A Relentless Pursuit

les-miserables-movieuserpic=moviesOur Christmas Day tradition is to go and see a movie and have Chinese food. This year’s movie was Les Misérables, the movie version of the long-running stage musical that we saw for the first time in July 2011 (the 25-th anniversary production).

If you’re not familiar with the story of Les Miz, here’s the summary I wrote of the musical, slightly adapted for the move:

Les Misérables” (the musical) tells the story of Jean Valjean, also known as prisoner 24601, and his adopted daughter, Cosette. It is based on the Victor Hugo of the same name, but does cut a few elements of the story. The story, which covers 17 years, is so complicated that a synopsis needed to be published in the program (seemingly, a bad sign). Given that, I’m not going to attempt to repeat it here. You can read it yourself in the program, or from the Wikipedia Page on the show. Suffice it to say that the stage production condensed the 1,200 page, five volume novel into two acts of 90 minutes and 65 minutes respectively. The first act coverd Jean Valjean’s release from prison and the interaction with the Bishop at Digne, the mayoral years at Montreiil-Sur-Mer where Valjean meets Fantine and takes responsibility for Cosette, the visit to Montfermeil where Valjean obtains Cosette from the Thénardiers, and the years in Paris where the student revolt begins and Marius and Cosette fall in love… all of this while the police officer Javert is chasing Valjean. The second act is solely in Paris and covered the student revolt, its failure, the subsequent growth of the relationship between Marius and Cosette, the final confrontations of Valjean and Javert, and the final redemption of Valjean. That’s a lot of material to cover—trying to cover so much material and so much time is the reason many great novels, such as Gone With The Wind, never make it to the Broadway stage. It is a testament to the original authors Claude-Michel Schönberg (music) and Alain Boublil (a French-language libretto) that they were able to take the beast of a novel and turn it into something understandable (although, arguably, this is really a full opera presented in the guise of a “musical”—at times, the lines between the two blurs). It is also a testament to the English language adapters, Herbert Kretzmer who developed the English language libretto, and Cameron Mackintosh, the original producer, who discovered the French production in 1982 and has sheparded it ever since (I’ll note Mackintosh’s full bio in the program was: “Produces musicals.”). The production was adapted by Sir Trevor Nunn and John Caird.

The translation does have its weak parts, however, primarily in how manipulative it is for the audience. By this, I mean the show in engineered to be a pleaser, with music that builds and leaves the toes tapping; with moments designed to permit the actors to shine; and with act-ending finales designed to stir the soul. In that sense, it is truly operatic as opposed to dramatic. It it also, at times, emotionally overwrought—again, a hallmark of the more operatic side. To some that is a fatal flaw that reduces the worth of the show, but I do enjoy the general effect.

This synopsis applies to the movie as well. In fact, the movie is only two minutes longer than the stage version, but feels even longer due to the lack of an intermission (oh, how I wish they would bring those back for movies). From reading the comments on some of the reviews, it appears the movie did some judicious trimming of the stage production in a few areas, and added a few clarifying moments. It is really hard to tell unless you have memorized the score, because the director, Tom Hooper, engaged the original authors to adapt the score for the stage. One addition I know of is a new song, “Suddenly”, which was added to capture the moment when Jean ValJean recognizes he is responsible for someone else. The authors indicated this wouldn’t work on stage because it was too close up a moment.

That brings up an important difference between stage and screen. Stage is always at a distance — there are no closeup shots unless you have binoculars with you. The screen can do the closeup, and thus the important of facial nuances and acting in the small is important. Hooper attempted to address this concern through his cinematography, in particular the closeups every time someone was singing. Many times this worked — in particular, it worked well during many of the Anne Hathaway songs. But I felt that he overdid it; it would have been nice to have these close-ups intermixed with some shots at a distance. In particular, I got tired of the many facial closeups that had me thinking about the work involved to stain so many teeth.

