We Are Movie Geeks All things movies… as noted by geeks.

June 15, 2011

STEPHEN SONDHEIM’S COMPANY – The Review

The world of sports has done this for many, many years -the all-star game. The very best players from all the different teams gathered together for one game. That big all-star type event has happened in the world of monster movie from THE HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN ( Frankenstein’s Monster! Dracula! The Wolfman! etc. ) to DESTROY ALL MONSTERS! ( Godzilla! Rodan! Mothra! etc.). Well you’ve got a limited chance to view an all-star once in a lifetime( although I think they did two performances ). Broadway musical.  This past April the New York Philharmonic presented a staged concert version of Stephan Sondheim’s 1970 musical classic ” Company”.  Broadway veterans and Hollywood stars joined forces to revisit this look at modern relationships. For all you theatre geeks and “gleeks” ( fans of the TV show “Glee” ) this is pure bliss.

The term “staged concert” is a fairly new show term. Like a concert performance of a stage musical, there are no backdrops, limited props ( most items are pantomimed ), and no big costume changes. The “staged” part refers to minimal dance choreography instead of the performers reading and singing from podiums. Here the actors present  the show in front of the orchestra which has joined them on stage as opposed to being out of sight below them in the “pit”.

Enough with the tech stuff! What’s the show about? Well it centers on a single guy-Robert ( Neil Patrick Harris ) who’s given a surprise birthday party by his dear friends-four couples. All but one of the couples is married. We also get to meet three single ladies that swingin’ Bobby is seeing. In flashbacks we see Robert interacting with each of the couples. Harry and Sarah ( Stephen Colbert and Martha Plimpton ) keep track of each other’s indiscretions while confiding in Robert. Peter and Susan ( Craig Bierko and Jill Paice ) stun Robert when they announce their plans to divorce. David and Jenny ( Jon Cryer and Jennifer Lauren Thompson ) are sold suburban parents who share a walk on the wild side via  a joint from Robert. Paul and Amy ( Aaron Lazar and Kate Finneran ) are in pre-wedding panic mode. Robert goes to a club with the much married, hard drinking, cynical Joanne ( Patti LuPone) and her new hubby, Larry ( Jim Walton ) where she challenges the indecisive single guy.

The actors are given a chance to shine with these gorgeous songs and great script. Some smart studio exec has to let Harris headline a big,brassy movie musical in between his excellent award show hosting gigs. The other big standouts are the delightful Tony winning actress Finneran’s exasperated “Not Getting Married Today” and LuPone showing her diva skills by belting out the show’s most enduring ballad, ” The Ladies Who Lunch”. Fans of TV’s “Mad Men” will be surprised by the great comic turn by Christine Hendricks as one of Robert’s girlfriends- the ditsy airline attendant ( or as Austin Powers would say,”sexy stew” ) April. Members of the Colbert Nation will get to see their hero in full singing, dancing mode. There’s no big camera tricks, no cinema enahancements on display here. Just a record of a classic show performed beautifully by an extrordinary group of actors. If you can’t make it out to Broadway, then this is the next best thing to the ” great white way”. It’s  ” tops in taps”!

Overall Rating: Four and a Quarter Out of Five Stars

COMPANY is playing at St. Louis’s Tivoli Theatre ( and around the country ) only on Wednesday, June 15, Thursday June 16, and Tuesday June 21 at 7:30 PM

April 14, 2011

RIO – The Review

Let’s see, we’ve got a couple that meet cute and can’t stand each other, but soon find mutual interests and finally attraction. This has been a staple of romantic comedies since movies began. Film goers tend to forget that this formula has also been utilized in animated features. They’ve all not been instantly smitten with each like Snow White and Prince Charming. Recently we’ve seen affection blossom over time between Rapunzel and Flynn in TANGLED ( and of course Princess Fiona and the big green hero of SHREK ) which may have had it’s roots back with LADY AND THE TRAMP. Well let’s add Jewel and Blu from the new film RIO to this list of Toontown couples. Their love story covers two continents in this delightful tale that’s truly made for the young and young at heart.

