Toronto Film Fest: Why Your Boyfriend Won't See Across the Universe
An idiosyncratic, Beatles-fueled imperfection.
Julie Taymor notoriously battled with studio execs over her epic psychedelic romance, which combines a 1960s love story with historical events, all set to a near non-stop soundtrack of Beatles songs. Sound good to you, fellas? Unsurprisingly, Across the Universe seems to leave many male reviewers cold, while women (and predisposed lovers of musicals) enjoy it much more.
First things first: Across the Universe has its contrivances. A 1960s working-class English boy named Jude travels to America to track down his father, becomes buds with a freewheeling college student (who, ahem, gets by with a little help from his friends), and falls in love with his buddy's sister, Lucy. Their lives are affected by Vietnam, they get on a psychedelic bus, and they have friends named JoJo, Sadie (who is sexy) and Prudence. The film is mostly sung, using over 30 Beatles tunes. And yes, there is dancing.
That said, it ain't bad. For what is essentially a boy-meets-girl, girl-gets-political, boy-loses-girl romantic saga, Taymor acquits herself well by marrying the best of the Fab Four's discography to the character drama that writers Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais have dreamed up, heavily influenced by Beatles mythology. Using 33 of the group's widely divergent songs, Across the Universe easily moves through the transformative socio-political landscape of the 1960s much like the band's own progression through the decades from moptop rock 'n rollers to folksy crooners to psychedelic experimenters.

Lucy (Evan Rachel Wood) and Jude (Jim Sturgess) adrift in love in Across the Universe
The best examples of this are our respective introductions to each character. As the film opens, we meet Lucy, a pretty blonde teenager, singing the Beatles' 1963 ditty "Hold Me Tight" to her boyfriend at a high school dance; across the pond in working-class Liverpool, a young lass is singing the same song to the mildly disinterested Jude. [Taymor similarly allows multiple characters to sing songs collectively throughout the film, emphasizing the universality of her source material and each song's potent resonance with the events of the 1960s -- just listen for sniffles in the crowd after an African-American child tearfully sings "Let It Be" while crouched behind a car during a race riot.]
Another early highlight is the dreamily shot "I Want To Hold Your Hand" number, in which actress T.V. Carpio (as a repressed lesbian cheerleader named Prudence) wistfully sings to a fellow classmate while walking obliviously through a football practice. Though at first her character seems out of place in the great romantic scheme of the film, Carpio's is a scene-stealing performance. But then, most of the supporting cast is as strong as the leads (non-singer Evan Rachel Wood is surprisingly good singing "If I Fell," while Jim Sturgess sounds a bit like Ewan McGregor in Moulin Rouge, only better), including singer Dana Fuchs as the electric Sexy Sadie, who looks like a prettier Joan Osborne with the voice of Janis Joplin.

The gang gets a dose of Sgt. Pepper with Mr. Kite
Taymor's film suffers from a few flaws, not the least of which is its own ambitious scope. At 133 minutes, Across the Universe is stuffed to the gills with elaborate numbers, sets, and story; one supposes that's to be expected in any attempt at contextualizing the whole of the Beatles' expansive catalogue -- and the 1960s. And while the characters are living, singing 1960s cliches -- the activist, the artist, the hippie musician, the veteran -- it doesn't much matter. With a conceit as unrelenting as an entire story told in Beatles songs, the film doesn't really need fully fleshed characters; we're constantly reminded that the words and songs of Paul, John, George and Ringo are driving the story, explaining emotions and motivations. In any case, it's no more cloying or trite than the idea of listening to the most saccharine of Beatles tunes almost four decades after their inception.
Some scenes have a distracting stagebound quality (such as the Vietnam-related "Happiness is a Warm Gun" and "I Want You" numbers, which employ specially-made moving sets, and "With A Little Help From My Friends," which inexplicably calls to mind the showiness of -- ugh -- Rent). Less supporting character exposition and one or two fewer clever cameos -- including Eddie Izzard as traveling vaudeville barker Mr. Kite, Salma Hayek as a morphine-toting war nurse, and U2's Bono as Dr. Robert -- also might have made this imperfect (but imaginative and affecting) film more of a solid gold hit, and, more importantly, an easier sell for females trying to bring their beaus to the theater.
Only Revolution Studios head Joe Roth knows if a half hour less of film plays significantly tighter, but far be it from anyone to begrudge the director her own, singular, vision. For what it's worth, this viewer's heartstrings were exhausted from overuse after a Toronto Film Festival screening, and more than a few journalists were checking their mascara in the ladies' room immediately after. With descriptors like "set to Beatles songs" and "musical romance," Across the Universe might prove a challenging film to bring the BF to -- and it is not without its flaws, for sure -- but anyone with a pulse will leave the theater moved, and that's no small feat.