Another difference between stage and screen is that stage locations are simple representations of locale and place. Abstractions of a prison, a cathedral, a workhouse, an inn. The screen affords the opportunity to make those locations realistic — to bring the audience up-close with the dirt and the grit and the grime. This, in turn, leads to an intense realism for the story and story elements. Many of the location shots worked quite well (although a few were a bit too CGI-ish — in particular the opening boat sequence and some of the sequences of Javert walking across the wall edge above the water). There were a number of sequences that stuck in my mind. In particular, I really liked the Act I closing sequence (oh, right, no acts)… I mean the sequence for the song “One Day More”. The intercuts between the various actors and locations was a perfect use of cinematography. Credit should go not only to Tom Hooper for this, but to Danny Oliver, the cinematographers, and Chris Dickens and Melanie Oliver, the film editors. I also liked the visuals on the sequence where they pulled up and out from the barracades. Both were visually stunning. I also liked the sequence where Valjean tore up his letter of leave and threw it into the wind.

The realism of a motion picture often works against the movie musical. Although easier to do in the era of the soundstage film (read: MGM musicals), the realism of today’s musicals often work against characters turning and bursting out in song. Hooper addressed this by retaining the sung-through approach of the original stage production, creating the conceit that singing is the normal singing. I think this was a smart decision, although it probably turned people away (as an aside, it would be really nice to see a modern remake of Porgy and Bess that did this). Hooper also addressed the common musical problem of lack of emotion in the singing, which comes about because actors record the songs months before they film the action. He actually had the songs sung by the actors during the filming. This worked very well, and brought out extra emotions that were visible in the end film.

The movie really did need an intermission, as movies often did in the 1960s (look at Sweet Charity, for example). It was obvious in the movie where the act break was: the emotion builds up during “One Day More” (the Act I closer) and then… bright sunlight. It was a jarring transition, and really needed the breath of an intermission. I did, however, appreciate their retaining the finale. Closing with the scenes of the barricades, and the stirring music of “Do You Hear the People Sing?” is much stronger than ending in the abbey.

Turning to the individual performances: Most were impressive, especially when viewed on the acting scale. Lets start with the leads: As Javert, Russell Crowe acted well… but he really didn’t have the vocal power necessary for the role. Hugh Jackman did much better as Valjean — he acted strongly, and sang quite well (he has had limited Broadway exposure, primarily in “The Boy from Oz” where he played Peter Allen). A number of Jackman’s scenes stick in the mind, especially the closing scene in the church, the scenes with Fantene, and the scene in the sewer.

Turning to the secondary characters, here there were a number of award winner performances. Much has been written about Anne Hathaway‘s performance as Fantene, and I agree with all of them. Her face, her movement, and her expressions during Fantene’s fall were spectacular, and her performance during “I Dreamed a Dream” was just outstanding.  Also visually stunning was Samantha Barks as the grown Éponine. A beautiful face and a beautiful voice — I think I fell in love with that face. As the grown Cosette,
Amanda Seyfried did a wonderful job — she had a wonderful voice in her numbers, and a lovely gentle expression.  It wasn’t just women that were great. I was very impressed with Eddie Redmayne as Marius — he performed well and had a lovely voice.

Now for the children and comic relief: Isabelle Allen did a very nice job as Young Cosette; in particular, she nailed her performance of “Castle in the Clouds”. I was less enamored of Daniel Huttlestone‘s performance as Gavroche: He performed well, but I couldn’t understand why an urchin in France had a heavy cockney aspects. He’d would be great as the lead in Oliver!. For comic relief we had the Thénardiers: Sacha Baron Cohen and Helena Bonham Carter. Both acted and sang reasonably well, and I loved the little nuances during “Master of the House” (although they really changed the reprise). Carter’s career seems to be playing slightly made eccentric women. She’s great at it, but it would be nice to see her in a normal role. (I’ll note that Hooper did cast her in one in his previous film, “The Kings Speech”).

Accents were a major problem in this production. I had trouble understanding why, for a story that ostensibly took place in France, most of the characters had English accents when singing. They dropped into French when they wanted to be course or show station, and of course Gavroche had a cockney accent for some unknown reason. If the movie was to be realistic, they needed to work on the accents.

A few other little notes: Colm Wilkinson, who was one of the original Valjeans on stage, played the Bishop of Digne, which I thought was a nice touch. Another stage actor in a major role was Aaron Tveit as Enjolras; Tveit was most recently one of the leads in Catch Me If You Can.