This odyssey begins down in South America as baby Blu joins his feathered friends in a big song and dance ( or maybe flight ) celebrating the beautiful new morning. Suddenly the music stops and he’s plunged into darkness. He’s been captured by poachers! They put him in a crate and whisk him out of the country via cargo plane. Soon his crate is in the back of a truck careening down the icy streets of Minnesota. Luck is on Blu’s side as his crate bounces out of the back of the truck and he’s found by a little girl named Linda. She takes the little guy home. As the years fly by ( although Blu himself never does learn to fly) they become inseparable. When the adult Linda ( Leslie Mann ) moves from home to live above a bookstore she manages, Blu ( Jesse Eisenberg ) is right by her side as helper and faithful pet. Their world is turned upside down when an ornithologist from Brazil,Tulio (Rodrigo Santoro) enters the bookstore. Turns out that Blu is the last male of his species left. The last female is down in Rio. The doctor proposes that Linda and Blu return with him to replenish the species. Reluctantly she agrees and they arrive at his avian sanctuary. There Blu meets his future mate, Jewel ( Anne Hathaway ), a fearsome fly-er determined to escape. She takes an immediate dislike to Blu. Late that night, thanks to a cunning cockatoo named Nigel ( Jermaine Clement ), the birds are stolen away by a motley group of smugglers. Blu and Jewel are immediately chained together, left claw to right claw ( like THE DEFIANT ONES ). Despite their differences ( she soars, he climbs ) they escape. They’re on the lam with the aid of a couple of street-wise birds, Nico ( Jamie Foxx ) and Pedro ( Will i Am ). They soon encounter the happy-go-lucky Rafael ( George Lopez ) who takes them to see his pal Luiz ( Tracy Morgan ) in order to free them from the chain. All the while they keep a few steps ahead of the smuggler gang and Nigel. who’s enlisted a pack of thieving monkeys. Oh, and Linda and Tulio are looking for the duo also. Can they catch up to Blu and Jewel before they’re caged and shipped off by the bad guys?

RIO is a dazzling treat for the eyes… and the ears! Seems the producers are almost hiding ( in commercials and trailers ) the fact that this is indeed a musical. The musical number in the opening scene is a great tribute to the gaudy Busby Berkley directed Carmen Miranda 1940’s extravaganzas. Later the despicable villain Nigel sings an ode to his vile wickedness. Clement’s years as half of the Flight of the Conchords serves the character very well. Later we’re treated to a sweet love song by Foxx’s Nico and a great rap duet between him and i Am’s Pedro. I was delighted to hear Ms. Hathaway’s beautiful singing voice in a couple of numbers ( wished there had been more ). Even Eisenberg warbled a couple lines in the closing number. Generally I have a problem with too many celebrity voices in animated features, but here I didn’t find it overly distracting. Eisenberg’s reprises his goofy nerd charm that he showed in ADVENTURELAND and ZOMBIELAND. Hathaway’s the right mixture of spunk and heart. Lopez ‘s good natured fun is contagious. And Tracy Morgan is the most endearing and lovable drooling canine since Tom Hanks’s old costar Hooch. Blue Sky studio has greatly improved on their ICE AGE work-they’re going too be giving Dreamworks and Pixar some stiff competition. The bird characters are colorful and emotive, the backgrounds shine and sparkle, and the humans are just the right mix of cartoony exaggeration and realistic movement. 3-D effects weren’t relied upon too much, so you can get just as much enjoyment of this rollicking adventure in regular projection. Once you’ve filed all your W-2s, reward yourself with this colorful south of the border finely, feathered love story.

Overall Rating : Four and a Half Out of Five Stars

April 12, 2011

AMPAS Announces “The Making of Great Movie Musicals” Online Series

Who doesn’t love a good musical – or at the very least seen one? Whether voluntarily in a movie theater, or just channel surfing late at night, if the characters in the movie are breaking out into song every ten minutes, you know you’re in for one of the best loved film genres – the movie musical!

In conjunction with the Academy’s April 27 premiere of a new digital restoration of “Bye Bye Birdie,” a four-part online series – The Making of Great Movie Musicals – will explore the progression of movie musicals from the early talkies through the Golden Age and into the modern era. The guided tour examines the films and creative artists who gave generations of film lovers countless magical musical movie moments.

In Part One, “Putting the Music in the Musicals,” take a trip behind the cameras to meet some of the talents responsible for the most memorable movie musicals. The creativity of these composers, lyricists and choreographers led to some of Hollywood’s most beloved classics. Rodgers and Hammerstein, Lerner and Loewe, Irving Berlin, Bob Fosse – here are some of the influential legends behind films like “Gigi,” “Mary Poppins” and “Cabaret.”


The final Rodgers and Hammerstein musical (both on stage and film), “The Sound of Music,” was based on the memoirs of Maria von Trapp, seen here (right) on the set of the 1965 film with star Julie Andrews (left) and Patricia Wise (center), wife of the film’s director, Robert Wise.

