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#1 |
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has no status.
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Interesting that the posters for the movie give no suggestion that this is a musical - how many teenage shock horror fans will walk out when
the characters start SINGING (and in a non-pop/rock style- no rappers or hip/hop junk here - and how uncool is that ! ) A US musical, set in London, and filmed at Pinewood Studios UK Variety From: http://www.variety.com/ By TODD MCCARTHY Both sharp and fleet, "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" proves a satisfying screen version of Stephen Sondheim's landmark 1979 theatrical musical. Where much could have gone wrong, things have turned out uniformly right thanks to highly focused direction by Tim Burton, expert screw-tightening by scenarist John Logan, and haunted and musically adept lead performances from Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter. Assembled artistic combo assures the film will reap by far the biggest audience to see a pure Sondheim musical, although just how big depends on the upscale crowd's tolerance for buckets of blood, and the degree to which the masses stay away due to the whiff of the highbrow. In all events, DreamWorks-Paramount and Warner Bros. have a classy and reasonably commercial delicacy on their hands. The composer-lyricist's bulging shelf of awards and peerless reputation notwithstanding, Sondheim's own shows have never invited much bigscreen interest, no doubt due to the general feeling that they are works from and for the head rather than the heart. The two films that were made from his musicals, "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" and "A Little Night Music," were, to put it kindly, hardly representative of the effect the shows had onstage. Some Broadway purists will gripe about how the film of "Sweeney Todd" omits and abridges certain songs, reshapes the drama to a degree or just can't measure up to their cherished memories of Angela Lansbury's wondrous performance as Mrs. Lovett. But it will be hard to argue that Burton and his cohorts have not imaginatively reconceived the piece as a work of cinema; strictly in film terms, "Sweeney" is seamless, coherent and vibrant, with scarcely a trace of "Broadway." The flip side of these virtues is that the immaculately designed settings and lack of breathing room lend the film a claustrophobic feel that underlines its status as an art work. Other qualitative considerations to the side, this aspect makes "Sweeney Todd" most recall the much- debated "Evita" among screen versions of post-'60s musicals. Eschewing trademark mannerisms and flights of fancy, and yet fully imprinting the film with his signature, Burton strongly delivers the dark core of this story of a lower-class London barber whose thirst for revenge against a venal judge gives birth to a prodigious serial killer. Yarn has questionable real-life origins in the 18th century, but came to prominence as a story and a stage drama in the mid-19th century, and in 1973 served as the inspiration for the Christopher Bond play that attracted Sondheim's attention. As Sweeney Todd (Depp) sails up the Thames with a young man, Anthony (Jamie Campbell Bower), having escaped from prison in Australia, his bitterly ironic commentary in "No Place Like London" firmly defines the side of the city the film will occupy; in production designer Dante Ferretti's superb realization, it is a squalid place of narrow streets and dingy rooms. Evoking old Hollywood horror pics, Burton has made something very close to a real black-and-white film, as Ferretti's sets, the extensive CGI backgrounds, Dariusz Wolski's lensing, Colleen Atwood's costumes and the pale makeup are synchronized to permit only traces of bold color -- mostly red -- to accent a world dominated by shades of gray, blue, white and black. Sweeney Todd returns with the single-minded intention of killing Judge Turpin (Alan Rickman, as deliciously sinister as fans know he can be), who locked him up on false charges so he could make off with the younger man's lovely wife Lucy and young daughter. Installed in a room above a dismal pie shop run by his slovenly long- ago landlady, Mrs. Lovett (Bonham Carter), Sweeney has his desire for payback sharpened by the news that Lucy killed herself out of distress and Turpin is now romantically inclined toward Sweeney's now-teenage daughter, Johanna (Jayne Wisener), who coincidentally catches the eye of the naively romantic Anthony (Campbell Bower's screen future seems assured, thanks to looks so striking that they distract one from looking even at Depp). Sweeney's murderous career commences to the detriment of a fellow barber, charlatan and con artist Adolfo Pirelli (Sacha Baron Cohen), following a public musical "duel" to determine who in London can administer the quickest, closest shave. Cohen, in his first screen appearance since "Borat," makes the most of this brief but expansive supporting role, broadly playing the braggart showman with, as required, two different accents and highly colorful costumes. Mrs. Lovett, a widow who signals her enduring love for Sweeney by having carefully kept his collection of gleaming razors through the years, makes a quick moral adjustment to her boarder's bloody enterprise by using his victims' flesh in her meat pies, which brings her business roaring back to life. All the while, Judge Turpin and his malevolent henchman Beadle Bamford (an unctuous, gruesomely toothsome Timothy Spall) frustratingly elude Sweeney's clutches; once they're on to him and Anthony, the virtuous Johanna is thrown into an asylum, while Mrs. Lovett begins entertaining delusions of happily-ever-after domestic bliss with Sweeney. Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler fashioned a darkly effective morality tale out of this descent into madness, one Logan has elegantly whittled down to two hours from three to satisfy the more concise specifications of the screen. Dialogue is present when needed, but the vast majority of the text and drama is conveyed via the songs, which themselves have sometimes been shortened -- with verses removed -- with little loss in impact. Burton stages the singing sequences with precision and fluidity; as most of them are intimate one-or-two-person affairs and not production numbers in the traditional sense, he approaches them as he would dramatic scenes, in degrees of closeup and with an emphasis on content and forward movement. Music has always played a major role in his films (notably in his previous pic, "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory") and this represents one happy instance of a film made by a director without stage experience that genuinely serves the intentions of the original piece. Heavy curiosity will center on how Depp, in particular, manages the vocals (all the actors performed their songs themselves). The answer is, perfectly well, thank you. The ever-resourceful thesp doesn't take the half- measure of sing-speaking in the manner of Rex Harrison or Richard Burton, but puts across his many numbers with an agreeable voice that effectively registers the lyrics' import. The same goes for Bonham Carter, a similarly untrained vocalist, who works in the same vein of successfully acting her role through song. There is deeply buried emotion and charged motivations in both characters that Depp and Bonham Carter consistently express, and the eerie similarity of their looks -- the endlessly dark eyes, cascading black hair, delicate facial structure, sunken cheeks, exaggerated lips, slight stature -- accentuates the characters' complicity; at one point, they are both so pale, they look like they've been done up in whiteface. Another effective connection is made between Sweeney and his mortal enemy, Rickman's hanging judge; both express the view, and justify their predisposition for meting out severe punishment, that all men have done something in their lives that make them deserve to die. It is certainly true of the two of them, no matter that one is the antihero, and the other the villain, of the piece. The narrow, heavily deterministic and, yes, gushingly bloody nature of the show (more than enough to warrant its R rating) serves to mute the exhilaration to a degree, but producers Richard Zanuck, Walter Parkes and Laurie MacDonald (and Sondheim, who had approval of the director and actors) deserve credit for ensuring that everyone involved on the picture was the right person for the job. --------------------------------------------------- Hollywood Reporter Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street It's 19th century London and everyone is singing, but when arterial blood sprays from the opened throat of Signor Adolfo Pirelli, you know this is no "My Fair Lady." Stephen Sondheim's award-winning musical "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street," a savage tale of cannibalism, madness and serial murder, is now Tim Burton's "Sweeney Todd." The show couldn't have fallen into better hands. With realistic gore replacing the stylistic bloodletting in the stage version, "Sweeney" loses some of its darkly comic tone -- not a lot of laughs here except the nervous kind. More akin to Burton's "Sleepy Hollow," where heads rolled like so many bowling balls, his "Sweeney Todd" places its emphasis on Grand Guignol and the deeply human story of twice-lost love and the horrifying destructiveness of revenge. It took two studios, DreamWorks and Warner Bros., to share the considerable risk of making and marketing this tragic tale that defies so many conventions of the American musical. It will be a significant challenge to find a substantial audience despite the advantage of the Burton and Sondheim brands along with a cast that includes Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter and Sacha Baron Cohen. a.. a.. "Sweeney Todd" comes from an obscure British melodrama -- which might or might not have been based on true 18th century events -- about a deranged barber who slit the throats of customers and his landlady who served the victims up in meatpies. Sondheim's 1979 show took place within the context of the Industrial Revolution and its rampant corruption and avarice. More satiric opera than musical, "Sweeney Todd" blended together a number of theatrical and literary modes, making