The series is based on 10 Things I Hate About You, which is itself based on William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew. The Stratford sisters, Kat and Bianca , have just moved from Ohio to California. As they start at their new school , they have very different goals.
It's clear that one sister wants to stand out and the other just wants to fit in. Kat is a cool, smart, strong-willed, forthright feminist who is looking to save the world and get out of school as fast as she can. When she meets the intense Patrick Verona , sparks begin to fly.
Bianca is a social butterfly whose main goal in life is to be popular, but when the head cheerleader makes her the mascot, she realizes she has a long way to go. As they start a bumpy year at Padua High, Kat and Bianca attempt to navigate the popular crowd, boys and their over-protective dad . Bianca tries everything to be popular and become a cheerleader – although getting involved with the boyfriend of the most popular girl in school creates new challenges. Kat is a strong-willed, confident kid with an eye toward her post-high-school life, while the only concern Bianca seems to have is how popular she becomes. But smooth sailing it won't be for the pair, especially in the company of head cheerleader Chastity, love-struck nerds like Cameron and the school's mysterious bad boy, Patrick.
Kat and Bianca Stratford may be sisters, but all comparisons end there. Kat is an outspoken, independent feminist, while Bianca is a social butterfly who wants nothing more to be popular, even if it means bowing to the whims of people like the demanding, Chastity Church. The series highlights the Stratford sisters as they experience the highs and lows of high schools, deal with their overprotective father and find love.
In Bianca's case this is her friend Cameron who has a huge crush on her, while Kat finds herself in an interesting relationship with school bad boy Patrick Verona. In Bianca's case this is her friend Cameron who has a huge crush on her, while Kat finds herself in an interesting relationship with school bad boy Patrick Verona. The film, in case you never saw it, stars Heath Ledger and Julia Stiles and is a modern day take on Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew. Bianca is the younger, Barbie-esque sister who longs for popularity, while her older sister Kat loathes anything to do with the social elite.
That's the essential premise of the film and from the pilot of this new ABC Family series, they aren't deviating much from the format. Except in this case, Kat and Bianca are the new kids in school, rather than Cameron. We're introduced to the two sisters, Bianca and Kat and their overprotective father, played by Larry Miller immediately as being new in town. Bianca and Kat's mother passed away, leaving dad to make sure his daughters grow up well and avoid pregnancy if possible. He's an obstetrician and very intent on making sure no guy puts a baby in either one of his daughters.
While Kat's content on being feared by anyone who crosses her path , Bianca is desperate to become popular at Padua high school and wastes no time sucking up to Chastity Church (that's seriously her name), the school's head cheerleader and queen bee. The film is remembered for more than serving as a breeding ground for a new generation of stars. Based loosely on Shakespeare's play The Taming of the Shrew, the movie told the story of two sisters in Seattle, Kat and Bianca , whose overbearing doctor father forbade them from dating in the fear that they'd come home knocked up. With her best friend Chastity , Bianca is the school's queen bee and the locus of attention for the guys, and she desperately wants to date; both greasy-haired hot rod Joey Donner and sweet new guy Cameron James (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) want to be the lucky guy. While Covington sought a "reimagined" adaptation, there are several connections between the pilot and movie, which gave the pilot the same feel.
Gil Junger, who directed the movie, also directed the pilot and served as series consultant. Richard Gibbs, who was credited for the original music in the 1999 movie, also composed the theme music for the pilot. In addition, Larry Miller reprised his role as the overprotective father, Walter Stratford. A cover of I Want You to Want Me by Cheap Trick was recorded by KSM. A music video was shot which featured members of the cast with KSM. Kat and Bianca Straford may be sisters but all comparisons end there.
Bianca is a social butterfly who wants nothing more to be popular. As they start a bumpy year at Padua High, Kat and Bianca attempt to navigate the popular crowd, boys and their Over Protective Dad Walter . Bianca tries everything to be popular and become a cheerleader – although getting involved with Joey the boyfriend of the most popular girl in school Chastity creates new challenges.
Parents need to know that this teen-targeted series based on the same-named 1999 film includes frequent references to sex -- including comments about girls' bodies, use of terms like "get laid," passionate kissing, and mention of teens' sexual experience. Popularity is a key concern, and one central character uses her social status to terrorize all but her closest friends, and her behavior goes unchecked by her peers and adults. Expect some intermittent strong language ("bitch," "ass," and the like) and references to teen drinking . Kat and Bianca's father -- who never wavers in his protection of them, even when they defy him -- is the show's strongest positive role model.