Click HERE to see the Academy’s new feature series. Visit AMPAS’s official site HERE, “Like” them on Facebook HERE and follow them on Twitter (@TheAcademy) HERE.

November 24, 2010

Review: TANGLED

Filed under: Animated,Family Flicks,Fantasy,Musicals,Review — Tags: , — Jim Batts @ 1:32 am

Hard to believe but in the mid 1980’s the animation department at the Disney Studios was in danger of being shut down. The recent documentary WAKING SLEEPING BEAUTY shows the  turmoil there after their big release, THE BLACK CAULDRON, tanked at the box office. Luckily the animation division was able to pull itself up by returning to classic fairy tales and hiring the team of Alan Menkin and the late, great Howard Ashman (fresh from their stage truimph “Little Shop of Horrors”) to inject some big show tunes into them. Soon Disney animation was back on top with the hat trick of THE LITTLE MERMAID, BEAUTY AND THE BEAST, and ALADDIN. Now after having great success with Pixar’s films, Disney is making an attempt to revive  the musical fairy tale with TANGLED. Will it be a return to their former glories or will it croak at the box office like THE PRINCESS AND THE FROG.

TANGLED is an expanded version of the classic Grimm fairy tale of Rapunzel. The story starts near an unnamed kingdom(maybe Italy?) when a piece of the sun breaks off and lands on earth. A magical glowing golden flowers sprouts where the bit landed and is found by the ancient Mother Gothel. When Gothel reaches for the flower her wrinkles magically disappear and her youth is restored. She covers the flower with a hollow bush and returns periodically to use it’s power. Meanwhile back at the castle, the pregnant queen ‘s health is fading quickly. The king orders a search for the legendary healing golden flower. One of the soldiers finds it and brings it back to Gothel’s horror. After drinking a potion made from the flower, the queen is restored to health and gives birth to a beautiful girl with shimmering blond hair they name Rapunzel. Late one night Gothel sneaks into the nursery to find the flower. She soon discovers that Rapunzel’s hair has the same rejuvenating powers, but not when the locks are sheared(they turn brown). Gothel takes the baby and disappears into the forest, never to be found. The heartbroken king and queen launch floating lighted lanterns into the sky on her birthday in hope that the girl will see them and return. But the years pass as Rapunzel grows up in a huge tower hidden deep in the forest. The young girl believes that Gothel is her mother and will not venture out after Mother tells her of the terrors of the outside world. That all changes on the eve of her eighteenth birthday as Flynn Rider discovers her alone in the tower while eluding the king’s men( he and the Stabbington brothers have taken a jeweled crown). After knocking him out, Rapunzel hides the crown. When he awakes, she tells him that he will get the crown back if he takes her to the kingdom so she may witness the lantern launch up close. They embark on a journey with the king’s soldiers, the Stabbington brothers, and Mother Gothel in hot pursuit.

The film has a much different look than other recent Disney features. Here they’re trying to combine the lush, modeled look of CGI with the hand drawn character stylings of earlier fairy tale features. The gorgeous, bright look of the film works thanks to directors Nathan Greno and Byron Howard with a big assist from executive producer and master animation artist Glen Keane. The look and movement of many of the characters is reminiscent of Keane’s work on Ariel, the Beast, and Tarzan. Like Ariel, Rapunzel is a bright eyed, plucky young woman that all the young girls in the audience will identifywith.  Mandy Moore is great as her speaking and singing voice. Ryder Flynn is a lovable rascal like Aladdin and is given voice by TV’s Chuck, Zachary Levi. Mother Gothel, voiced by Broadway vet Donna Murphy, is not as strong a villainess as  previous Disney bad girls(particularly Ursula or Maleficent). She’s wicked, but seems to wield control over Rapunzel in a passive aggressive fashion. Great character work is on display with the two mute animals: Pascal the chameleon and Maximus the white stallion. One scenes has our heroes going to a forest eatery and meeting a motley group of thugs who might be related to the HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON vikings. Although the artwork is great I had problems with the simple story of Rapunzel be stretched to feature length. The   chases  and the flood seemed like padding. The film’s not helped by some unmemorable songs. Of course Rapunzel must sing of her desire to explore the world, “When Will My Life Begin”, but it’s no “Part of Your World”. Mother Gothel’s wannabe showstopper “Mother Knows Best” quickly becomes tedious. Luckily “I’ve Got a Dream” is livened up by some great animation of the forest thugs. I found it distracting that these medieval folks were using modern phrases like “downer” and “freak-out”. Perhaps I’m nitpicking too much. The wee ones should enjoy the frantic action and animal antics. I just hope Disney doesn’t give up on these old classics. I think there’s another timeless masterpiece to be brought to the big screen using that old magic that Walt began over seventy years ago.

