aged grandfather. This would be a stretch for Harrison Ford.
Heath Ledger ain't Harrison Ford.
The Teenager Who
Knows All, who saw this film with me, liked it. He agreed it was preposterous, but
enjoyed the music and pretty girls. Everyone in the school is gorgeous, even the leather
ladies in the Skunk Club. Stadium High School in Tacoma, Washington, is pretty. There are
several nice panoramic views of the water.
But "Tush!
tush! Fear boys with bugs." (Act I, Scene 2). Your middle-schoolers will enjoy
this PG-13 film (no violence, no sex). They will find the world of Stadium High to be
titillating and full of the promise of beautiful bodies -and a live band at the prom. Ha!
Anyone older, or
anyone who is tired of TV, should skip this tiresome view of stereotypical spoiled white
teenagers and go see 20 Dates, which is infinitely
funnier and also has a number in the title.
The publicity notes
about Karen McCullah Lutz, half of the screenwriting team, say: "Karen
lives in the Hollywood Hills with her husband Walter, who is immensely relieved that
people are willing to pay her."
"And
thereby hangs a tale." (Act IV, Scene 2)
- DAK