Sorry, I don't mean to sound ungrateful! I have some respiratory/sinus thing that makes my head feel like someone's stuffed it with chloroform-soaked cotton balls, so thinking is not happening.
Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
That review reminds me -- I haven't see Les Miz yet, but we saw a commercial for it last night (I assume the first commercial after the Oscar nominations), and the first shot of Jackman made me yell "Wolverine!"
Tim told me if I'm going to be yelling "Wolverine!" through the whole movie, I'm not allowed to go. I told him I would mix it up by yelling "Catwoman!" and "Gladiator!" as well.
Frankly, I'm amazed he ever goes to movies with me.
On a less smart-assed note, at a family party I was talking with Tim's 21-year-old nephew about Les Miz, and it turns out we have the same favorite cast recording of it (and feel equally strongly about the fact that it is the One True Recording). And he's also a HUGE fan of Dr. Horrible and Avengers (well, mostly Loki). It was a highly geeky evening.
What is your one true recording?
The London cast. And, honestly, I think it's my one true recording because it was the first one I ever heard. I was 17, and I don't think I realized there might even be more than one cast recording. I listened to it incessantly before I found out there was a Broadway cast recording. When I listened to that one, I had already burned the London cast into my brain, and nothing else has ever sounded right to me.
and the first shot of Jackman made me yell "Wolverine!"
Like he did?
(In my head, the last bit of this song is sung to the tune of "Who Am I?" because I assume the only reason it wasn't really done that way was copyright.)
Like he did?
Hah. Not quite so melodious.
Also, I had never heard him sing before (having not seen Les Miz yet), and he's pretty good. (But Colm Wilkinson is still an impossible act to follow.)
The only bits of Les Miz that I've heard are passing phrases from commercials or stories about the show. I've never heard any of the songs all the way through. I guess I'll fix that some day.
My boss, who claims to have hated the Broadway show, went to see the movie and hated that too. Um, did you go to see it just so that you had first-person evidence that you hated that as well?
Which brings me to the concept that I've heard about here and there (maybe mostly here) about musicial theatre buffs not considering Les Miz to be good, or a worthy musical, or a real musical, or whatnot, and I'm curious as to the what and why and wherefore. Especially since I feel like it's a golden standard.
Is it too serious and pretty? Is it not weird or experimental enough? /spent a weekend with anarchists who think it's perfectly natural to sit in a bar for a band called Snacks serving inedible snacks and playing dissonant and unharmonious music and enjoying the humor of the horror of the situation (they hated the music, but appreciated the experience. I am a heathen, because bwuh?). //can of worms
Sound like Dadaists.
From my perspective, it isn't musical theatre buffs considering les mis to be sub par, it is theatre people thinking musical theatre/popular theatre is lesser than srs bizness theatre, evidenced by liking Les Mis.