Overall Rating: Four out of Five Stars

November 23, 2010

Top Ten Tuesday: Magnificent Musicals

In honor of the opening of the film BURLESQUE, starring Cher, Christina Aguilera and Stanley Tucci, the Movie Geeks are presenting what we feel are the best motion picture musicals.

Honorable Mention: MARY POPPINS

“Practically Perfect in Every Way”, this is how the incomparably magical nanny Mary Poppins describes herself with nary a boastful smirk on a revealing tape measure in the still-charming 1964 Disney classic musical set in post-Victorian London circa 1910. MARY POPPINS is the first movie I can remember seeing in a theater as a child I still feel genuine warmth about this movie as an adult. Such was the impact of Julie Andrews in her big screen debut, as she epitomizes the title character with equal quantities of starch and sugar. There are so many delightful scenes in MARY POPPINS that it’s hard to choose which to highlight, though one of the best ones has to be the fantasy animated sequence where Bert, as played by the incomparable Dick Van Dyke dances with the penguins. MARY POPPINS is still one of the best family-oriented films to come out of Hollywood.

10. ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW

THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW is the essential B-movie: cheesy script, bad special effects, and odd costumes, characters, and plot lines. But despite the budget, it is a great movie. The songs are excellent, and although odd and cheesy, the script is solid. The quality of acting is strong across the board but when Tim Curry makes his entrance as Frank N Furter, you can’t take your eyes off one of musical cinema’s great characters. It’s become the definition of a midnight cult film and begs to be seen, like it is at the Tivoli theater in ST. Louis every October, with performers on stage and the audience joining in a collective send-up. It’s pure escapism so open your mind and give yourself over to absolute pleasure for THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW never grows old.

9. CHICAGO

Seems as though every four or five years entertainment reviewers and reporters bemoan the death of the movie musical. Shortly after, a film is released that injects life into the “dead” genre. Such is the case of Rob Marhsall’s 2002 big screen adaptation of the Broadway smash, CHICAGO. The story of murder and fame was originally a 1920’s non-musical play, then a silent film, followed by a sound version(Ginger Rogers as ROXIE HART) in 1942 and finally become a stage musical in the 1970’s with Gwen Verdon and Chita Rivera. After a hit stage revival in the 1990’s the story kicked around Hollywood again until Marshall and screenwriter Bill Condon hit upon a way of adapting it for modern audiences. The big song and dance numbers would be fantasies in the mind of Roxie. And what glorious fantasies! Roxie sees herself taking over from Velma Kelly on “All That Jazz”. Queen Latifah as women’s lock-up matron “Momma” Morton” belts out “When You’re Good to Momma” in a smokey jazz club. The gals recreate the 70’s Bob Fosse choreography during “The Cell Block Tango”. Catherine Zeta Jones shows off the skills that earned her honors as the best tap dancer in Wales(and an Oscar) as she tries to sell Roxie on the idea of the two of them going on stage. Richard Gere joins the fun as the showboating defence attorney Billy Flynn and belts out one of Kander and Ebb’s (CABARET) signature tunes, “Razzle Dazzle”. The big numbers are superb, but what may resonate most with audiences is that original story from the 20’s. In the era of reality TV and tabloid stars, Roxie’s quest to become famous by any means seems more relevant than ever. Movie audiences(and Academy members) responded enthusiastically to this big, brassy musical and it took home six Oscars including Best Picture. Not bad for a “dead” genre.

8. LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS

To this day, I find it difficult to imagine these words would pass through my lips… but, Frank Oz out did Roger Corman with a musical. Corman’s classic was a dark comedy, but what oz managed to do was to bring Little Shop to the forefront, maintaining the dark humor while adding the whimsical Broadway element. Combined with a somewhat recognizable cast for the time, the film became a cult classic, not on par with but akin to Rocky Horror Picture Show. Audrey was unforgettable, enjoyable and frightening, while the cast of mostly actors inexperienced in the musical genre, pulled off this feat with fantastic results. “Feed me, Seymour!” I want more!

