A Taymor triumph. A mélange of creativity using the Beatles music to express a generation in full. The fresh interpretation of the music is perfection.
Across the Universe
By
Victoria Alexander
FilmsInReview.com
Daring and brilliant. A Taymor triumph. A mélange of visual creativity using the Beatles music to capture and express a generation in full. The fresh interpretation of the music is perfection.
My weekly column, “The Devil’s Hammer,” is posted every Monday. The Devil's Hammer on FTB. If you would like to be included on my distribution list for a weekly preview, just email me at masauu@aol.com.
Before the screening I happened upon the fabulously blunt and powerful L.A. Weekly columnist Nikki Finke’s article called “Across An Alternate Universe” (Deadline Hollywood, April 11, 2007) chronicling the studio’s crisis leading up to the release of Julie Taymor’s film, “Across the Universe.” While Finke had not seen the film, she related all the trauma that went into pulling the final edit together. Finke said: “Pretentious and indulgent” is how people describe her [Taymor’s] impossibly artsy-fartsy cut of Across the Universe, which test audiences dislike. Its problems, I’m told, include its length, its lack of narrative, its weird flights of LSD fancy (one laughable one with Bono, another with dancing puppet heads).”
I loved Taymor’s two previous films, “Titus” and “Frida”, so I waited an additional 90 minutes for the print to be found, the projectionist to arrive, and the building of the print. Told the film clocked in at 2 hours and 13 minutes, most of the press that had assembled for a 10 AM screening left. I’m thrilled I stayed.
For everything that Finke reported about the film’s bloated length and the producer, Joe Roth, finally bringing in his own editor to re-assemble a more streamlined cut, at its preview screening time it seems that Taymor’s vision was retained. I disagree with test audiences. The 60’s and 70’s were all about LSD, hippies, groupies, flower power, Merry Pranksters and Beatles music. There was a narrative and I understood everything that was going on. I certainly did not need a voiceover or playbook.
Perhaps the test audiences or studio executives didn’t like the strong, non-verbal political message?
A corn-fed, all-American girl, Lucy (Evan Rachel Wood), leaves home to follow her older brother Max (Joe Anderson) to New York after her boyfriend dies in the Vietnam War. In Britain, a Liverpool kid, Jude (Jim Sturgess), comes to New York and meets Max, who invites him to live at singer Sadie’s (Dana Fuchs) Greenwich Village apartment.
If you want to put music to a generation that was evolving in the time of war, free love, and psychedelic exploration, Taymor’s use of the Beatles catalog is perfection.
Taymor begins the film on the face of newcomer Sturgess, who is incredibly charismatic. While everyone is terrific, Dana Fuchs, styled as a Janis Joplin singer, is mesmerizing.
I loved all the performances with Bono as a Merry Prankster singing “I Am A Watrus,” Joe Cocker singing “Come Together” and Eddie Izzard performing "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite." As far as Actors-Against-Taymor, “Frida” star Salma Hayek is wonderful as the Singing Nurse. Many of the Beatles characters and greatest songs are represented. The most striking image for me is the underwear shod soldiers carrying the Statue of Liberty on their shoulders.
Don’t fear the uncompromised length, because after seeing it you will complain they probably made Taymor cut your favorite Beatles song.
Victoria Alexander lives in Las Vegas, Nevada and answers every email. You can contact Victoria directly at masauu@aol.com or by visiting www.FilmsInReview.com.
ACROSS THE UNIVERSE
Columbia Pictures
Revolution Studios, A Matthew Gross/Team Todd production
Credits:
Director: Julie Taymor
Screenwriters: Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais
Story: Julie Taymor, Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais
Producers: Suzanne Todd, Jennifer Todd, Matthew Gross
Director of photography: Bruno Delbonnel
Production designer: Mark Friedberg
Music: Elliot Goldenthal
Songs produced by: T Bone Burnett, Elliot Goldenthal, Teese Gohl
Co-producers: Richard Baratta, Ben Haber
Costume designer: Albert Wolsky
Editor: Francoise Bonnot
Choreographer: Daniel Ezralow
Cast:
Lucy: Evan Rachel Wood
Jude: Jim Sturgess
Max Carrigan: Joe Anderson
Sadie: Dana Fuchs
Jo-Jo: Martin Luther McCoy
Prudence: T.V. Carpio
Jude’s Mother: Angela Mounsey
Jude’s Father: Robert Clohessy
Lucy’s Father: Dylan Baker
Lucy’s Mother: Linda Emond
Uncle Teddy: Bill Irwin
Bum/Pimp/Mad Hippie: Joe Cocker
Dr. Robert: Bono
Mr. Kite: Eddie Izzard
Singing Nurse: Salma Hayek
Running time -- 133 minutes
MPAA rating PG-13
By
Victoria Alexander
FilmsInReview.com
Daring and brilliant. A Taymor triumph. A mélange of visual creativity using the Beatles music to capture and express a generation in full. The fresh interpretation of the music is perfection.
