| |














 |
|

Shakespeare
is spinning in his grave.
Picture this figure of speech. Its not so much
poetic as graceless and gross, much like Gil
Jungers 10 Things I Hate About You, a film loosely
based on the Bards The Taming of the Shrew.
Heres the premise: two beautiful sisters living in
Washington state stand for opposite worldviews one
superficial and pleasure-seeking, the other feminist and
intelligent. The position of Bianca Stratford (Larisa
Oleynik), peeved that she is not allowed to date boys,
worsens when her obstetrician father changes the rule.
Now Bianca can date only when Kat dates! This seems
unlikely, as Kat is the shrew of Shakespeares
title, a determined little termagant who shuns guys only
after she has mentally outshone them. Here now
complications. At wits end, Bianca exploits a boy
with a crush on her, a new kid in school named Cameron
(Joseph Gordon Levitt). In a convoluted series of
schemes, a handsome bad boy (Patrick Verona, played by
Heath Ledger) is paid to woo Kat. Hence Bianca is free to
date the slimy Joey Donner (Andrew Keegan), although she
had suggested shed be dating Cameron in return for
his favor.
Still with it? The basic love stories are promising,
especially a minor one involving a friend of
Camerons and a friend of Kats. But the turns
of romantic plot are too predictable, and the resulting
relationships fall flat. How can viewers believe a
repulsive young man like Verona can become a desirable,
even noble character? Does Bianca truly overcome her
shallowness and attain a mantle of decency? And most
crucially, why is the shrew tamed so relatively easily?
Heaps of questions occur to the watcher of this film.
Julia Stiles is the most striking cast member, and does a
strong job portraying Kats feminist bent. Karen
McCullah Lutzs screenplay, though, casts Kat as a
closet Barbie, ready to comply when she is pleased. A
strong facial resemblance helps Oleynik in being
convincing as the sister. Oleynik is fine as Bianca,
especially in portraying the occasional shallowness that
is such a strong contrast to Kats cultural
politics.
Larry Miller plays the father of Kat and Bianca as an
overprotective buffoon. Hes an undeveloped
caricature about whom we ultimately care very little. Let
it be enough to say that the writing has him telling us
about his character, when real characters show
themselves. Needless to say, his wife is missing from the
scene. The result does not make us sympathize for the
plight of his single parenthood, as much as it makes us
wonder if screenwriters dont kill parents off just
to have less characters to flesh out fully.
In a couple of small roles, David Leisure and Daryl
Mitchell play teachers who add funny moments to the film.
But the tones of their characterization again intrude,
and the viewer wonders if she is watching realism or
over-the-top camp. The filthy language and personal
insults used by Mr. Morgan (Mitchells teacher) are
downright unbelievable. Its almost as though the
film is trying to exaggerate in the same way the
situations in Clueless were exaggerated but 10
Things is much less successful.
The films faults are many. For one, Budweiser must
have paid dearly for product placement. How advisable is
it, however, to place your product in the hands of
hundreds of actors playing underage drinkers? Another,
larger flaw is the sense of irresponsibility. Again and
again the youngsters peopling the film do nasty things to
each other and fail to pay for them. From silly schtick
Bianca shooting her coach with an arrow to
major deception, 10 Things I Hate About You reinforces
the notion that horrible behaviors often dont carry
consequences. Yes, there are the conventions of teen
movies: references to sex, scanty clothing (enough
navels, already!) and endless sight gags. Not that a film
must be politically correct, but this one also points out
several cliques, poking fun at each of them. The satire
is done nicely, but in the end the tone is less than
tolerant. Oh, besides Mitchell, there is one
African-American actress, Gabrielle Union, as one of
Biancas shallow friends. The lack of diversity is
one shortcoming, but its the films careless
accenting of reckless attitudes that crosses the line
from harmless fluff to become offensive drivel. In the
current flood of teen-oriented films, when is a director
going to respect this line?
The tie-in with Shakespeare is what drew my attention. No
similar relation exists with the spate of new teen
flicks. So for the millions of moviegoers not targeted by
filmmakers exploiting this genre, do not hesitate to miss
them. Even the use of Good Will could not add weight to
this piece; come on, how much more lightness do the young
people of the world need?

Related
'10 Things I Hate About You' Links:

|
|
 How
do I loathe thee? Let me count the ways.

![[Image]](http://www.movie-page.com/reviews/1999/april/10things01.jpg)
![[Image]](http://www.movie-page.com/reviews/1999/april/10things02.jpg)
![[Image]](http://www.movie-page.com/reviews/1999/april/10things03.jpg)
![[Image]](http://www.movie-page.com/reviews/1999/april/10things04.jpg)
![[Image]](http://www.movie-page.com/reviews/1999/april/10things05.jpg)
![[Image]](http://www.movie-page.com/reviews/1999/april/10things06.jpg)
|