Does Les Misérables have enough to win over the movie-going audience not used to musicals. Possibly. They will dislike the length and the sung-through aspects (especially those unfamiliar with the stage production), but will probably enjoy the performances. As with the musical, the movie is well-crafted to tug at the emotions and to build to a climax. Music does that so well. If you don’t shed a few tears at the end, I’ll be surprised.

Previews: We had five previews at our performance.

  • Oblivion” is an action-adventure movie with Tom Cruise and Morgan Freeman, dealing with a war that ended mankind. Looked sorta interesting, but I can’t see shelling out the bucks for it in the theatre. I’ll probably watch it when it shows up on TV.
  • Identity Thief” was one of two Melissa McCarthy comedies previewed. The presence of Jason Bateman should be a warning (although he was OK in Hitch). This looks like the premise could be a bit tiresome on the big screen. Again, it should do well on cable.
  • The Heat” was the second Melissa McCarthy comedy, this time pairing McCarthy with Sandra Bullock. This could be funny, although again it doesn’t seem to be the type of “event” movie that requires the big screen. I’ll probably wait for this one as well.
  • Quartet” looks to be a cute movie for the elderly crowd, but probably won’t score well with audiences. Again, I’ll wait for this one, although my mother-in-law would likely love it.
  • Admission” is a Tiny Fey/Paul Rudd comedy, and looks mildly entertaining. Again, I’m not seeing much that says “big screen” is required.

You’ll probably note that I felt all of these movies could wait for the small screen. There are movies that are so big they require a full screen and audience to immerse you in the story and place. Les Miserables was one; Lincoln was another. Many of the science-fiction movies are that way. But your simple comedies? Often, they don’t need the big screen to make their points.

Dining Notes: It was Christmas. This meant Chinese Food. Last night, we ended up at Lotus Inn in Woodland Hills. They were overloaded and understaffed last night. This meant that the service was a bit slower. As for the food, there were strengths and weaknesses. The Orange Chicken and Lemon Chicken were particularly good, as was the Chicken-Corn soup. The Chicken with Garlic was more problematic, as the menu didn’t make clear the use of bell peppers and mushrooms in the dish. I ordered a BBQ Pork appetizer. While tasty, it wasn’t up to the standards of Chinatown Cha Su — it had a heavier BBQ sauce (although not Western) when a lighter drier touch was required. My wife had the Singapore Noodles, and found them a little salty. Still, when compared to the previous year’s Hot Wok, it was much better.

Upcoming Theatre and Concerts:  We currently have no movies scheduled or anticipated in the next 6 months. Our 2012 entertainment year ends next week with Other Desert Cities at the Taper on December 29. Turning to 2013… January starts with Anything Goes” at the Ahmanson on January 6. January 12 is currently held for the MoTAS Shabbat, although I may book something in the evening. January 19 is currently open, as Erin returns to Berkeley the next day; supposedly, there may be an event at REP of interest that evening. January 26 is being held for the just announced production of Triassic Parq–The Musical at the Chance Theatre in Orange County. February will start with the first play of the REP season, “Putnam County Spelling Bee“.  February 9 is being held for “Backbeat” at the Ahmanson. February 16 brings “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown” at Cabrillo Music Theatre, and the last weekend of February is currently open. March starts with “I’ll Be Back Before Midnight” at the Colony. After a break for Fogcon (although I may do something here), theatre picks up with “Catch Me If You Can” at Broadway LA/Pantages on March 16 and “Boeing Boeing” at REP East on March 23. March may also bring “End of the Rainbow” at the Ahmanson, most likely on March 30. April will bring the Southern California Renaissance Faire (huzzah for the $15 Holidazzle sale), “Grease” at Cabrillo Music Theatre, and “To Kill a Mockingbird” at REP East. I’m also keeping my eyes open as the various theatres start making their 2013 season announcements. Lastly, what few dates we do have open may be filled by productions I see on Goldstar, LA Stage Tix, Plays411, or discussed in the various LA Stage Blogs I read (I particularly recommend Musicals in LA and LA Stage Times).

