Skip to main content Currently Reading 'R#J' Review: Confined to Digital Screens, Romeo and Juliet Update Feels More Like an Experiment Than a Movie Carey Williams' bold technological gamble finds some contemporary relevance but eschews narrative purpose for its unique setting. Tomris Laffly, provided by FacebookTwitterEmail Director: Carey Williams With: Camaron Engels, Sydney Graham, Moe Irvin, RJ Cyler, Siddiq Saunderson, Francesca Noel, Maria Gabriela de Faria, Diego Tinoco, Russell Hornsby. Running time: Running time: 91 MIN. Courtesy of Sundance Institute There are instances in director Carey Williams’ boldly experimental yet wearisome “R#J” that genuinely grasp the essence of romance, identity and existence in the age of social media. Those fleeting but relatable moments feel like major triumphs in Williams’ Gen Z-centric adaptation of “Romeo and Juliet,” a movie that unfolds almost entirely on electronic screens. And you get a taste of them enough times to wish for a film that achieves a similar level of insight on the whole, something with purpose that went beyond the contrived quest, “What if we do Shakespeare, but solely in the virtual world?”