My weekly column, “The Devil’s Hammer,” is posted every Monday. The Devil's Hammer on FTB. If you would like to be included on my distribution list for a weekly preview, just email me at masauu@aol.com.
Before the screening I happened upon the fabulously blunt and powerful L.A. Weekly columnist Nikki Finke’s article called “Across An Alternate Universe” (Deadline Hollywood, April 11, 2007) chronicling the studio’s crisis leading up to the release of Julie Taymor’s film, “Across the Universe.” While Finke had not seen the film, she related all the trauma that went into pulling the final edit together. Finke said: “Pretentious and indulgent” is how people describe her [Taymor’s] impossibly artsy-fartsy cut of Across the Universe, which test audiences dislike. Its problems, I’m told, include its length, its lack of narrative, its weird flights of LSD fancy (one laughable one with Bono, another with dancing puppet heads).”
I loved Taymor’s two previous films, “Titus” and “Frida”, so I waited an additional 90 minutes for the print to be found, the projectionist to arrive, and the building of the print. Told the film clocked in at 2 hours and 13 minutes, most of the press that had assembled for a 10 AM screening left. I’m thrilled I stayed.
For everything that Finke reported about the film’s bloated length and the producer, Joe Roth, finally bringing in his own editor to re-assemble a more streamlined cut, at its preview screening time it seems that Taymor’s vision was retained. I disagree with test audiences. The 60’s and 70’s were all about LSD, hippies, groupies, flower power, Merry Pranksters and Beatles music. There was a narrative and I understood everything that was going on. I certainly did not need a voiceover or playbook.
Perhaps the test audiences or studio executives didn’t like the strong, non-verbal political message?
A corn-fed, all-American girl, Lucy (Evan Rachel Wood), leaves home to follow her older brother Max (Joe Anderson) to New York after her boyfriend dies in the Vietnam War. In Britain, a Liverpool kid, Jude (Jim Sturgess), comes to New York and meets Max, who invites him to live at singer Sadie’s (Dana Fuchs) Greenwich Village apartment.
If you want to put music to a generation that was evolving in the time of war, free love, and psychedelic exploration, Taymor’s use of the Beatles catalog is perfection.
Taymor begins the film on the face of newcomer Sturgess, who is incredibly charismatic. While everyone is terrific, Dana Fuchs, styled as a Janis Joplin singer, is mesmerizing.
I loved all the performances with Bono as a Merry Prankster singing “I Am A Watrus,” Joe Cocker singing “Come Together” and Eddie Izzard performing "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite." As far as Actors-Against-Taymor, “Frida” star Salma Hayek is wonderful as the Singing Nurse. Many of the Beatles characters and greatest songs are represented. The most striking image for me is the underwear shod soldiers carrying the Statue of Liberty on their shoulders.
Don’t fear the uncompromised length, because after seeing it you will complain they probably made Taymor cut your favorite Beatles song.
Victoria Alexander lives in Las Vegas, Nevada and answers every email. You can contact Victoria directly at masauu@aol.com or by visiting www.FilmsInReview.com.
ACROSS THE UNIVERSE
Columbia Pictures
Revolution Studios, A Matthew Gross/Team Todd production
Credits:
Director: Julie Taymor
Screenwriters: Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais
Story: Julie Taymor, Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais
Producers: Suzanne Todd, Jennifer Todd, Matthew Gross
Director of photography: Bruno Delbonnel
Production designer: Mark Friedberg
Music: Elliot Goldenthal
Songs produced by: T Bone Burnett, Elliot Goldenthal, Teese Gohl
Co-producers: Richard Baratta, Ben Haber
Costume designer: Albert Wolsky
Editor: Francoise Bonnot
Choreographer: Daniel Ezralow
Cast:
Lucy: Evan Rachel Wood
Jude: Jim Sturgess
Max Carrigan: Joe Anderson
Sadie: Dana Fuchs
Jo-Jo: Martin Luther McCoy
Prudence: T.V. Carpio
Jude’s Mother: Angela Mounsey
Jude’s Father: Robert Clohessy
Lucy’s Father: Dylan Baker
Lucy’s Mother: Linda Emond
Uncle Teddy: Bill Irwin
Bum/Pimp/Mad Hippie: Joe Cocker
Dr. Robert: Bono
Mr. Kite: Eddie Izzard
Singing Nurse: Salma Hayek
Running time -- 133 minutes
MPAA rating PG-13
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carl berner writes: on Feb 21 2008 08:01 PM What a creative creation of the 60's, an era I wish had never been (except for the Beatles music, of course, but then, they did feed off of much of the "seach for meaning" that so many of my age at the time reveled in: self-realization with the vehicles of "sex, drugs and rock n' roll!) Even though I do not look back at all fondly of that period, I think Taymor and company did a brilliant job of reminding us what it was all about! (Reply to this) |
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