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Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln

We go to a lot of theatre. Sometimes, however, there are stories that are told better on the silver screen, due to the need to immerse oneself in the environment and characters. Today, we saw one of those moves: “Lincoln“, produced and directed by Steven Spielberg.

Lincoln tells the story of our 16th President and his political battles to get the 13th amendment passed. As with the musical 1776, this is political sausagemaking — something you don’t really want to see. This wasn’t an argument of lofty goals and high ideals. This was political horse trading, some borderline constitutional actions, and the story of a President who was doing what he felt needed to be done to bring the country back together. This art of horsetrading and personally cajoling the other party is something that has been lost: President Obama would be well advised to see this movie to learn, perhaps, how to take some leadership roles in convincing congress.

The history told in the movie is fascinating, and illustrated political nuances I hadn’t thought about before. I do not know if it is 100% true, but it appears to have been well researched. The movie illustrates as Washington DC and a government bureaucracy vastly different than the imperial presidency we see today. I understand how today’s presidency has grown in the trappings — much of it arising due to Lincoln’s assassination attempt — but one wonders if it has distanced the occupants of the office from the people.

The performances in the movie were spectacular. You can see the full cast at the IMBD page, but I’d like to highlight some performances. As Lincoln, Daniel Day-Lewis gave a truly spectacular performance — I expect him to be nominated for a Lead Actor Oscar. Believable and moving, he embodied the character and brought him alive. Also notable was Sally Field as Mary Todd Lincoln. Although I’m aware of the age difference between Field and Day-Lewis, the pairing worked well. Field brought surprising depth to a character that is much less understood. Field may also see (another) Oscar nomination–I think we really like her.

A number of the supporting characters are also worthy of mention. I particularly liked Tommy Lee Jones’ Thaddeus Stevens, head of the conservative wing of the Republican party. Also notable was James Spader was W.N. Bilbo, one of the horse traders used to convince Democrats to support the amendment. I also liked Jared Harris as U.S. Grant.

A few other quick notes. During the opening scene, there is a shot of Lincoln slowly standing up to speak. I instantly thought of “Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln.” I also noted how realistic the war scenes were. War, especially in the mid-1800s, was hell.

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Green and on the Screen

Last week, I wrote about our visit to Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, a show that one attends for the entertainment value, not any significant or heavy plot. Today, as we’ve been orphaned for Thanksgiving, we decided to break with tradition and go see a movie: “The Muppets“, which opened yesterday.

Now, I have a smart spot in my heart for the Muppets. Growing up, The Muppet Show was one of those TV shows that appealed to my sensibility. It was a little bit Broadway, a little bit pop, with the right level of subversive and out of the box humor to appeal to my warped sense of humor. The early Muppet movies were good (and I always enjoyed the subversive nature of Muppet Classic Theatre), but later ones lost their way. Especially after the death of Jim Henson (so young), Disney just didn’t seem to know what to do with the Muppets, and they languished, forgotten and neglected.

I’m pleased to say that this movie confronts that issue dead on. As the movie starts, we meet Gary (Jason Segal), Mary (Amy Adams), and Gary’s brother, Walter (Walter, in a stunning debut). Gary and Mary are going to Los Angeles to celebrate their 10th dating anniversary, and they decide to bring Walter along to see the home of his heroes, the Muppets. Alas, when they arrive, the Muppet studios are derelict, and the Muppets are spread across the continent. The studio is about to be sold to a developer who wants the land for its oil. They only way to save the studio is to raise $10,000,000 by an artificial deadline, and the only way to do that is to reunite the Muppets. From this setup, the movie moves steadily to its goal: first the race to find and reunite everyone, and then restoring the theatre and putting on the Muppet telethon, all the while dealing with the bad guy, Tex Richman (Chris Cooper) (insert maniacal laugh). As one with expect with this being a Disney movie, the theatre is saved, but that is the least of the story line.

The movie is full of vintage Muppet humor (and that includes old jokes, wocka wocka). It includes self-referential humor. It includes lots of singing and dancing (this really is a musical, folks, but what did you expect?). It confronts the issue of what happened to the Muppets with humor straight on—it acknowledges that today’s audiences are believed to have moved beyond the basic humor that were the Muppets. It also provdes that belief wrong—it demonstrates that intelligent humor, singing, and dancing are more entertaining than fart jokes. Don’t believe me? Just look at where the box office receipts are going: The Muppets vs. Jack and Jill. Good humor and good writing will always win.

