Saturday, December 29, 2012

Les Miserables – The musical movie review

I tried to be brief... I really did

For those who just want the bullet points – jump down to the “review” section.


BACKGROUND
Let me begin with this:

I. Love. This. Book. 

 
I love this book because of its ethos and pathos. 

I love it for its romance and tragedy.

As a follower of Christ, I love the Christian metaphors and beautiful depiction of the inability of Law overcome by Grace.

I love it because of Hugo’s goal with it. 

"The book the reader has now before his eyes - from one end to the other; in its whole and in its details, whatever the omissions, the exceptions, or the faults - is the march from evil to good, from injustice to justice, from the false to the true, from night to day, from appetite to conscience, from rottenness to life, from brutality to duty, from Hell to Heaven, from nothingness to God. Starting point: matter; goal: the soul. Hydra at the beginning, angel at the end." – Victor Hugo



For these reasons, the musical (in any format) doesn’t do the book justice. 

In fact, most movie adaptations don’t either.

I’ve seen the 1930’s movie, the 1998 Liam Neeson version (which inexplicably ends after Javert’s suicide!) and am about to watch the 2000 GĂ©rard Depardieu mini-series version – which I hear is the closest to the source material.

I’ve seen the stage musical three times.

The musical changes parts of the book (Mme. Thenardier is alive at the wedding, Eponine gives Marius’ letter to Valjean) and necessarily omits others (the bishops’s story, Valjean and the boat rescue – no, not what you see at the beginning of the 2012 movie, Valjean & Cosette’s time at the convent – including the buried alive scene, Marius’ uncle)  for pacing and for the simple fact that no one would be able to sit through a 20 hour musical.


REVIEW  (SPOILERS may follow)

So what do I think of the 2012 Tom Hooper directed musical-movie?

4 stars out of 5

First – it is intentionally not the stage musical.  Please do not go in expecting to see the stage version on screen.  It was not intended to be.

“None of us wanted to simply put the show on the screen, but rather reinvent the material as a movie in its own right” (emphasis mine) – Sir Cameron Mackintosh, producer of both the stage musical and this film.  Quote from the liner notes of the musical-movie soundtrack. 

I enjoyed this movie enough that I want to see it again.  Very soon.  In the cinema.

And I sure hope they release an extended directors cut on Blu-Ray.  I’d pre-order that today.

I was moved to tears many times, with chest-hitching barely-contained sobs.


The good:
Live filmed singing works for much of his movie

The visuals are stunning, the sets, makeup and costumes wonderful, with delightful nods to anyone who has read the book.  (Gavroche’s white elephant for example, the doll in the window, the young revolutionary kissing the innkeeper woman to get her chair for the barricade, Gavroche rightly brings Marius’ note to Jan Valjean – not Eponine)

Colm Wilkinson (originaor of the role of Jean Valjean in both the London and New York stage productions) as the Bishop – yes!



Anne Hathaway... I thought she was perfect.  I have never been so heart-broken for Fantine during “I Dreamed a Dream”.  Her grief and anger and final resignation are Oscar worthy (imho) – though I did think she was too pretty during the factory scene.  I mean the other workers have facial blemishes, bad teeth… but not Fantine. 



The cattiness of the other women workers was perfect.



Hugh Jackman was great; very believable but not stellar.  Valjean’s soliloquy is amazingly emotional, but “Bring Him Home” was hard for me to sit through.  It would not have been a crime to lower the range so he could have sung without straining.  Alfie Boe is still my favorite singing Valjean.



The new song “Suddenly” helped tie the story together, but won’t be the next big hit inserted into the stage show.



Gavroche and young Cosette were amazing for kid actor/singers



Eddie Redmayne as Marius – completely believable in every scene he is in.  every scene.  His voice is sublime; “Empty Chairs” will tear your heart out as much as Valjean’s Soliloquy.



Samantha Barks as Eponine – from stage to screen – superb job!



