10 Things I Hate About You (1999) — Review

10 Things I Hate About You (1999)
9 / 10

10 Things I Hate About You is one of the great teen romantic comedies of the late 1990s and one of the more thoughtful Shakespeare adaptations in contemporary cinema. Gil Junger directed. Karen McCullah and Kirsten Smith wrote the screenplay. The film was released in March 1999. It grossed approximately fifty-three million dollars worldwide on a production budget of approximately sixteen million dollars. The commercial reception was substantial. The cultural standing has continued accumulating across more than two and a half decades of subsequent viewing. The 9/10 reflects honest assessment of a film that operates as both successful teen romantic comedy and as substantive Shakespeare adaptation at the same time.

The film adapts Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew to contemporary American high school setting. The substantial source-text modifications shift the property from sixteenth-century Italian household setting to late-1990s suburban Seattle. The aggregate is one of the more successful examples of how classical source material can be productively reframed for contemporary commercial cinema. The Shakespeare association supports the broader film while allowing the screenplay to construct entirely original narrative content within the established framework.

The Premise

Cameron James, a new student at Padua High School, develops romantic interest in Bianca Stratford. Bianca’s father has prohibited her from dating until her difficult older sister Kat agrees to date someone. Cameron and his friend Michael devise a plan to pay Patrick Verona, the school’s bad-boy outsider, to date Kat so that Bianca can begin dating Cameron. The premise reproduces the Taming of the Shrew structural framework while updating the dramatic content for contemporary teen romantic comedy conventions.

The premise also reverses several conventional Shakespeare elements. Kat is not actually being tamed across the runtime. The character is being understood by Patrick and the broader narrative rather than being subdued or corrected. The shift reflects substantially different gender politics than the source play had operated within while preserving the structural framework that the adaptation requires. The aggregate is one of the more thoughtful reframings of Shakespeare source material in contemporary cinema.

The Cast

Julia Stiles played Kat Stratford. The performance is one of the great teen comedy lead performances of the late 1990s. Stiles brings appropriate intellectual register combined with substantial emotional vulnerability that the role required. The character is genuinely intelligent rather than merely difficult. The character’s resistance to conventional dating culture emerges from substantive intellectual commitment rather than from arbitrary contrarianism. Stiles delivers each register with full theatrical commitment.

Heath Ledger played Patrick Verona. The performance was Ledger’s substantial American film debut. He had been working primarily in Australian productions before 10 Things. The performance brings appropriate bad-boy register combined with the kind of emotional intelligence that the role’s broader arc required. Patrick is not actually the dangerous outsider that his school reputation suggests. The character is more thoughtful than the broader school community had recognized. The performance choices established Ledger as substantial American film actor across the subsequent decade before his death in 2008.

The “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You” sequence in which Patrick sings to Kat across the school athletic field has become permanent cultural reference. Ledger performed the sequence with genuine theatrical commitment that subsequent performances have rarely matched. The marching band accompaniment, the public romantic declaration, and the broader theatrical staging combine into one of the great single sequences in late 1990s teen romantic comedy.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt played Cameron James. The performance brings appropriate awkward romantic register combined with substantial theatrical commitment. Gordon-Levitt had been working primarily in television before 10 Things. The performance prefigured his subsequent substantial film career. Larisa Oleynik played Bianca Stratford. David Krumholtz played Michael Eckman, Cameron’s strategic advisor. The supporting cast handles the broader material with appropriate professional commitment.

Larry Miller played Walter Stratford, Kat and Bianca’s protective father. The performance brings appropriate paternal comedy register combined with genuine emotional commitment to the protective dynamic. Allison Janney played Ms. Perky, the high school guidance counselor who writes erotic romance novels during her counseling sessions. The supporting performances across the production deliver consistent comic and dramatic content throughout the runtime.

For Writers

10 Things I Hate About You demonstrates how classical source material can be productively updated for contemporary settings while preserving the structural framework that the source provides. McCullah and Smith maintained Shakespeare’s Taming of the Shrew structural framework including the parallel sister courtship dynamic, the paternal restriction creating dramatic obstacles, and the bad-boy character who must be paid to court the difficult sister. The screenplay updates each element for contemporary high school setting while preserving what makes the structural framework dramatically effective. The lesson for writers is that classical source material provides structural frameworks that survive substantial setting modification. Writers adapting classical material should identify what structural elements produce the source’s dramatic effectiveness and preserve those elements while updating surface content for contemporary audiences.

The Shakespeare Content

The film handles its Shakespeare association at multiple levels at the same time. The Padua High School name references Shakespeare’s setting in Padua, Italy. Patrick Verona’s surname references Verona, the setting of Romeo and Juliet. The Stratford family surname references Shakespeare’s birthplace Stratford-upon-Avon. Various other references appear throughout the runtime including direct quotations from Shakespeare’s plays and sonnets that the characters deliver in classroom or romantic contexts.