The performances were excellent. Jason Segal has lovable schlub down to a science, although it was unnerving to see him on the big screen. Amy Adams was back in the Enchanted-groove, with very strong singing and dancing (I had never noticed how muscular her legs are). Chris Cooper made a good evil guy, even if he couldn’t laugh. Jack Black, playing Jack Black, was very Jack Blackish. As for the Muppets themselves: the current voice talent is pretty close to the original, and the new writers generally had the characterizations right. Walter is the only new Muppet, and he never realizes he is a Muppet until the end—this is the basic conceit of the Muppet world: that they are no different than anyone else in the world. As would be expected, there are loads of cameos—I won’t mention them so as not to spoil them.

Not surprisingly, the movie does have some adult themes. The basic question the movie addresses is “What is our purpose in life?” For Muppets, that is clear that their purpose is to entertain; that is where they are happiest. Until they discover (or should I say, re-discover) that truth, they were doomed. There is also the question of finding out what we really love, and putting that love in our life with the correct importance. Love has always been a central theme in the Muppets; in this movie, there is not only the love between Kermit and Piggy, but the love between Gary and Mary. Both must be acknowledged for the world to be whole.

I truly hope that this movie creates a Muppet resurgence. I understand that NBC has requested a pilot for a new Muppets show. I’m hopeful, but this is NBC we are talking about. The Muppets are good, but I don’t know if they are strong enough to save the network (further, I’m curious why ABC isn’t doing the pilot). We need the Muppet’s brand of humor these days, and we need to bring back real variety shows.

Mahna Mahna.

Previews: Just a few previews. The first was for “Brave“, which looks to be a good girl-empowerment movie from Pixar. We’ll probably see it, but not in the theatre. The second was for a Japanese-style remake of The Borrowers called “The Secret World of Arrietty“. This uses traditional animation and will likely be good; however, I don’t think it will be a strong success at the box office just because of the nature of the typical audience. The third preview was for “Mirror Mirror, another comedy-fantasy based on Snow White that seems to focus on women-empowerment. Looks good, but Julia Roberts appears miscast. The last preview was for “Paranorman, which seemed out of time. This looks to be a good Halloween movie, but is being released in August, and previewed in November a year before. Perhaps they are trying to build word of mouth, but I’m not sure it will be successful, although they might pull a “Nightmare Before Christmas” out of it. From the folks that did Coraline.

Future Movie Plans: We plan to see a movie on Christmas Day (and have Chinese food); I’m not sure which one yet. Who knows… if Puss and Boots is still in the theatres we might see that; I’ve also heard good things about “Hugo“. Looking at the December releases, not much screams out: there is Carnage, but we are seeing the play in January, and I’d rather see the play first. “The Iron Lady” is a possibility, but I want to see the reviews. “Tintin” is another, but again I want to see the reviews. As for theatre… this weekend brings both “Bring It On” at the Ahmanson and “The Graduate” at REP East. For the rest, look at the bottom of the Chitty review.

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And The Series Comes To An End

Tonight, we broke down and went to see “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows, Part 2“. First and foremost, let me tell you want happens….

Harry Potter dies.

Or He doesn’t.

C’mon, you could read the book.

As for my opinion of the movie: it made the great end of a series. However, it was just an average movie, especially if you haven’t memorized the context of the previous 6½ books… or have forgotten them. Harry Potter would make a great series to watch in a marathon sitting, but as the series when on, each episode became more and more dependent on remembering the vaguarities of the backstory, and this hurts the movies as standalone.

I do applaud the producers, however, for actually making the entire series into films, and even more amazingly, keeping the cast together for all eight, modulo deaths. That’s pretty remarkable in this day and age.

Otherwise, I thought the movie was very dark (again, this fit the end of the series well, but made for a very tense movie), and I found myself wondering about the time about half-way through (again, some relief was needed from the darkness).

Lastly, watching the credits, I began to see why movies are so much more expensive than live theatre. Look at all the people that have to be paid salaries.