Sacha Baron Cohen – a great Thenardier



Helena Bonham-Carter – very good with exception that if you’ve read the book, you know Mme Thenardier is described as barrel-like and mannish.  Not exactly a description of Ms. HB-C



I loved how they included the iconic Enjrolas death scene, though from a window, not on the barricade.  And the guy who played him did a great job too.



The sewer scene was disgustingly spot on – no pun intended.  Thank you for removing the song “Dog Eats Dog.”



Javert’s death – there’s no mistake kids… he won’t be back in a sequel.



The end trio with Fantine, Jean Valjean and the bishop (!) makes SO much more sense than having Eponine – whom JVJ has never met – welcome him into heaven.






The Bad: things that distracted me from the story




Javert. Was. Awful.

Russel Crowe’s performance seemed phoned in.  I have much respect for his work in other movies (most notably for me, A Beautiful Mind). I did not, however, believe him as Javert; “hunting down” and chasing Valjean.  He seemed indifferent.  And his singing?  Even American Idol and X-Factor would have laughed him off the set.  No power, no conviction in his voice.  During “Stars” I just wanted to yell “stop already!”  His performance was a nasal-y pop-ish vocal that scooped into notes.  Barf!  I know musical theatre is considered more ”pop” than classical, but this didn’t fit.  I know high school-ers who could have nailed this.  Or let one of the stage stars take it.  This movie need a better Javert, not a well-known one.  I read they considered Paul Bettany.  Missed opportunity there.



On that note, Amanda Seyfried.. good acting, very child-like, but her voice was a bit too Disney-princess, machine-gun vibrato at times for me.



It begins raining instantaneously during “On My Own.”  I know it fits the lyric, but shouldn’t it have been preceded by distant thunder or something?  I mean, Eponine literally turns a corner and the street is wet and she is drenched from rain already falling. 



Pacing.  My wife and I disagree on this… but things felt a bit too rushed.  Maybe because during the stage show there is applause or a set change.  This film just whipped along, sometimes not leaving the viewer time to digest the scene.



24601 – the tattoo proves beyond doubt that Jean Valjean is who he says he is… not just a good intentioned man trying to help an accused man.  The court needs to see the tattoo and we the audience need to see it too.  Otherwise it’s just a somewhat meaningless number.



Other super nit picky stuff
– British and Cockney accents in a show set in France?  Don’t we get enough of that in Biblical movies set in the Middle East?

- In the book Fanbtine is specifically described as a blonde, and Cosette a brunette.  Would have been nice to see on screen.

- Did Fantine have to have the “chopped ‘do” after death?



So all in all 4 stars.  If Javert had been stronger this would have moved quickly to one of my favorite movies.



If you liked this movie, you’ll love the stage musical.



If you love the stage musical, the book will fundamentally change you.

Friday, December 28, 2012

Best Musical finds 2012 / 2013



The best of the best of the best....sir...with honors



I’ve been told I listen to way too much music.  Maybe…  but some people watch too much football,  golf too much, Pintrest too much, fill in your vice here:
I __________________ too much _________________.

In my musical journeys, here are my favorite finds/listens this past year followed by some groups I'm starting to dig into here at the end of the year.

Many of these groups/bands/artists can be listened to on Spotify (embeded & links included). 
So if you're looking for good new music, perhaps you'll find something here that connects with you just right


Best Music  2012

OR click the following link and when Spotify opens you can click "shuffle" so you get a sampling of all the groups without listening to one entire album
(Best of 2012)

Obvious/Expected - bands I was expecting great music from
Muse – The 2nd Law
Killers – Battle Born
Snow Patrol – Fallen Empires (released in ’11 but I just found it this year)
Future of Forestry – Young Man Follow
Shiny Toy Guns - III

New to me - bands I stumbled on and fell in love with
Pas Neos -  Wheat & the Tares / Who Do You Say I Am?
Among Savages – Wanderings of an Illustrative Mind
Paper Route – the Peace of Wild Things
Abandon – Control
Gotye – Making Mirrors
Michael Ketterer – Love/War/Solar System
Sound of Arrows - Voyage
Kimbra – Vows