7. CABARET

Prepare yourself. this will be the ONLY time you hear me say these words… Liza Minelli is brilliant [in CABARET.] Bob Fosse’s film adaptation of the Broadway musical is extraordinary on every level. The story of Sally Bowles, a burlesque entertainer in the midst of the Nazi party’s rise to power, comes to vivid life on screen. CABARET is one of those rare musicals that doesn’t feel like a musical, but maintains the magic therein. The audience is not bludgeoned repeatedly with hokey, cheesy songs that show up out of the blue, detracting from a wonderful story. Fosse was remarkably successful at conveying a sense of realism combined with the Broadway show spectacle.

6. WEST SIDE STORY

Based on the classic tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, West Side Story tells of the ill-fated romance between Tony and Maria, young lovers each associated with gangs at war with each other (the Sharks and the Jets). Everyone is familiar with the story, but what I really find interesting is some of the behind-the-scenes facts that many people don’t know.First of all, it needs to be pointed out that West Side Story was nominated for 11 Academy Awards and won 10, including Best Picture and Best Supporting Actor and Actress (Rita Moreno and George Chakiris). It still holds the record for most Oscars won by a musical.My other favorite trivia about West Side Story is all the actors in Hollywood that were either considered or campaigned for the roles of star-crossed lovers Tony and Maria. Elvis Presley was originally approached for Tony. However, his manager, Colonel Tom Parker strongly believed the role to be wrong for Elvis and made him decline in favor of other movie musicals. Several Hollywood men auditioned for the part, including Warren Beatty, Tab Hunter, Anthony Perkins, Burt Reynolds, Troy Donahue, Bobby Darin, Richard Chamberlain and Dennis Hopper. Most were deemed too old and the part eventually went to former child star Richard Beymer.Jill St. John, Audrey Hepburn, Diane Baker, Valerie Harper, Elizabeth Ashley and Suzanne Pleshette were among the many actresses who lobbied for the role of Maria. However, Hepburn later withdrew because she became pregnant. The producers had not originally thought of Natalie Wood for the role of Maria. She was filming Splendor in the Grass with Warren Beatty and was romantically involved with him off-screen. When Beatty went to screen test for the role of Tony, Wood read opposite him as Maria as a favor because she had been practicing with him. The producers fell in love with the idea of Wood as Maria but did not cast Beatty.Both actors Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer tried to do their own singing for the movie, but their voices were ultimately deemed to be too unrefined, and they were overdubbed by Jimmy Bryant and Marni Nixon, respectively. Wood’s contract stated that she would pre-record all her songs. When Wood struggled with the challenging soprano role her voice was blended with Marni Nixon’s. Natalie sang the lower portions and Marni’s provided the higher vocals. During production, she was led to believe that these versions would be used (with Wood singing the majority of the vocals), although music supervisors Saul Chaplin and Johnny Green had already decided her singing voice would later be completely dubbed by Marni Nixon.

5. FIDDLER ON THE ROOF

Filled with such memorable songs as “If I Were A Rich Man,” “Tradition,” “Matchmaker,” and “Sunrise, Sunset” FIDDLER ON THE ROOF is #5 on our list. The Norman Jewison directed musical centers on a poor milkman, Tevye (Topol), and his Jewish family living in the town of Anatevka, in Tsarist Russia, in 1905. Tevye’s focus is on his three daughters and who they’ll marry. The original Broadway production of the show, which opened in 1964, was the first run of a musical in history to surpass the 3,000 performance mark and held the record for the longest-running Broadway musical for almost 10 years. At the time, the decision to cast Topol, instead of Zero Mostel, as Tevye was a somewhat controversial one, as the role had originated with Mostel and he had made it famous. Surrounded by a supporting cast of Norma Crane, Leonard Frey, Molly Picon and Paul Michael Glaser, the robust Topol was only in his mid-thirties when he performed the role of an older Tevye. The film won three Academy Awards and two Golden Globes in 1971. It won Oscars for Best Song Score Adaptation, Best Cinematography, and Best Sound – including one for arranger-conductor John Williams. The cast looks realistically cold throughout seeing as it was lensed in Croatia: in Mala Gorica, Lekenik, and Zagreb. One of the more memorable scenes happens during the opening credits. While constantly talking to the audience (and God), Tevye sits outside his house explaining the importance of tradition and stability, otherwise his life would be like a FIDDLER ON THE ROOF.

