Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Review: DEAR EVAN HANSEN

  

   There aren't many original hit Broadway musicals these days, are there? It seems like the majority of musicals on Broadway that are certified hits are those old-school shows from long ago like Fiddler on the Roof, West Side Story, My Fair Lady, and South Pacific. I could go on...forever. This year the biggest musical coming out is a new version of The Music Man starring Wolverine himself, Hugh Jackman. It's not that Broadway doesn't have new ideas, it's just that a known entity already has a place in some people's heads so they at least aren't wary of buying a ticket to the unknown. And while Hamilton was the last smash Broadway hit, it wasn't exactly an original story or anything. The Book of Mormon was probably the last hit Broadway musical not based on a book or film or story or real life character. They're rare; a new, fresh, original musical that not only makes it to Broadway but becomes a hit. Dear Evan Hansen was just that. It premiered on Broadway in 2016 and is still running. It won multiple Tony awards. Ben Platt became a star. And now it's a movie...that's getting ripped to shreds by movie critics and the Twitter schadenfreude maelstrom. 
    Dear Evan Hansen has to be the darkest hit Broadway musical since at least Sweeney Todd, a musical about a serial killer. Dear Evan Hansen has some humor in it and at least one fun, light, danceable song...but it's such a dark and depressing story that I'm shocked it became a popular, hit musical. The basic story is that the main character, Evan Hansen, is a depressed, suicidal teen with no friends, a missing father, and a mom that's never around. Cue the showtunes! When a student at his school commits suicide, Evan Hansen ends up somehow tricking everyone into thinking he was the dead kid's only friend, which leads him into spending time with the dead kid's family, being noticed at school finally in a good way, and kissing a girl for the first time. Suddenly his life is fantastic, except it's an elaborate lie that will probably come crashing down someday. Suicide. Depression. Teenage angst. Lies. Trickery. Family problems. Holy shit, how is this a hit Broadway musical? How are there even songs about all of this? How did this even get greenlit? 
    The funny thing in all of this is that the main gripe the critics have for the film version has nothing to do with the plot, story, or songs. Nope. All the critics care about is Benn Platt's hair and his age. Weird that they're not concerned that there's song and dance numbers in a film about suicide and depression. They only care about Benn Platt's hair. Is his hair that big a problem? It's a curly mop, probably grown to hide his receding hairline since he's 27 years old and is supposed to play a High School senior. And is a 27 year old playing a High School kid that much of a problem? It's certainly not great, though it doesn't ruin the film. I'm wondering...have these critics never seen High School movies like Grease or Dazed & Confused where everyone looks like they're 30 years old? Sure, Benn Platt looks like an old man playing a teen, but what's the alternative? Platt supposedly gave a powerhouse performance on Broadway and won a Tony for his role. He even admitted that the movie probably wouldn't have gotten made if he wasn't the star (his dad was also a producer, probably one of the reasons). It's a catch-22. Do you give Platt, who made the role famous & is obviously great at it, the role? Or do you give it to a true High School age kid that looks age appropriate but a) the movie probably isn't going to make any money and b) the actor probably won't do as good a job as Platt. The studio went with Platt and now the critics have their knives out. I wonder...did he look that old on Broadway (he was 23 when the show started)? Or are Broadway critics different than film critics? 
    For whatever it's worth, I never saw the Broadway version but I did enjoy the film. Granted, I love musicals, and the music is good in this. There is only one stand-out hit, the song when Evan and his psuedo-friend are crafting fake emails between him and the dead kid to show the dead kid's parents. "He smoked crack." "Crack?" I dyed laughing at that bit. And what am I doing...laughing during a movie about depression and suicide? It's certainly a strange mix of a film. The other songs are mostly quiet emotional tunes but they're all very well done. And the story, which, let's face it, is definitely original but definitely bizarre, is very engrossing. The only problem with the story I had is that the ending is obviously going to be a downer, and thus it kind of peters out instead of ends with any kind of emotional catharsis or wise moral victory. Since Evan Hansen is suicidal, depressed, and has no friends but suddenly becomes a star and a stud when he lies...what are we supposed to get out of this? Don't like? Why not? He lied and scored the hottie. He tricked the world and suddenly everyone smiled and said "hi" to him in the school hallways. There is no moral to the story then, right? Or is the underlying theme that anyone popular, rich, and successful is just a liar and fraud and not truly themselves? Is there something about the way we create a false narrative about ourselves through social media woven throughout this? I suppose you could write a book about what's going on in this film, which is a good thing. Most Broadway musicals are just forgettable, colorful fluff. This one is strange, dark, and hard to put your finger on. 
    The acting by Benn Platt, Julianne Moore, and Kaitlyn Dever is great. The direction by Steven Chbosky is top-notch; the film looks fantastic. The musical numbers work, the songs are good. The story is compelling. You can rag on the fact that the High School kid looks like a forty year old man all you want, but this is a good, unique, and interesting movie regardless. ***
     

