cokebabies
Super Freak
Bleh.
In fairness, I didn't like the stage performance, either. I was under the VERY misguided information that the film would be more "Disney-esque" of a musical - spoken dialogue, with sung numbers mixed in. I hate musicals where the dialogue is sung, as well. Maybe that's all musicals, I don't know enough about the specifics of the genre.
But apparently Hugh Jackman's vocal chords are lodged three inches up his sinuses, since most of his vocals were incredibly nasal. He did a good job for a good amount of time, but having so much screen time exposed his weaknesses. And Crowe's singing reminded me of what I think a man-sized teddy bear would sound like.
Hooper's direction was really odd at points. The novelty of his extreme zoom-ins during the solos wore off quickly; Hathaway's was the only time it was effective. Otherwise, framing almost every solo with the singer at the bottom-right of the screen got tiresome.
The two performances I loved were Hathaway's, and whoever played the main revolutionary (in the red coat). Hathaway did a good job singing, but her raw emotion took it to another level. "I Dreamed A Dream" got hard to watch by the end - in a good way. Whoever the main revolutionary was, he wasn't on screen enough. One of the few cast members who I genuinely thought could sing well, combined with an enjoyable character, made for one of my favorites.
In fairness, I didn't like the stage performance, either. I was under the VERY misguided information that the film would be more "Disney-esque" of a musical - spoken dialogue, with sung numbers mixed in. I hate musicals where the dialogue is sung, as well. Maybe that's all musicals, I don't know enough about the specifics of the genre.
But apparently Hugh Jackman's vocal chords are lodged three inches up his sinuses, since most of his vocals were incredibly nasal. He did a good job for a good amount of time, but having so much screen time exposed his weaknesses. And Crowe's singing reminded me of what I think a man-sized teddy bear would sound like.
Hooper's direction was really odd at points. The novelty of his extreme zoom-ins during the solos wore off quickly; Hathaway's was the only time it was effective. Otherwise, framing almost every solo with the singer at the bottom-right of the screen got tiresome.
The two performances I loved were Hathaway's, and whoever played the main revolutionary (in the red coat). Hathaway did a good job singing, but her raw emotion took it to another level. "I Dreamed A Dream" got hard to watch by the end - in a good way. Whoever the main revolutionary was, he wasn't on screen enough. One of the few cast members who I genuinely thought could sing well, combined with an enjoyable character, made for one of my favorites.