The problem is that the play doesn't break any taboos: it reinforces the misogynistic notion that everyone is happier when women know their place. Breaking taboos would've been suggesting that things are actually better when men and women are considered equals. Shakespeare was capable of this, and, as I suggested above, he may have been subliminally suggesting this in Taming of the Shrew. It all depends on whether we read it straight or ironically.
I enjoy Comedy of Errors just fine, but it's not the (near)-masterpiece Twelfth Night is.
Because if that's all a work has going for it then it might as well be sold as a dime novel. Shakespeare's other "lurid" efforts (like Macbeth) have much more going for it than just that aspect. Lurid matter can be elevated to high art, absolutely, and Shakespeare did that frequently in the later plays.
And it's because of how sympathetic and human he is that Hal's betrayal at the end of II Henry IV may be the single most devastating moment in all Shakespeare. It's very close with the final scene in Lear, anyway. Others might object, but I feel that Orson Welles's Chimes at Midnight is probably superior to the two plays taken straight.
Pericles is certainly flawed (probably because, again, it was a collaboration), but I always feel like Timon is better than I remember it. It's certainly Shakepseare's bleakest play as it pertains to the nature of humanity.



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The Merry Wives of Windsor is fun, but it's not real. Henry IV One & Two are funnier, and as real as it gets. What more can you say?