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Review: DUNE

 

    About a year and a half ago, the first trailer for Denis Villeneuve's Dune came out. A good movie made out of that classic sci-fi book is like the white whale of cinema, so the excellent first trailer got me excited enough to not only finally read the book (it's good, not great) but also watch the David Lynch version (it's a silly, unwatchable mess). The first book came out in the 60's, so it's kind of sad that it took until 2021 for a decent filmed version to come out. One of the reasons why Dune has always depressed film buffs is not only because the Lynch version was a disaster but also because of Alejandro Jodorowsky's never filmed version. His version is so infamous someone even made a documentary about it. It was supposed to have music by Pink Floyd and star Orson Welles and Mick Jagger. What people don't realize, however, is that Jodorowsky's Dune would have been fucking terrible. Jodorowsky has admitted to never reading the book, which is one problem. The other? His movies are awful! 
    Denis Villeneuve, however, has actually made some good movies like Sicario, Arrival, and Blade Runner 2049. Villeneuve also made the smart decision to cut the book in half into two films. And while Blade Runner 2049 was gorgeous, the reason it never achieved greatness was because it was all cool visuals with a lame story. Dune, however, is actually a really good story. So...could it happen? Would it happen? Would someone actually make a good movie out of Dune? It didn't help that the film was postponed an entire year thanks to the pandemic. And it certainly is quite cruel that it's been released in 18 countries before coming out in the U.S. next month. 
    The book was first published in August of 1965. I can officially say that it's September 2021 and finally a worthy film version has arrived. Denis Villeneuve's Dune is phenomenal. It's everything you want to see in a film. I'm so shocked that it's actually good. The one reason the David Lynch version was so terrible was because it was silly. And probably the one reason why Denis Villeneuve's version is so great is because it's not silly. And I'm guessing, unlike Jodorowsky, Villeneuve probably actually read the book.
    The basic story is that the Atriedes family is powerful and runs a whole planet. They're assigned to go and take over a desert planet, Arrakis. The problem? Arrakis is a "death trap." But Arrakis has spice, which helps power spaceships going long distances across the galaxy. Arrakis is, quite basically, Tatooine from Star Wars (one of George Lucas' many rip-offs in that film). Arrakis has giant sandworms. It also has thousands of mysterious desert people. So the Atriedes family go to Arrakis. The problem? The Harkonnen run Arrakis, and they're not too happy about being kicked out. While all of this is going on, Paul Atriedes, played by Timothy Chalamet, in his best performance yet, is having strange dreams about a girl and about his destinty in the world. He also happens to be learning a powerful force not unlike The Force in Star Wars. But unlike a film like Star Wars, Dune isn't a crowd-loving popcorn type of a film. In fact, I'm guessing the majority of Marvel superhero movie fans won't like this Dune. This is definitely more arthouse than blockbuster. There are no elaborate action sequences. There are no humorous sidekicks. There are no jokes. This is art. It's serious. It's gorgeous. Hell, even the Hans Zimmer score is beautiful. This is all probably one of the main reasons why Dune was never a big, Hollywood franchise like Jurassic Park or The Avengers. I can't even fathom how this got made. The scope of this film is vast. While most of it is CGI, it's all still epic and grand. The spaceships are the size of skyscrapers. The sets are Cleopatra-like. There are armies of thousands. And all of this is serious, poetic, and dream-like. Shockingly, everything works. The film is fantastic in almost every aspect. It has the feel of high drama, of watching a great, big, old-school Hollywood epic with a cast of thousands and a budget unheard of. The kind of thing you start watching and you feel goosebumps. It definitely goes beyond mere cinema into something else, something rare. You just don't see films this big that are this good very often, if ever.
    While the acting is all top-notch, from Oscar Isaac as Paul's Father, to Batista and Stellan Skarsgard as the evil Harkonnens, to Josh Brolin and Jason Mamoa as Atrides soldiers, the real reason this film is so good is because of how it looks. The thing is quite the sight to see. Everything is larger than life, but it's the details that make it stand out. That one beautiful, eerily creepy shot of the soldiers in white quietly descending down to the ground. The ripple of sand when a worm is approaching, and the way the earth starts to give way. That beautiful shot of Chalamet holding onto Josh Brolin at the edge of the spaceship as they look down at a sandworm devouring a harvester. I could literally just look at pictures from this movie and be impressed. But the story it tells works as well, as you become transfixed in this world, this journey. And it certainly helps that the films only covers the best part of the book, which is only about the first 1/3rd of it. But the final scene, with the soldiers marching across the desert to a future unknown, doesn't make you angry that the film is continued. No, it makes you dying to see the next part. And that's about as good as it gets. And this film is just about as good as it gets. It's been a long time, but we've finally gotten a great Dune film. ****