Wanted to re-read this recently, it's long been one of my favorite Shakespeare works. What I love about this work is that it operates on a few levels -- the aesthetics of the show are fun and interesting, i.e. the idea of faeries and lovers floating about, watching us, but also the play within the play conceit works really well. There's a meta-ness to this play, even the fact that Pyramus and Thisbe is a parallel to R&J, but I think beyond that there's a skewering of humans doing silly things like having day workers put on a production, chasing after silly, fickle love, and the like. More broadly, though, there's this deeper question about what love really is and whether its transient nature is inherent, or a factor of chance, or magical forces outside our control. But all this is explored in the form of pure candy, which makes it fun, even if something lingers after the faeries are all gone.