As for the previews: Sherlock Holmes #2, ehhh. Dark Knight rises. ehh. Planet of the Apes, prequel. Ehhh. Some Steven Spielberg movie. Ehhh. Apollo 18. Potentially interesting.

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Entertainment News Chum

A few entertainment related items (mostly theatre) from the lunchtime news reading:

  • Pasadena Playhouse. As you may recall, we’re long time Pasadena Playhouse subscribers, but the bankruptcy combined with a lackluster upcoming season have led us not to renew. So here’s more info on the lackluster season to come… it seems they decided on the musical. No, it isn’t The Nutty Professor or Peggy Sue Got Married as they indicated in their season brochure. The musical will be: Sleepless in Seattle: The Musical. The production will be directed by Joel Zwick and feature songs written by Michelle Citrin, Michael Garin and Josh Nelson. No casting, and it is supposedly faithful to the movie (which I have never seen). Color me underwhelmed.
  • Barney Sings. One of the first shows I ever saw on stage was “The Rothschilds” with Hal Linden. Mr. Linden has a beautiful voice, which one rarely hears. The LA Times recently had a nice article on Hal Linden, including a reference to a new CD he is releasing. Some of us oldsters may remember Mr. Linden from his role on Barney Miller—a role he got from his lead performance in The Rothschilds.
  • Corrupting the Kiddies. Hard to believe, but Avenue Q is coming to a high-school near you. Of course, the high school version is very sanitized. The school edition makes the following changes: (1) The language (both dialogue and lyrics) has been cleaned-up throughout, making the show closer to a PG-13; (2) The song “Internet is For Porn” has been replaced with “Social Life is Online”; (3) The songs “My Girl Friend Who Lives In Canada” and “Loud As The Hell You Want” are cut; (4) The videos throughout the show are all now done live using actors; (5) The scenes with the Bad Idea Bears have been trimmed and amended to now focus less on drinking; and (5) A few character names have been changed – Lucy T. Slut is now just Lucy, and Mrs. T. is now Mrs. Butz. Somehow, it seems too cleaned up for me.
  • Seeing the Light. One problem that is non-existant in live theatre is an inability to see the actors. That’s not true for movies, and Roger Ebert has a nice article on the growing dimness in theaters today. He’s not talking about the scripts or the actors, but the projectionists are not projecting the image at the proper brightness. Those of you who are regular theater-goers should read this, and speak up when you are not getting the image you pay for.
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Another Mama in the House

I’ve been busy today, so I’ll just share one tidbit that’s been rolling around in my head: Barbra Streisand is thinking about playing Mama Rose in a new movie version of Gypsy. She might have the pipes, but I’m not sure I could see her in the role. Then again, I couldn’t see Patti LuPone, Bernadette Peters, Tyne Daily, Bette Midler, or any of the other ones as Mama Rose either. What do you think?

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So Long, for So Little

“So Long… for So Little”. And thus my daughter summed up our annual Christmas movie, “Harry Potter and the Deadly Hollows, Part 1”. I agree with her assessment, for it captures well the essence of the problem.

I’m not going to go over the details of the story. If you care about Harry Potter, you’ve probably read the book (and likely seen the movie by now). If you don’t care about Harry Potter, by now you won’t be going to see this movie anyway. But suffice it to say that the story is part of the problem. Not the substance of the story, for it does its job of moving the Harry Potter story towards its final end. Rather, the problem is the length. Rowling suffered from sequelitis—each subsequent part got longer and longer and threw more into the story. Contrast the succinctness of the first book with the last. The screenwriters, when faced with the voluminous Volume 7, had two choices: preserve the story as closely as possible to satisfy the fan community, or trim-trim-trim to get a story that could be old in a reasonable time. If this had been live theatre, they would have had a dramaturge to have them tell the story effectively. But they chose the former option and hewed closer to the book. As such, the story had such length they had to split it into two movies, and they crammed so much into the first movie it was well over two hours. For all that length, the audience never got a good resolution. It didn’t leave me wanting more.

