At Long Last Love
So for our second
substitute movie for Ram Gopal Varma Ki Aag we had to watch At Long Last Love. I’d never heard of this
before, but after a quick look on IMDB I quickly learned that Colin was going
to hate this movie as it’s a musical and I know his feelings about them. As for
me, I love a good musical. I’ll happily admit that I know all the words to
Little Shop of Horrors, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, Sweeney Todd, A
Nightmare Before Christmas and West Side Story (Ok. I only know the words to
West Side Story because of the Schlong album – Punk Side Story, but it still
counts!). Since this movie is appearing on our list, even if it is as a sub, I
suspected that I wouldn’t be learning the words any time soon though…
Set during the Great
Depression, heiress Brooke Carter (Cybill Shepherd), meets an Italian gambler,
Johnny Spanish (Duilio Del Prente), at a race track. Meanwhile Playboy
millionaire Michael Oliver Pritchard III (Burt Reynolds) falls in love with
actress Kitty O'Kelly (Madeline Kahn), after nearly running her over. Kitty and
Brooke turn out to be old friends who went to public school together, and the
two couples hit the town together, along with Elizabeth (Eileen Brennan) and
Rodney (John Hillerman), Pritchard’s butler/chauffeur. As Brooke and Pritchard
start to fall for each other, Kitty and Johnny try to make them jealous and
Elizabeth tries her best to seduce the staid Rodney. Will anyone find true
love? Why is everyone singing when talking to each other works just as well,
and doesn’t need to rhyme? Was that a talking canary? Seriously what the fuck?
A talking canary? Am I missing something her?
I’ve never had to
review a musical before, and honestly I’m not even sure where I should start.
All movies are a sum of their parts to a degree, but sometimes if the acting is
good enough, or the cinematography is really well done or just if it’s really
unique and interesting, then a bad movie can become an ok movie, or an ok movie
can become a brilliant movie.
Musicals have this strange uniqueness in the
cinematic world though, where as well as
the usual things like acting, directing, script, costume/sets, cinematography,
editing, SFX etc. you now have to add in the songs, the singing, the dancing
and the choreography, which have become even more important than everything
else and yet are the things most likely to go wrong for a musical. Unfortunately if you get these wrong then whole thing comes crashing down
faster than David Hasselhof at a free bar. At Long Last Love resembles a barman that just left the bottle in this analogy.
The songs were written
by one of musical theatre’s greats, Cole Porter, which you would
think would give them some sort of pedigree, but it seems that when the songs
are put into a movie they just don’t work. To make it worse, there are no huge
songs that you find yourself humming at odd times. This film is screaming out
for a Singin’ in the Rain or a Time Warp, but it just never delivers, and that
leaves you with a sour taste as all musicals should have at least one song that
gets lodged in your head for months. In short, At Long Last Love was Porter’s
Cut the Crap (by The Clash and one of the worst albums ever by one of the greatest bands ever for all the non punk fans).
To make matters worse, Peter Bodganovich decided to make one of the worst decisions it was possible for him to make, and he had the actors sing their performances live. This may have worked better with more experienced musical actors, but for Burt Reynolds and Cybill Shepherd it sounds like Carpool Karaoke with Rebecca Black and Bob Dylan.
To make matters worse, Peter Bodganovich decided to make one of the worst decisions it was possible for him to make, and he had the actors sing their performances live. This may have worked better with more experienced musical actors, but for Burt Reynolds and Cybill Shepherd it sounds like Carpool Karaoke with Rebecca Black and Bob Dylan.
Reynolds and Shepherd are hardly Fred
Astaire and Ginger Rogers, in fact as a singing duo they’re more like Fred West
and Mr Rogers. Shepherd can just about hold a tune, but her dancing is so out
of time that it would make Doctor Who would look on in awe. As for Reynolds,
him and singing mix as well as
milk and beer (AKA the “cocktail” known as horse jizz...). He is so out of his depth in this movie that he reminds me of Tom
Cruise in a paddling pool. Having said that though, they both have a certain
onscreen charm that lifts their performances into the realms of tolerable, as
do the majority of the cast.
The sets and the costumes are actually
superb. They capture the decadence of the 1930s musicals perfectly and make
this a very nice film to look at. The editing is also done brilliantly, as is
the cinematography and some of the scenes themselves have a really good
whimsical humour that suits the film perfectly. If Bodganovich had concentrated
as much on the performances of the songs as he clearly did on the visuals of
this movie, it could have been much, much better.
Since this movie was a
sub, then it really isn’t anywhere near the levels of cinematic depravity we’ve
been sinking to recently, but it is still a pretty poor excuse for a movie. Bogdanovich's decision to record everything live really backfired on
him. Whilst it genuinely looks good,
the awful singing, dancing and songs killed off all the potential this film had
and just makes this an embarrassing addition to musical cinema. Less The Sound of Music and more the sound of Cole Porter rolling
over in his grave.
No comments:
Post a Comment