FWIW, Whedon calls his "Much Ado" a "noir deconstruction of a romantic comedy." I think he's realized that perfectly with the source material, and I think it works like gangbusters.
Also - I was raised on Shakespeare, both read by my father and on the BBC as a tiny child, have studied the acting of the language and acted it. This, for me, is the best film of a Shakespeare comedy I've ever seen - and the chemistry between Acker and Denishof is astonishing.
It has also won over real novices to the Bard - one with no more than high-school reading and a children's theatre staging.
Finally, I came to this film a non-Whedon fan (though I respected his brains). Now I am exploring his other work.
Oh, right. So, she secretly trained a flock of sandflies.
reply
share