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Shakespeare 2.0: The bard on the screen

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<i>By Susan King / Aaron Williams / Los Angeles Times Staff Writer</i><br>
<br>
Traditional or not traditional? That is the question when directors mount productions of William Shakespeare's plays.<br>
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Over the decades, theater, movies and even television versions of the Bard's plays have defied convention, some turning them into musicals, samurai action thrillers, films noir and modern-day dramas. Go back as far as MGM's all-star "The Hollywood Revue of 1929," and you'll find Norma Shearer and John Gilbert performing the balcony love scene from "Romeo and Juliet" in the slang of the day, including pig Latin.<br>
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Click through the gallery to view films inspired by Shakespeare's works.

Shakespeare 2.0: The bard on the screen

( From left to right, "Coriolanus" (The Weinstein Company), "Merchant of Venice" (Sony Pictures Classics), "The Tempest" (Tempest Production, LLC) / July 6, 2012 )
By Susan King / Aaron Williams / Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

Traditional or not traditional? That is the question when directors mount productions of William Shakespeare's plays.

Over the decades, theater, movies and even television versions of the Bard's plays have defied convention, some turning them into musicals, samurai action thrillers, films noir and modern-day dramas. Go back as far as MGM's all-star "The Hollywood Revue of 1929," and you'll find Norma Shearer and John Gilbert performing the balcony love scene from "Romeo and Juliet" in the slang of the day, including pig Latin.

Click through the gallery to view films inspired by Shakespeare's works.
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