4. THE WIZARD OF OZ

Ok… so, this one has a special place in my heart. (Melissa here). I grew up with THE WIZARD OF OZ, and I know you are all thinking the same thing… but did your mother have an entire room dedicated to it??? Filled with costumes from MGM on mannequins, or a cairn terrier named Toto? Oh good, I win! I can recite this movie the entire way through. Talk about a remarkable film that was adapted from books. Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, Bert Lahr, Jack Haley, Margaret Hamilton… they are all memorable characters that make you forget that they are actors. Sure, the silver make up was far from safe, and you can see the crew running around in the forest if you look closely, but it is still a timeless piece of history! My favorite scene was actually cut, but it can be seen in the extras… It’s the Jitterbug number. I wish they would have left it in, but it didn’t do much for the film as a whole.This movie still captures the hearts of little girls who are waiting to get swept away to Oz (that is, once they get over their fear of the witch!).

3. MOULIN ROUGE

In MOULIN ROUGE, director Baz Luhrmann combined the commercial (using modern music and a surprisingly heavy dose of comedy) with the artistic (the heavily theatrical stylings and loaded emotional content) to create a definitive pop-opera that was both unhinged and brilliant. With CG-rollercoaster shots through Paris, amazing production design and about as much edits you can fit into a two-hour film without driving your audience fully insane MOULIN ROUGE was a visual feast every second of its running time. Luhrmann used many different types of music and has everything from Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend to Material Girl to Smells Like Teen Spirit to FatBoy Slim’s loose interpretation of The CanCan all in the first 15 minutes! Nicole Kidman was at the top her game as Satine and MOULIN ROUGE had great supporting work from Jim Broadbent and John Leguizamo.

2. THE SOUND OF MUSIC

SOUND OF MUSIC is #2 on our top ten musical favorites this week. I love this movie and I have loved it since I first saw it as a child. The film is based loosely on the life of the Von Trapp family the summer before the start of World War II. The mother has died and the father is trying to find a governess to care for his 7 children. Captain Von Trapp believes that the only way to maintain discipline is to run the house with strict rules. Maria has other thoughts on how to control the children. The household is transformed by Maria, and so is the audience. One great song after another is performed. The musical score is by Rogers and Hammerstein (you can’t possibly go wrong there). Put together their brilliant music and the talents of Julie Andrews, Christopher Plummer and the rest of the cast and the film is wonderful. The film won 5 Oscar Awards; Best Director, Best Film Editing, Best Music, Best Sound and Best Picture.

1. SINGING IN THE RAIN

During the “golden age” of Hollywood MGM Studios were the gold standard of movie making specially in musicals. In 1952 they released one of their crown jewels, SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN. After huge success of AN AMERICAN IN PARIS(1951’s Best Picture winner) producer Arthur Freed wished to mount another prestige production with it’s star, Gene Kelly. Freed and composer Nacio Herb Brown decided to utilize songs form the vast studio music library. They brought in Broadway’s Betty Comden and Adolph Green to write a story to link these standards. The duo decided to set the film during the advent of “talkies”. In 1928 many studios were in a panic when Warner Brothers brought sound to the the movies with THE JAZZ SINGER. Comden and Green concocted a loving, hilarious satire of early film making. AFI voted this the 16th funniest film of all time in a recent poll. But then, it’s the performers and musical numbers that cements it as a classic. Freed found two great partners for Kelly: relative newcomer Debbie Reynolds and a song and dance man who could more than keep up with Kelly, Donald O’Connor. How can you pick a favorite sequence? Don Lockwood(Kelly) and Cosmo Brown(O’Connor) rip up a vaudeville stage with “Fit as a Fiddle”. Later they tear up their teacher’s classroom during “Moses Supposes”. Joined by Kathe Selden(Reynolds) they careen over a couch singing “Good Morning”. Lockwood envisions a rags-to-riches fable with “The Broadway Melody” in which his naive hoofer is seduced by the ultimate femme fatale danced by Cyd Charisse(those legs!). Most people believe the greatest scene is Kelly solo on”Singin’ in the Rain” as he joyfully twirls his umbrella and bounces from puddle to puddle after Don has confessed his love for Kathy(aww, he gave that guy his umbrella!). For me, one of the greatest scenes in all cinema is when Cosmo tries to cheer up Don with “Make ‘Em Laugh”. Without the use of movie trickery(CGI was a loooong way off) O’Connor seemingly becomes a cartoon character as he literally dances up walls. You want to turn your frown upside down? Pop in the DVD and go right to this bit of pure magic! The musical stars are greatly helped by some terrific supporting actors. Future movie musical star Rita Moreno(WEST SIDE STORY) is the “Zip” girl. Jerry Lewis movie mainstay Kathleen Freeman(and the “Penguin” in THE BLUES BROTHERS) is a diction coach. Millard Mitchell elicits great laughs as R. F. ,the studio chief.  But the real stand put is Jean Hagan In an Oscar nominated performance as the egotistical, dim-witted, screen siren Lita Lamount(the hiss-able villain). Everything about this movie from the sets, costumes, and sparkling cinematography can’t be beat. Some may argue about it’s AFI rating as the number one movie musical of all time, but SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN stands as a testament to the glory of the Hollywood studio produced musical extravaganza! Truly tops in taps!