the show at once Brechtian, Dickensian and Jacobean. Sondheim acknowledges the influence of the film music of Bernard Herrmann even as he throws in a Viennese waltz or music hall burlesque. Burton and writer John Logan take all this as a gift, which is then filtered through Burton's own unrepentant sense of the macabre. Except for imaginary sequences or flashbacks to happier days, the film has a monochromatic look with color drained from cityscape. Depp and Carter dress mostly in stark dark clothes with black circles around the eyes, almost as if the figures in Burton's "Corpse Bride" served as models. In choosing actors who can carry a tune as opposed to singing-actors, Burton has wisely gone for the tragic, emotional heart of the story, narrowing the focus to Sweeney; Mrs. Lovett, the meatpie lady, plagued by unrequited love for Sweeney; and Toby (Edward Sanders, who has a striking voice), the street urchin who assists but is innocent of the pie's ingredients. Depp is the movie's heart and guts. His Sweeney, nee Benjamin Barker - - having escaped false imprisonment in Australia after 15 years -- is ruled by revenge upon his return to London. Presented with his razors, which Mrs. Lovett (Carter) has lovingly guarded all these years, he grasps a blade with his firm right hand. "At last, my arm is complete again," he thunders. His homicidal rage centers on Judge Turpin (a dour Alan Rickman), a vile sexual predator who had Benjamin arrested by henchman Beadle Bamford (a smarmy Timothy Spall) so he can steal Benjamin's wife (Laura Michelle Kelly) and baby daughter. Sweeney learns that his wife poisoned herself and Turpin, who took the baby as his ward, lusts after the now grown woman Johanna (a wan Jayne Wisener). Anthony (Jamie Campbell Bower), a young sailor who rescued Sweeney at sea, now longs to do likewise for Johanna on land. Thus, a triangle of obsessed characters emerges. Depp plays Sweeney as a man so focused on death, so committed to blood, that he has lost all touch with life. Carter's amoral Nellie Lovett, her hair apparently combed with an egg beater, is herself obsessed with Sweeney. She imagines an impossible life with him without realizing he is unmoored from any reality in which this might take place. The judge, hungering after young women, is the film's major disappointment. Onstage, the tormented man struggled with his obsession, longing to regain his goodness. Here he is a stock melodramatic villain who lacks any ideals other than those of self-interest, though Rickman uses all the tricks in his actor's bag to coax a human being out of the caricature. Sanders' Toby is a street kid who turns out to possess a moral compass the adults so sorely lack. Baron Cohen as Pirelli, the barber's first victim, is surprisingly muted. Perhaps the requirement to sing has neutralized Cohen's usual outrageousness. Burton doesn't seem to know what to do with film's ingenues, Wisener's Johanna and Bower's Anthony, so they are largely ignored. The musical numbers ooze with Sondheim's audacious wit and scathing lyrics. A lullaby conveys menace. A waltz celebrates conspiracy. Cynicism runs through all the songs' social critique. The blood juxtaposed to the music is highly unsettling. It runs contrary to expectations. Burton pushes this gore into his audiences' faces so as to feel the madness and the destructive fury of Sweeney's obsession. Teaming with Depp, his long-time alter ego, Burton makes Sweeney a smoldering dark pit of fury and hate that consumes itself. With his sturdy acting and surprisingly good voice, Depp is a Sweeney Todd for the ages. Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street A DreamWorks-Paramount (in U.S.)/Warner Bros. (international) release and presentation of a Parkes/MacDonald production and a Zanuck Co. production. Produced by Richard D. Zanuck, Walter Parkes, Laurie MacDonald, John Logan. Executive producer, Patrick McCormick. Co-producer, Katterli Frauenfelder. Directed by Tim Burton. Screenplay, John Logan, based on the musical "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" by Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler from an adaptation of "Sweeney Todd" by Christopher Bond. Sweeney Todd - Johnny Depp Mrs. Nellie Lovett - Helena Bonham Carter Judge Turpin - Alan Rickman Beadle Bamford - Timothy Spall Adolfo Pirelli - Sacha Baron Cohen Johanna - Jayne Wisner Anthony Hope - Jamie Campbell Bower Toby - Edward Sanders Beggar Woman - Laura Michelle Kelly Camera (Deluxe color), Dariusz Wolski; editor, Chris Lebenzon; music and songs, Sondheim; production designer, Dante Ferretti; supervising art director, Gary Freeman; set decorator, Francesca Lo Schiavo; costume designer, Colleen Atwood; sound (Dolby Digital/DTS/SDDS), Tony Dawe; supervising sound editor, David Evans; re-recording mixers, Tom Johnson, Michael Semanick; visual effects supervisor, Chas Jarrett; associate producer, Derek Frey; assistant director, Katterli Frauenfelder; casting, Susie Figgis. Reviewed at Paramount studios, Los Angeles, Nov. 29, 2007. MPAA Rating: R. Running time: 117 MIN. |
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#2 |
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has no status.