The film also handles the broader Shakespeare cultural standing with substantial respect. The English literature classroom sequences treat Shakespeare as substantive cultural property rather than as obstacle to be overcome. Kat’s intellectual engagement with feminist literature and her broader academic ambition operates as substantive character content rather than as mockable nerd theatrics. The aggregate treatment of intellectual content within high school comedy framework is one of the production’s distinctive achievements.

The 10 Things Poem

The film’s title references the poem that Kat delivers in the third act English class assignment. Kat reads her ten-things poem about Patrick in front of the class. The poem operates as both substantive emotional declaration and as title resolution. The audience receives complete poetic statement that has been built across the broader runtime. The aggregate sequence has become one of the more emotionally resonant scenes in late 1990s teen romantic comedy.

The poem itself was written by Karen McCullah and Kirsten Smith for the screenplay rather than adapted from existing material. The specific construction handles the ten-things framework while delivering substantive emotional content that simpler structural approach would not have generated. The aggregate poem has been frequently quoted and referenced across subsequent decades of popular culture discussion of the film.

The Cultural Standing

10 Things I Hate About You has accumulated substantial cultural standing across more than two and a half decades of subsequent viewing. The film has been frequently included in best teen comedy lists across multiple categories. The Heath Ledger performance has become particularly significant following his death in 2008. The Julia Stiles performance established her as substantial American film actress across the subsequent decade.

The film has also influenced subsequent teen romantic comedy production. The combination of literary source adaptation, accomplished young cast, and substantive emotional content produced framework that subsequent productions have continued building on. Various comparable adaptations including She’s the Man and various other Shakespeare-influenced productions followed similar approaches with varying success.

The film was adapted into a 2009 ABC Family television series of the same title. The series ran for approximately one season before cancellation. The aggregate adaptation tradition extends beyond the original film though the 1999 production remains the canonical adaptation.

For Writers

10 Things I Hate About You demonstrates the value of treating teenage characters as substantively intelligent rather than as objects of comedic condescension. Kat’s intellectual engagement with feminist literature, her academic ambition, and her substantive resistance to conventional dating culture all emerge from genuine character development rather than from mockable nerd theatrics. The lesson for writers handling teen characters is that audience investment substantially increases when productions treat young characters with appropriate respect for their intellectual and emotional capacity. Productions that condescend to teenage characters typically deliver weaker work than productions that respect their intellectual and emotional capacity. Subsequent young-audience productions have continued building on what 10 Things established for contemporary teen comedy.

The Heath Ledger Legacy

Heath Ledger died in January 2008 at age twenty-eight from accidental prescription medication overdose. His death substantially affected the cultural reception of his earlier work including 10 Things I Hate About You. Audiences who discover the 1999 production after Ledger’s death receive different experience than audiences who engaged with the production during its original release. The aggregate cultural standing has accumulated additional significance partly because of the broader Ledger filmography that subsequent viewing has connected.

The Ledger career trajectory between 10 Things and his death in 2008 included substantial work in various productions including A Knight’s Tale, Brokeback Mountain, The Dark Knight, and various other major productions. The Dark Knight Joker performance won him the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor posthumously. The 10 Things performance is therefore one of his early career achievements rather than his peak work. The performance nevertheless demonstrates the substantial theatrical capability that his subsequent career would extend.

For Writers

The 10 Things “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You” sequence demonstrates how musical performance can deliver romantic declaration content more effectively than verbal romantic dialogue. Patrick sings to Kat across the school athletic field with marching band accompaniment. The public theatrical staging produces dramatic content that conventional romantic dialogue could not have delivered. The lesson for writers handling romantic content is that non-verbal romantic communication often produces stronger work than verbal declaration. Productions that deliver romantic content through specific dramatic action including musical performance, physical movement, and other non-verbal expression typically produce more memorable romantic moments than productions relying primarily on verbal declaration.

Craft Note

Craft Note

10 Things I Hate About You is the example case for how teen romantic comedy can deliver substantive content within commercial framework. Gil Junger directed within mainstream Hollywood teen comedy conventions while accommodating Shakespeare source material and substantive young performer work. Julia Stiles and Heath Ledger delivered committed lead performances. The McCullah and Smith screenplay handled both Shakespeare adaptation and contemporary teen comedy at the same time. The aggregate combination produced work that has remained essential viewing across more than two and a half decades of subsequent engagement. The lesson for writers and producers is that teen comedy can support substantive material when productions commit to treating young audiences with appropriate respect for their intellectual and emotional capacity.