There were other problems as well. The first thing I noticed was the obviously catering to the 3D market. There were so many scenes that seemed to be filmed in such as way as to look spectacular in 3D, but come off as just tiresome in 2D. There was also far too much emphasis on the special effects. I found myself contrasting HP7.1 with yesterday’s movie, “The King’s Speech”. Whereas King’s Speechfocused on the story with no obvious special effects, HP7.1 seemed to focus on the effects just for the sake of the effects. This could be why it has made much more money, but it’s all eye candy surrounding a lack of substance.

One word about “the scene”. You know the one: where Harry and Hermione kiss, seemingly naked. It has generated quite a bit of controversy. My opinion that it worked fine in the context: it’s goal was to goad a character into action, and it did what it was meant to do. So it wasn’t in the book. Deal.

I am pleased to see the growth in acting abilities of the three principal actors. All have grown in skill (and we’ve seen Daniel Radcliffe on Broadway), but this was really Emma Watson’s movie. As I noted in my earlier review, a good aspect of a story is character grown. We don’t see it from Harry; he’s just reacting. We don’t see it that much from Ron. But we see Hermione grow in strength and nuance, and it was well played and well acted. It was also interesting to note the overlap in actors between this movie and The King’s Speech: in particular, Helena Bonham Carter and Timothy Spall. Take a look here for the full cast list.

We can look forward, if you call it that, to Part 2 of this in July 2011.

Theatre Notes. We saw this at the Pacific Winnetka, and Pacific is the parent chain to Arclight. The differences were astounding. Pacific had 5 minutes of commercials before the previews. The volume was loud enough to be painful. The projector bulb kept varying intensity, and the print and previews were showing signs of wear. The Arclight had none of these problems. Does that justify an extra few dollars. Perhaps.

Previews. This movie had five previews, none of which impressed me. “Season of the Witch” was a horror film, and in general I’m not a fan of those. Both “Green Hornet” and “Green Lantern” will be popular with those that love the superhero/comic genre, and will make a lot of money, but seemed to be too much action/special effects for me. “Kung Fu Panda 2 and “Yogi Bear” seemed to be aimed at the younger family audience with enough fart jokes for the teens—and thus drew no interest from me. So Hollywood was 0 for 5 this time. I think I’m spoiled by live theatre.

The Wrap Up. So that is likely it for my reviewing for 2010, unless I squeeze in something next week. In total, we saw 42 live theatre productions, 7 staged readings of episodes of “Meeting of Minds” (#2, #8, #10, #13, #19, #23, #24), 3 movies, 2 dance shows, and one Drum Corps show. The live theatre productions were “Lost in Yonkers”, “Camelot”, “The Andrews Brothers”, “Dirty Rotten Scoundrels”, “Ray Bradbury’s Wisdom 2116”, “The Story of My Life”, “On Golden Pond”, “See What I Wanna See”, “Jacques Brel is Alive and Living in Paris”, “Damn Yankees”, “12 Angry Men”, “Little Shop of Horrors”, “The 39 Steps”, “The Wedding Singer”, “South Pacific”, “Dog Sees God”, “It’s Top Secret”, “The Rocky Horror Show”, “In The Heights”, “Grace and Glorie”, “The Last Days of Judas Iscariot”, “Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella”, “The Lieutenant of Inishmore”, “Young Frankenstein: The Musical”, “Seussical: The Musical”, “[title of show]”, “Speech and Debate”, “Side Man”, “U.S.S. Pinefore”, “Free Man of Color”, “The Glass Menagerie”, “Leap of Faith”, “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”, “FDR”, “Happy Days: The Musical”, “Varney the Vampire”, “Bell, Book, and Candle”, “Amadeus”, “The Wild Party”, “Harps and Angels”, “Uptown, Downtown” and “Next to Normal”. The movies were “It’s Complicated”, “The King’s Speech” and this movie. The dance shows were Celebrate Dance 2010 and VNHS “Momentum”

That was a lot. I hope you enjoyed reading the reviews as much as I have enjoyed writing them. Celebrate 2011 by going to see something: a live theatre production, a dance, a concert, or a movie. Share your opinions about what you see. I look forward to reading them.

