The logical preoccupation with how to represent Shylock after the Holocaust too often prevents addressing in depth other problematic aspects of Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice, such as the nature of the intense relationship between Antonio and Bassanio and the meaning of the subplot involving Portia’s ring. In Michael Radford’s accomplished film adaptation the suggestion that Antonio is in love with Bassanio grants the play a new coherence, integrating into a single unity Shylock’s vicious attack against the merchant, Portia’s role in Antonio’s defence and even the often overlooked ring plot. A repressive heterosexism, thus, turns out to be, a major discourse in the economy of the play, whose main ‘problem’ is not anti-semitism but hom...