Yes siree… with so many from which to choose from, it was a difficult list to put together. What would your Top 10 List look like? let us know in the comments section below.

From Sony Pictures and Screen Gems, see BURLESQUE in theaters on November 24, 2010. You can find BURLESQUE on Facebook, on Twitter or visit the official site here.

November 4, 2010

TANGLED ‘Grounded For Life’ Featurette, Meet Mother Gothel & Flynn Rider

From Yahoo! Movies comes this new featurette from TANGLED. After seeing it at a screening last Saturday, I can’t tell you how excited I am about this magical movie! In this vignette, Rapunzel (voiced by Mandy Moore) finds ways to keep busy while she’s locked away at the top of a tower. The film features new songs and a score by eight-time Oscar®-winning composer/songwriter Alan Menken THE LITTLE MERMAID, BEAUTY AND THE BEAST, ALADDIN, POCAHONTAS, and, most recently, ENCHANTED.

Walt Disney Animation Studios would also like to introduce you to MOTHER GOTHEL from TANGLED

Have a look at the villainess (voiced by Donna Murphy) in this new video.

She may be controlling, manipulative and over-protective, but MOTHER GOTHEL is the only mother Rapunzel has ever known. By stealing Rapunzel as an infant and raising her in the tower, Gothel ensured that she alone would have access to Rapunzel’s magical hair, which she uses as her personal fountain of youth. Gothel loves Rapunzel more as a possession than as a daughter, and uses every weapon in her arsenal “including a constant flow of subtle jabs, backhanded compliments and over-the-top guilt trips” to keep Rapunzel hidden away. When Rapunzel finally defies her wishes and ventures out into the world, the delightfully deranged Gothel will to stop at nothing to get her little girl back into the tower.

The directors of TANGLED are here to give you the inside scoop on the creation of Flynn Rider!

Synopsis:

Walt Disney Pictures presents TANGLED, one of the most hilarious, hair-raising tales ever told. When the kingdom’s most wanted “and most charming” bandit Flynn Rider (voice of Zachary Levi) hides out in a mysterious tower, he’s taken hostage by Rapunzel (voice of Mandy Moore), a beautiful and feisty tower-bound teen with 70 feet of magical, golden hair. Flynn’s curious captor, who’s looking for her ticket out of the tower where she’s been locked away for years, strikes a deal with the handsome thief and the unlikely duo sets off on an action-packed escapade, complete with a super-cop horse, an over-protective chameleon and a gruff gang of pub thugs.

Marking Walt Disney Pictures’ 50th full-length animated feature, TANGLED will be in theaters on November 24, 2010. Get ready for a story of adventure, heart, humor and hair – lots of hair – this holiday season in Disney Digital 3D.

Like TANGLED on Facebook at: www.Facebook.com/DisneyTangled or follow it on Twitter.

Restored FUNNY GIRL To Reopen Renovated Academy Theater in NYC

This is Babs at her best….imagine seeing this scene restored??

Beverly Hills, CA – The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ “Monday Nights with Oscar®” series returns with a screening of FUNNY GIRL (1968), starring Barbra Streisand, on Monday, November 15, at 7 p.m. at the Academy Theater at Lighthouse International in New York City. The series had been on hiatus for most of the year as the theater underwent major renovations.

Nominated for eight Academy Awards®, including Best Picture, FUNNY GIRL is based on the hit 1964 Broadway musical. The film was directed by William Wyler from a screenplay by Isobel Lennart, who also wrote the Broadway book.

FUNNY GIRL features an Oscar-nominated title song and score and such musical numbers as “Don’t Rain on My Parade,” “People,” and “My Man.” Streisand, reprising her onstage role as legendary Ziegfeld Follies comedienne Fanny Brice, gave a star-making performance that garnered her a Best Actress Oscar. The film co-stars Kay Medford in an Academy Award®-nominated performance, as well as Walter Pidgeon, Lee Allen, and Omar Sharif as Brice’s husband, troubled gambler Nick Arnstein.

