Prospero's Books and John Cassavetes' Tempest were both well-made, interesting films inspired by Shakespeare.
Amanda Bynes' She's the Man was not.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Prospero's Books and John Cassavetes' Tempest were both well-made, interesting films inspired by Shakespeare.
Amanda Bynes' She's the Man was not.
Christopher Moore's book, Fool.
I had a running list of things that are almost perfectly Shakespearean, without really being a direct spinoff. For example, I Love Lucy is so much like Merry Wives of Windsor in many respects.
"Romiette and Julio" by Sharon Draper. A pretty popular YA book that modernized the story, but the plot is different Romiette is African-American, Julio is Chicano.
Lots of Shakespeare in Fool on the Hill by Matt Ruff. Still one of my favorite books.
Oh, and Romeo and Julie. Women's fic novel with the lead characters in their late fifties/early sixties. It was their children who were against the match.
Lots of Shakespeare in Fool on the Hill by Matt Ruff. Still one of my favorite books.
Man, I love that book. Haven't read it in years; I'm afraid it won't hold up. I think it's a bit id-vortexy for me. It's all wrapped up with college for me, cause I went to Cornell for 3 semesters and knew a bunch of people who lived in Risley. It was a whole thing there, about the college experience I didn't have.
Hey, the Hamlet in Croation speech from er.
(If it hasn't been mentioned.)
SO. hot.
Except for Midsummer Night's Dream the comedies are a bit under-exploited.
The Boys from Syracuse is basically a musical version of The Comedy of Errors.
How about the Paul Rudnick play, "I Hate Hamlet"?
And I highly recommend A Thousand Acres. It's Lear in the c. 1980 agricultural Midwest.
Kurosawa remade Macbeth and King Lear. Both in awesome fashion.
As pointed out, those are Throne of Blood and Ran. Kurosawa also did Hamlet: The Bad Sleep Well.