Across the Universe is out in limited release this Friday, and is currently at 47 percent on the Tomatometer.
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| Movie: | Across the Universe |
| Celeb: | Beatles |
| Salma Hayek | |
| Julie Taymor | |
| Eddie Izzard | |
| Bono | |
| Evan Rachel Wood | |
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| Jim Sturgess |
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on Sep 13 2007 07:01 PM I'm a guy and I want to see it. Crazy *** acid trips and Beatles tunes? I'm there. (Reply to this) |
![]() on Sep 13 2007 07:53 PM sounds like crud. really. a musical, in film, ruining all the cool songs that the fab four made up, using names from the songs, and taking the words of the songs literally...wow, the creativity. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 13 2007 08:14 PM I do want to see this. It may not be as good as I originally thought, but i'll still see it. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 13 2007 08:35 PM Sounds fun and funky, and sometimes I want to get teary eyed. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 13 2007 08:35 PM I'll pass. I dunno what it is, but love movies are just incredibly depressing to me. Especially when they're musicals. Even moreso when they further romanticize an era that really feels overrated to me. I guess that means my perfect movie would be a violent war epic without a soundtrack that takes place in 7th century Malaysia. Actually that sounds kind of cool.... Not saying this movie will be bad. Critics might love it and it could become an instant classic with a lot of people. Just saying it's not for me. Oh and I'm a guy. So there you go. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 13 2007 08:39 PM Whoops, missed that last line. Guess critics really are pretty split. Didn't even know the movie was coming out so soon. Shows how under my radar it was. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 13 2007 08:52 PM This guy wants to see it. Too bad I live in a craphole and I'll have to wait for it on DVD but needless to say I'm looking forward to seeing it as soon as possible. JOHN LENNON WAS THE MAN!!!! PAUL AIN'T ****!!!!!!!!! (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 13 2007 09:03 PM Romanticizations of the sixties are pretty cliche. The trailer makes it look like the film is trying too hard. And there are cameos? Lame. I'd like to check the Tomatometer on I'm Not There and skip this melodrama. Why not make a film like this set today? Many of the threads of this tapestry are not exclusive to the sixties, though tying Beatles songs in could be a feat. Truthfully, I'd rather see a Superbad in the sixties about guys going to peace rallies to get laid. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 13 2007 09:07 PM Well I am a female and I think this movie just looks down-right uninteresting. I will wait until they make the 1960's musical exploration set to the tunes of The Velvet Underground. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 13 2007 09:19 PM nightbat666 you just explained why this movie is so creative. I had not planned on it before, but I for one will be seeing it for the reasons you listed. (Reply to this) |
![]() on Sep 13 2007 10:08 PM Yeah it looks a little melodramatic, but I'll still see it. The cinematography looks excellent. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 13 2007 10:18 PM I wasn't the only one in the theater that saw this trailer and mumbled, "Gay." (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 13 2007 10:24 PM In reply to this comment (#1121777) Ever see Factory Girl... (Reply to this) |
![]() on Sep 14 2007 01:52 AM It's really hard to imagine not liking anything that features Beatles songs all the way through. I could be an elitist and claim that the film will seek to tarnish the wonderful work that the Fab Four produced, but it would take a hell of a lot more than this movie to do such a thing. It looks like a fun flick, I'd like to see it. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 14 2007 02:56 AM In reply to this comment (#1121836) This looks good, i plan on seeing it, and i am a guy, so whatev... and is it just me or does the main character look just like Paul did in the 60's? (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 14 2007 03:00 AM In reply to this comment (#1121777) Yeah, umm Truye, Marvel Zombie is right, the movie you're waiting to see was made last year and its called Factory Girl. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 14 2007 04:19 AM "With A Little Help From My Friends"? Rent?! It got theatre-wide applause at my showing. I was impressed - very genuine, light-hearted number. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 14 2007 04:22 AM I lived through the sixties. It was dirty, short & brutal (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 14 2007 05:30 AM The Beatles . . . the number one most OVERATED band of all time! So sick of the beatle-worshippers! What hypocrites they were! Singing about love and world peace, and they couldn't even hold their own band together!? (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 14 2007 08:46 AM When i saw this trailer in theaters i almost puked. Hearing the review here makes me wonder whether there are any sane people left in the world. (Reply to this) |
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