This recently restored print from the Sony Pictures vaults displays the vibrant Technicolor cinematography of Oscar nominee Harry Stradling, as well as costumes by Irene Sharaff.

Tickets for “Funny Girl” are $5 for the general public and $3 for Academy members and students with a valid ID. Tickets may be purchased online at www.oscars.org or by mail (a printable order form is available in the Events & Exhibitions section of the website). Tickets may also be purchased at the box office prior to the event (subject to availability). All seating is unreserved.

The Academy Theater is located at 111 East 59th Street in New York City. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. All seating is unreserved. For more information, visit www.oscars.org or call (212) 821-9251.

ABOUT THE ACADEMY
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is the world’s preeminent movie-related organization, with a membership of more than 6,000 of the most accomplished men and women working in cinema. In addition to the annual Academy Awards – in which the members vote to select the nominees and winners – the Academy presents a diverse year-round slate of public programs, exhibitions and events; provides financial support to a wide range of other movie-related organizations and endeavors; acts as a neutral advocate in the advancement of motion picture technology; and, through its Margaret Herrick Library and Academy Film Archive, collects, preserves, restores and provides access to movies and items related to their history. Through these and other activities the Academy serves students, historians, the entertainment industry and people everywhere who love movies.

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July 1, 2010

A Sneak-Peek At Cher & Aguilera In BURLESQUE

Filed under: Drama,General News,Musicals,Romance — Tags: , , , , — Michelle McCue @ 5:27 pm

Susan Wloszczyna of USA Today has the first photos from Sony/Screen Gems upcoming BURLESQUE due in theaters November 24, 2010. The musical stars Cher, in her first major role in over a decade, Christina Aguilera, Eric Dane,Cam Gigandet, Julianne Hough, Peter Gallagher, Alan Cumming with Kristen Bell and Stanley Tucci. The thought of seeing Cher back on the big screen after all these years makes me giddy. And together with Stanley Tucci makes me downright delirious!

Directed by Steve Antin and from a script by Antin, Susannah Grant (THE SOLOIST), and Keith Merryman, BURLESQUE centers on Ali, an ambitious small-town girl with a big-town voice (Aguilera) who finds love, family and success in a neo-burlesque club. Ali meets Marcus, a charming, successful businessman who offers to buy Tess (Cher) out of the burlesque club and vies for Ali’s heart.

Read Susan Wloszczyna’s interview with BURLESQUE’s director Steven Antin here. You can find BURLESQUE on Facebook or visit the official site here.

All photos by Stephen Vaughan, Screen Gems

November 23, 2009

New NINE Poster Tells Us What To Do

nine poster

Judging by this new poster for NINE, brought to us today by the fine folks over at Cinematical, it isn’t hard to understand that paparazzi is an Italian word.  This poster brings style, glitz,  glamor, and even Daniel Day-Lewis wearing shades to fend off the flashes.  Doesn’t hurt either that he’s surrounded by four, gorgeous women, a few of whom may walk away with a couple of awards for this film.

Of course, I do wish they would have left off the “THIS HOLIDAY” bit off of the tagline.  Simply “BE ITALIAN” is cool enough, and it doesn’t need to direct our attention towards the release date.

Other than that minor  quibble, this thing is pretty smooth.  Hopefully the film is half as smooth.  With all these names attached to it, how can it not be?

NINE hits theaters on December 25th.

October 20, 2009

Adam Shankman ROCKing the AGES

Filed under: Adaptations,Director,General News,Movies,Musicals — Tags: , — Kirk @ 6:10 am

rock of ages

Adam Shankman, the director behind the latest, film version of HAIRSPRAY, is going back to the musical.  Via Variety, he has signed on to helm the feature film adaptation of ROCK OF AGES, the five-time Tony nominated musical featuring songs from 80s bands like Twisted Sister, Journey, and Bon Jovi.  Shankman will direct and choreograph the film for New Line with production set to begin next Summer.

Says Shankman about stepping back into the musical world:

I had the best time of my life making ‘Hairspray’ and badly wanted another musical, and when I watched ‘Rock of Ages,’ I was struck by the fact that not only had much of the audience seen it more than once, every guy in the audience knew the words to the songs.  What an extraordinary opportunity to open the genre to an audience that otherwise wouldn’t go see a musical.

Chris D’Arienzo, the musical’s creator, has scripted the movie version.  Warner Brothers plans to release the film in 2011.

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