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Triumphing Over D-D-D-D-D-Difficulty

Yesterday, while my wife and daughter went to the Pantages to see West Side Story (more on that later), I went to go see “The Kings Speech” at the Arclight Hollywood. Before I go into the movie, a few words about the theatre itself. Arclight is an interesting chain. They do reserved seating for showings, and do not seat people after the movie has started. They do no advertising, either before a show starts or in the trailer reel. They only run about 3 previews. For this, you pay a bit more (and they validated parking). They also have the usher actually welcome you to the showing, remind you personally to shut off electronic devices, etc. All in all, it was very nice execution for a movie theatre; something you no longer see these days. The theatre I was at was an Arclight multiplex next to the original Cinerama dome, which they program as well. Although my movie wasn’t in the dome (“True Grit” was), it was nice to walk around the dome and get the sense of history.

Anyway, as to the movie itself. The movie tells a real-life story of the ascension of King George VI (a period that was also covered well in the musical “Only a Kingdom” that we saw at the Pasadena Playhouse in 1998). Whereas the musical focused on the love story of Edward (a/k/a David) (King Edward VIII) and Wallis Simpson and how that love led him to give up the crown, this movie focuses on his brother Albert (King George VI). Albert’s problem was that he stammered so much that he was an ineffectual public speaker. This wouldn’t have been a problem if he had been a commoner, but he was 2nd in line to the throne, and royals are expected to speak. The movie tells the story of how he overcame the speech difficulty with the help of a speech therapist (Lionel Logue), and how the king and the commoner became friends. It also tells the parallel story of the death of King George V, the turbulent period of King Edward VIII’s brief rule, and the ascension of King George VI as Great Britain entered into World War II.

This was a story I hadn’t known before, and I found it quite interesting. It made for a good drama, because it had that key element that makes a successful story: character growth. At least in the main characters, we saw significant growth from beginning to end: we saw how Albert (George VI) grew from a nervous public speaker into a confident king; we also saw Lionel grow from a gruff coach into a friend that respected Albert. Other characters saw less growth (Edward) or were more charactures (Wallis Simpson, Churchill). But that was only a minor problem.

The acting in this production was top-notch. The leads were Colin Firth as Albert (King George VI); Helena Bonham Carter as Elizabeth (Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother); and Geoffrey Rush as Lionel Logue. All three were perfection in their roles and a delight to watch. Other signficant actors were Guy Pearce as Edward (King Edward VIII) and Timothy Spall as Winston Churchill. You can find a full cast listing here.

The King’s Speech” was directed by Tom Hooper, with cinametography by Danny Cohen. Most of the time, when I see a movie, I notice the cinemetography and how the camera angles add or detract from the story. I must complement the director and the cinemetography here for I didn’t notice the distinctly cinematic aspects at all. They told the story in such a way that the story came first, and the production tricks blended into the background. This is great storytelling.

The King’s Speech” was rated “R”, primarily for the use of curse words as Edward overcomes his speaking difficulty. That was an idiotic rating for this unique historical story. Ignore the rating and go see this movie, be it in a theatre or in the comfort of your home.

Previews. There were three previews at this show. The first was for “Frankie and Alice”, which looks to be a tour de force for Halle Berry—a strong performance drama that likely won’t do well at the box office. The second was for “The Rite”, a horror film about exorcism that looks completely uninteresting. The third preview was for “The Company Men”, a recession-drama about a man who loses his job and has to refind himself. This last one looks interesting, but I don’t think it is interesting enough to get myself to a movie theatre for.

West Side Story. Oh, and as for “West Side Story”: I’m glad I didn’t see it. According to my family, the trick of having the Jets speak in English and the Sharks in Spanish didn’t work, and made the story disjointed. Although the dancing was good, the leads of Tony and Maria weren’t of professional quality. The only complementary word about an actor I heard was for the actress playing Anita and the actor playing Doc. This basically agrees with the scathing Los Angeles Times review, which is well worth reading if you are a fan of bad reviews. On the whole, I think I made the right choice.

Upcoming Movies: Today is Christmas, and I’m Jewish. Yup, that means we should be seeing a movie today. Most likely, we’ll be at the Pacific Winnetka 21 finally seeing “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1”. There’s a slight possibility we might see “Tangled” instead, but I’d put that at <10%. Nothing else is the least bit interesting.

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