Senior Member
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All the indications are that the film is a definite winner.
I was very worried when I heard this announced, as I am a big fan of the Sondheim musical, and the thought of Burton butchering it (pardon the pun) was too much. However, it has received some RAVE reviews, and I have every reason to believe it does justice to the brilliance of Sondheim's original conception. I also hear it is pretty gory, which is fine by me. It's a show that really works when made as grisly and bloody as possible, in the tradition of Grand Guignol. Can't wait for this to be released in the UK. |
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#3 |
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is a Chelsea fan
Chief Member OBME
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I loved the stage version so I am looking forward to this.
Bats.
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I'm a water horse! BAT-QUIZ 6 WINNER HAS BEEN POSTED IN THE COMPETITION THREAD - TUESDAY 8TH JULY 2008 |
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#4 |
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has no status.
Senior Member
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Just seen it.
Very theatrical, typical Tim Burton, very dark, but generally very good. Helena Bonham-Carter is excellent, Johnny Depp hardly ever gives a bad performance, wonderful again, same as Alan Rickman and Timothy Spall, also Sacha Baron Cohen is good. Very bloodthirsty, certainly not for kids but if you like musical theatre you will love this. Sets are wonderful, really looks good and it is well put together. Out of 10 I would give it a 7. |
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#5 | |
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is a Chelsea fan
Chief Member OBME
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Quote:
Bats.
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I'm a water horse! BAT-QUIZ 6 WINNER HAS BEEN POSTED IN THE COMPETITION THREAD - TUESDAY 8TH JULY 2008 |
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#6 |
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has no status.
Senior Member
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Ooooh it was bloody good fun. I say, a good bit of spurting/gushing blood.
Johnny Depp was great as the meanacing, very troubled man who was consumed with hate and revenge. I dislike musicals for the most part, but this was so off kilter, so bloody violent, it just added to the "fun", I had a good time. I am glad I wasn't heading straight out to dinner afterwards though. Helena Bonham Carter's Mrs. Lovett had some scathingly good witty lines, and Helena Bonham Carter has a great singing voice. She is more the villian than Sweeny if you start taking stock of her. Meatpies and other dasdardly deeds. Ah what unrequired love can do to a person. Sweeny was after revenge, he just got carried away with himself. Mrs. Lovett was out for herself. One of the lighter scenes, well the only one perhaps, is a daydream Mrs. Lovett has about her and Sweeny off on vacation and eventually getting married. It is a very Burtonesque scene, very whimsical and macabre. Great sets and costumes, they seemed more real than in some Burton films. Ed Sanders, the kid that played Toby, the orphan Mrs. Lovett takes in to help around the shop, is good. I am almost getting tired of Alan Rickman as "the villian" in just about every movie he is in. I enjoyed the hell out of this movie, and I'd say it is one of Tim Burton's best films. One thing I loved about the movie alot of it seemed monochromatic, the colors were so subdued and the blood was such a nice bright splash/touch of color.
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…time is short. So you gotta ask yourself: Are you a fighter, Fish Queen, or are you zombie food? Last edited by Nita St. James; 04-02-2008 at 12:00 AM. |
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#7 |
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is scared of Tuesdays
Senior Member
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I really enjoyed it and I'm completely unfamiliar with the stage version.
Johnny Depp was very good but I thought Helena Bonham Carter was even better (although Mrs L is the showier part, hence Angela Lansbury's Broadway plaudits). |
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#8 | |
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has no status.
Senior Member
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Quote:
Her singing was great, and she really seemed to be having a hell of a good time with the role too.
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…time is short. So you gotta ask yourself: Are you a fighter, Fish Queen, or are you zombie food? |
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#9 | |
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is A non-entity
Senior Member
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Quote:
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"...the chairman of Littlewoods stores made a Keynote speech!" |
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#10 |
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is wishing he were sitting in the 3/9s at the Odeon
Temple Fortune
Senior Member
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Your friend is entitled to his opinion like everyone else.However i found it to be a thoroughly enjoyable way of spending two hours.The lad who played Toby was just great.
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