10 Things I Hate About You, Scotland, PA, and other adaptations of the Bard's work

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20th Century Fox

The best of this week's (admittedly lean) DVD releases is Coriolanus, the sleek and muscular Shakespeare adaptation from star and first-time director Ralph Fiennes. He's been angling to bring the play to the screen for nearly a dozen years now, since he first played it on the London stage. When the time came to do so, he did what many a filmmaker before him has done to make Shakespeare tenable to today's audience: He modernized it. But the text is so open, and his staging is so robust, that the interpretation works; it couldn't feel more timely and appropriate, with (perhaps intentional, perhaps accidental) allusions to the Tea Party, Congressional dysfunction, and the Occupy movement that land without the clumsiness that so often batters political cinema.

In honor of a job well done, we've assembled ten other films that altered the Bard's plots and texts in a similarly entertaining fashion.

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