For fans and scholars, the idea of these scenes is tantalizing—especially the Queen Mab sequence and Juliet’s darker hesitation. But without access to the actual footage, any “review” is an exercise in longing. Zeffirelli’s final cut remains a masterpiece, but the lost scenes represent a poetic ghost limb: felt but unseen. If Paramount ever uncovers a workprint, it would be a cinematic event on par with finding the missing reels of The Magnificent Ambersons .
Paramount Pictures reportedly stored trims and outtakes in a vault that was later cleared in the 1980s. To date, no deleted scenes have appeared on home video releases (including the 50th-anniversary Blu-ray). Some footage may have been reused in the 1968 Romeo and Juliet documentary The Film That Changed Their Lives , but even that is unconfirmed. romeo and juliet 1968 deleted scenes
★★★★☆ (one star deducted for eternal inaccessibility) Final note: If you’re researching for academic or fan-editing purposes, check the archives of the British Film Institute or Olivia Hussey’s 2018 memoir , where she briefly mentions improvising a longer goodbye scene. For now, the deleted scenes of 1968 remain a legend—beautiful, frustrating, and lost. For fans and scholars, the idea of these