Welcome Back / Returning to the Stage
Men Without Hats – Love in the Age of War

Worship
We Are Creation – We Are Creation
Young Oceans – Young Oceans
Brett Younker – Come to the Water

Christmas
Solid Rock – Gloria

Heading into 2013 … these are groups I’m test driving

The Hollow Threads
Scientist (not on Spotify yet)
Hey Ocean!
The Rival
Reign of Kindo
Kye Kye
All Sons & Daughters
Loud Harp
Young Galaxy




OR click the following link and when Spotify opens you can click "shuffle" so you get a sampling of all the groups without listening to one entire album
2013 Test Drive

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Summer Flix


I don’t know about you, but for me some movies are seasonal – it just doesn’t feel like I’ve experienced that season unless certain movies are part of the routine.
I think most people feel this way about winter and Christmas: movies like It’s a Wonderful Life, A Christmas Carol (the Muppet version), A Christmas Story, White Christmas, Home Alone, Emmet Otter’s Jug Band Christmas…  OK, that last one is a stretch, but you get what I mean.
But what about summer movies?  Is it just me, or do others of you have perennial summer movies that put the ‘cherry on top’, so to speak, of your summer?  That it kind of feels like you skipped something if you don’t watch that movie every summer?
Maybe it’s because these movies came out in the summer and I have fond memories of my skin slightly tingling with sunburn, dodging the 90+degree heat with my cousin at the Crossroads Mall in Omaha.  Or walking the 3 blocks from my grandparents in Hastings to the local cinema with that same cousin in the sweltering July heat.  Sure, some of it is nostalgia, but not all of it.  I mean, I clearly remember waiting in the summer heat of 1983 to see Return of the Jedi for the first time, but it’s not a movie that I feel like needs to be a part of my summer.
These are the movies I feel like are a necessary part of my summer… for whatever reason, but in no particular order:
-       The Goonies
(“’nice’ is my middle name Mrs. Walsh”)
-       The Karate Kid
(“wax on. Wax off.”)
-       Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure
(“strange things are afoot at the Circle K”)
-       Back to the Future
(“I am your density”)
So… is it just me? Or do you have perennial ‘summer’ movies too?  If so – list ‘em below – and the first quote you can think of from that movie….

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the 2nd Advent



This year I’ve been thinking a lot about the grander scope of what advent means.

“Advent (from the Latin word adventus meaning "coming") is a season observed in many Western Christian churches, a time of expectant waiting and preparation for the celebration of the Nativity of Jesus at Christmas.”

thanks Wiki wiki woo

It also describes our current here and everyday ‘now’.  We are in the time of waiting for Christ’s 2nd advent, His second coming.

Hopefully for those who are followers of Jesus it is an expectant time characterized with both joy and longing.

Its easy for any of us to lose sight of this precisely because the wait is long and the arrival time completely unknown.

So when I ran across this video, I was struck with the thought that it serves as a great parable for how we Christians should live during this current advent.

A little background:

An AirTran plane is on the tarmac waiting while a maintenance check is performed.

The passengers are… waiting

They don’t know if it’s a 5 minute check or if it will keep them grounded for an hour or more.

Amongst the passengers a choir is seated, some clumped together, some next to non-choir people.



Beautiful.

During their wait, the choir sings a beautiful song of satisfaction found in Jesus.  It is not a song of coercion.  It is not a song of eloquent apologetics. It is not a song detailing a logical case that can be made. It is not a boastful song. It is a song of longing, and waiting.  A song of longing for the Savior who has so changed a life, that the singer can’t help but sing of how nothing else compares.

So as we wait on the tarmac…waiting, as we journey during this advent, let’s bring beauty to the wait.  Let’s sing of hope during the wait.  Let our lives be songs, whose movements and decisions and interactions are notes borne of love for our coming Savior.  


And maybe in so doing others who were not once part of the choir will consider joining the song.




My wife has a great airplane analogy in a similar but completely different vein that I hope she will one day blog.