The Verdict

A 9/10. 10 Things I Hate About You is one of the great teen romantic comedies of the late 1990s and one of the more thoughtful Shakespeare adaptations in contemporary cinema. Julia Stiles delivers substantive lead performance. Heath Ledger establishes his American film career through committed romantic comedy work. Joseph Gordon-Levitt, David Krumholtz, Larisa Oleynik, Larry Miller, Allison Janney, and the broader supporting cast deliver consistent professional commitment throughout the runtime.

The film operates as both successful teen romantic comedy and as substantive Shakespeare adaptation at the same time. Audiences interested in late 1990s teen comedy, in Heath Ledger’s filmography, in Julia Stiles’s career, or in contemporary Shakespeare adaptation should pursue the film. The “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You” sequence has become permanent cultural reference. The ten-things poem delivers substantive emotional content within commercial framework. The aggregate is essential viewing for anyone interested in how contemporary cinema can productively adapt classical source material.


FAQ

Is it really a Shakespeare adaptation?

Yes. The film adapts Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew to contemporary American high school setting. The aggregate is one of the more successful examples of how classical source material can be productively reframed for contemporary commercial cinema. The Padua High School name, the Patrick Verona surname, the Stratford family name, and various other references throughout the runtime establish the Shakespeare association explicitly.

How good is Heath Ledger in this?

Substantial. The performance was Ledger’s substantial American film debut. The “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You” sequence in particular delivered theatrical commitment that subsequent performances have rarely matched. The performance choices established him as substantial American film actor across the subsequent decade before his death in 2008.

Is the film appropriate for teenagers?

Yes. The PG-13 rating accurately reflects the broader content. The film handles teen relationship content with appropriate restraint. The aggregate is appropriate viewing for older teenage audiences. Some specific content including the prom sequences may require parental discussion with younger teens.

Who is Joseph Gordon-Levitt?

Joseph Gordon-Levitt played Cameron James. The performance was one of his early film appearances. He had been working primarily in television including Third Rock from the Sun before 10 Things. The performance prefigured his subsequent substantial film career including major productions like 500 Days of Summer, Inception, and Looper.

What is the ten-things poem?

The poem that Kat delivers in the third-act English class assignment. Kat reads her ten-things poem about Patrick in front of the class. The poem operates as both substantive emotional declaration and as title resolution. The specific poem was written by Karen McCullah and Kirsten Smith for the screenplay rather than adapted from existing material.

Is the Allison Janney performance good?

Yes. Janney played Ms. Perky, the high school guidance counselor who writes erotic romance novels during her counseling sessions. The performance brings appropriate comic theatrical commitment to the supporting role. Janney would subsequently win multiple Emmy Awards and the Academy Award for I, Tonya in 2018. The 10 Things performance demonstrates her substantial comic capability that her broader career would extend.

Are there other Shakespeare teen adaptations?

Yes. The 1990s and 2000s produced multiple Shakespeare-adapted teen productions including She’s the Man (Twelfth Night), O (Othello), and various other productions. 10 Things I Hate About You is generally considered the strongest of the broader adaptation cycle. The cycle reflected substantial cultural interest in updating classical source material for contemporary audiences during the period.

How does this compare to other teen films of the period?

10 Things sits at the top tier of late 1990s teen comedy alongside Clueless from 1995 and various other productions. The film’s specific Shakespeare adaptation framework distinguishes it from broader teen comedy production while delivering comparable entertainment within commercial framework. The aggregate is one of the more enduring late 1990s teen comedies.

Was there a television series?

Yes. ABC Family produced a 10 Things I Hate About You television series in 2009. The series ran for approximately one season before cancellation. The cast was different from the original film. The aggregate is largely forgotten outside completist circles. Audiences interested in the property should pursue the original 1999 film.

Is the film actually feminist?

Substantively. Kat’s character resists conventional dating culture from genuine intellectual commitment rather than from arbitrary contrarianism. Her engagement with feminist literature operates as substantive character content rather than as mockable theatrics. The aggregate handles gender politics with substantially more thought than typical late 1990s teen comedy productions deployed.

How does Julia Stiles do?

Excellent. The performance brings appropriate intellectual register combined with substantial emotional vulnerability. The character is genuinely intelligent rather than merely difficult. Stiles delivers each register with full theatrical commitment. The performance established her as substantial American film actress across the subsequent decade.

What is the cultural legacy?

Substantial. The film has been frequently included in best teen comedy lists across multiple categories. The Heath Ledger performance has become particularly significant following his death in 2008. The Julia Stiles performance established her career. The aggregate cultural standing has continued accumulating across more than two and a half decades of subsequent engagement.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top