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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Strange interpretation,
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This review is from: Romeo and Juliet: A BBC Radio 3 Full-cast Dramatisation. Starring Douglas Henshall & Cast (BBC Radio Shakespeare) (Audio CD)
It's always difficult to achieve the drama of a play through voice alone and in many ways this succeeds - although the verse reading of Juliet is very average, completely devoid of the poetry. The worst problem though is Capulet - for ages it was bugging me who this sounded like. At first I though the previous reviewer might be right and that he sounded drunk - but unfortunately then it hit me - he sounds exactly like George the hippo on Rainbow. So every time he speaks I just see a big pink hippo in my mind'e eye which is a tad distracting. The Queen Mab piece benefits from an Irish actor's accent. All in all, mixed. I would have preferred the Arkangel production, but it is not on CD which is a bore.
13 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Far from satisfying, and rather surprising,
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This review is from: Romeo and Juliet: A BBC Radio 3 Full-cast Dramatisation. Starring Douglas Henshall & Cast (BBC Radio Shakespeare) (Audio CD)
This radio adaptation is interesting in some ways, but it remains rather short on its objective. The sound universe created behind the voices is rather diminutive. Some voices are not that very accurate : Juliet is rather old-sounding and Romeo is quite late in his twenties at least. Lord Capulet speaks as if he were plain drunk all the time. But what's more some interpretations are defective. The famous sonnet during the dance is just badly done. The tone is wrong. The wit is flattened, etc. The balcony scene is slightly better, luckily. Romeo, by the way, is too much of a hooligan, of an agressive character, not at all in keeping with the world we can vaguely hear behind. Finally there are some cuts and some changes in the text that are not at all justified, such as « pacing » for « passing ». Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, Paris Universities II and IX.
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