Heath Ledger's role as Patrick Verona is one of the reasons why the movie became so popular. He embodied the role well as a highly charming and handsome bad boy. The show's Patrick was played by actor Ethan Peck, but his character didn't have the same feel as Ledger's character. Seeing as the show didn't focus on the "dating" plan like the movie, it uses other plotlines to make up for it. This made the show fun to watch as every episode had to deal with a new story arc. There's even Bianca becoming a mascot to then having feelings for the head cheerleader's boyfriend and trying to keep it a secret.
Kat starts to become attracted to Patrick in a tug-of-war relationship. A pair of very different sisters, Kat the feminist and Bianca the social climber, start at a new high school and must contend with their overprotective dad at home. On March 31, 1999, the high school rom-com 10 Things I Hate About You hit theaters, and grossed a modest $53.4 million worldwide.
It was the American film debut of Heath Ledger, and also helped to launch the career of Julia Stiles. Loosely based on Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew, 10 Things I Hate About You pits two sisters, Kat and Bianca, against each other as they romance high school boys. Bianca isn't allowed to date until Kat does, so Joey Donner pays Patrick Verona to take Kat on a date and to the prom. Karen McCullah and Kirsten Smith wrote the script and went on to pen Legally Blonde and The House Bunny. TV director Gil Junger helmed it, and rock band Letters for Cleo contributed some songs.
Here are 10 non-odious facts about the iconic late '90s teen flick. Miller was already a well-established comedy actor when he landed the role of the hilariously over-protective, teen pregnancy-fearing father of Kat and Bianca. Of his numerous subsequent film and TV appearances, he is perhaps best known for his turn as Princess Mia's brash stylist Paolo in The Princess Diaries and the sequel.
He reprised his role as Mr. Stratford in the short-lived TV reboot of 10 Things, and more recently played Principal Perkales on the mini-series High School Cupid, a Cupid Inc. He's been married to producer Eileen Conn, with whom he has two children, since 1993. The half-hour series centres on the Stratford sisters, Kat and Bianca, as they start at their new high school with very contradictory goals. Kat is a strong-willed, in-your-face feminist who is looking to save the world and get out of high school as fast as she can. Bianca is a social butterfly whose only concern is that she be popular, at any cost. The Stratford sisters have just moved in from Ohio to California and are about to start their new year at school.
But while the younger sister Bianca wants to try her best to stand out and be popular, her older sister Kat is a cool, smart, strong-willed, forthright feminist who is looking to better the world and get out of school as fast as she can. When Kat meets the intense Patrick Verona , sparks begin to fly. Inspired by the 1999 film of the same name, 10 THINGS I HATE ABOUT YOU chronicles the struggles of the Stratford sisters, Bianca and Kat , as they adapt to a new school.
Socialite Bianca longs only for acceptance into Padua High's popularity nucleus, but when her sharp-tongued, feminist sister butts heads with the school's self-appointed diva, Chastity , Bianca knows she has an uphill battle ahead. On the romantic front, Kat's unruliness turns the head of mysterious Patrick , and Bianca is being heavily pursued by resident nice guy Cameron . The only thing the sisters can count on is the persistence of their protective father, Walter , who will do anything to ensure that they stay safe -- and untouched by the opposite sex. Bianca's story arc in the show is vastly different from what's seen in the movie.
In both versions, she's still the sweet and angelic sister who wants to be loved by everyone. She wants to be popular, and, to do so, she becomes the school mascot to get in the good graces of the head cheerleader. Fans of the original movie version would realize that the show swayed in a vastly different direction to the original concept. There's no covert plan to get the Stratford sisters to date. But, it does have the resident bad boy, the comedy, and teen drama. Though both the series and movie have their own unique charms, it's tough to discern which is the better of the two.
In this sitcom, two sisters try to navigate the social structure of a new high school. When one of them falls for a boy that she doesn't seem to like very much, sparks fly. The series is based on a film of the same name, and the film was based on Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew. While she's still boy-crazy and cares about being popular, there's a slight difference since in the TV show she's the new girl and has to work her way up to the social ladder and sometimes comes across as being a little too desperate.
In the movie she was only desperate to date, but she would never have to worry about being shunned to Social Siberia. However, I did like the episode where she called out Chasity on her selfishness and I saw movie! Anyway, the actress who plays her could be Kristen Bell's little sister. Gabriela Silva is a List writer for Screen Rant with experience in all things television, film and pop culture.
A graduate of Fordham University with previous years experience interning for Cliché Magazine. You'll most likely find her binge-watching a new television show or movies on Netflix into the early morning. There's a boiling war between Bianca and the head cheerleader over a guy. There are even blind date set-ups and the drama of Bianca's boyfriend aspiring to be a model.
Even Mr.Stratford creates his own drama at school when dating the guidance counselor. There's no ploy of getting someone to date her sister so she can. Instead, it's all about Binca trying to become popular, and, along the way, she starts to get feelings for the head cheerleader's boyfriend. In the show, Bianca has her own path and story to figure out that's more complex than the movie's version.
Based on the same-named hit movie from 1999 that starred Heath Ledger and Julia Stiles, this half-hour series returns to Padua High, where newcomers Kat and Bianca Stratford attempt to navigate the popular crowd. "We knew we wanted to write a teen movie and whenCluelesscame out, we thought Amy Heckerling was a genius for contemporizing a classic [Jane Austen's Emma], so we decided to try that as well," McCullah told The Script Lab in 2015. "We choseTaming of the Shrewand figured out which story lines we wanted to keep and update and how we'd go about it and then outlined all the characters and the story while we sat on a beach in Mexico." So in the end, when Kat has been paired with Patrick, and Bianca with Cameron, there's nothing left but to find suitors for their minor best friends.
The bad one, Chastity, gets the bad one, Joey, and the good one, Mandella, gets the good one, Michael. Chastity and Joey make sense; they're both evil beautiful people, but Mandella and Michael? Bianca is a social butterfly whose main goal in life is to be popular, but when the head cheerleader makes her the mascot, she realises she has a long way to go. It's movie night at Padua High, and Bianca sets Cameron up on a date with Dawn so that they can double date with her and Joey. Meanwhile Kat is upset that Patrick told her she can date anyone she likes, so she decides to accept Blank's date night invitation. Patrick doesn't deal well with seeing Kat with the other guy, while Walter hits it off with the school counselor, and romance ensues.
I set my expectations kind of high for this series, given my love for the film and the pilot definitely didn't disappoint. It caters well to teens and young-adults and like most of ABC Family's other original series, will probably appeal to people outside of those age demographics as well, making it a fun, family-friendly show with a little bit of edge to keep things interesting. The band appears as themselves a couple of times in the film, including a scene on a rooftop, where they sing their Cheap Trick cover, "I Want You to Want Me." Lead singer Kay Hanley told Popdose that the experience scared the band. They had to perform the song on a patch of roof the size of Hanley's kitchen, and on a windy day. Chastity is worried that the other cheerleaders are plotting something and decides to make Bianca vice head cheerleader. Bianca and Chastity pretend to have a fight so that the other girls will trust and confide in Bianca.
Chastity gets kicked off the cheerleading squad and Michelle becomes head cheerleader. Chastity announces that if she's not reinstated as head cheerleader, she is going to leave Padua for another school. Two sisters who are opposites try to navigate high school and deal with their overprotective dad. This series probably isn't what Shakespeare had in mind when he wrote The Taming of the Shrew.
It's peppered with bold sexual references and innuendo, many of which come from the teens' father (though he's otherwise an admirable role model). What's more, Chastity's nasty behavior toward her social inferiors raises issues related to tolerance and fairness, and Bianca's willingness to forego her dignity for social standing sends some iffy messages to tween and teen girls. Add to that the occasional strong language and casual references to teen drinking, and it's clear that this show isn't meant for tweens. The series has a strong focus on high school social structure, and many characters are preoccupied with popularity and how to achieve it (though others apparently couldn't care less). Still, although characters like "mean girl" Chastity use popularity as an excuse to be cruel, others stand up for themselves, and there's a strong father-daughter relationship at the heart of the series.
Both versions of Kat Stratford are meant to be a bit hard around the edges. Both embody this feminist character that cares about the environment and dislikes social norms like high school social status. In the movie, Kat thanks the prom is a waste of time and pretty jocks to be a joke. He starts to fall for her despite the deal he made to woo her for money. The relationship is more based on overall sexual chemistry than anything else.
There's a slight difference in how the two Stratford sisters are introduced in the show. In the movie, their status is already established in school amongst their peers. Bianca is the sweet and eligible girl while her older sister is the "shrew." The introduction of the new student, Cameron is what sets off the story.
In 2008, ABC Family announced their intention to create a comedy pilot based on the 1999 movie. The pilot was written by Carter Covington, a self-professed fan of the original 1999 film. In November 2008, casting was announced for the pilot, with production following that fall.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.