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Film and the Arts

NYC Theater Roundup: “Let It Be," "First Date," "Harbor"

Let It Be
Songs by the Beatles; directed by John Maher
Performances began July 16, 2013

 

 
First Date
Music and lyrics by Alan Zachary and Michael Weiner; book by Austin Winsberg
Directed by Bill Berry
Performances began July 9, 2013

 

Harbor
Written by Chad Beguelin; directed by Mark Lamos
Performances through September 8, 2013

 

In an entertainment world full of endless recycling, it’s no surprise some new stage shows are simply pale shadows of what we’ve seen before. Let It Be, the latest Beatles tribute show, follows the tried and true formula on Broadway in 1977 (Beatlemania) and in 2010 (Rain); the Broadway musical First Date and off-Broadway play Harbor feel like sitcoms that go beyond TV’s 30-minute constraints to their detriment.
 
"John Lennon" in Let It Be (photo: Chad Batka)
 

The Beatles are a cash cow that keeps on giving, especially among baby boomers, so it’s a no-brainer to bring another Beatles tribute show to Broadway, following the success of Rain three years ago. Let It Be hits all the audience-pleasing notes that its predecessors did: note-perfect recreations of beloved classics from “I Saw Her Standing There” to the title tune, and passable recreations of the Fab Four’s constantly changing look from early-era suits to Sgt. Pepper psychedelia to a last lap of long hair and beards.
 
It all goes down easily enough—and the eager audience gratefully laps it up—but there’s a stunning lack of originality, as several segments from Rain are aped: selections from the era’s TV shows and commercials are shown on screens in the theater, a semi-acoustic set that includes selections from Rubber Soul is played, and even a fake Jimi Hendrix is heard in a snippet of the real Hendrix’s cover of Bob Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower.”
 
But very little of this will matter to anyone who plunks down their money, and in the end, it shouldn’t. Proficient musicians—several veterans of Rain or other Beatles tribute groups—play dozens of songs in just over two hours, and the show climaxes with the group’s ultimate audience participation song, “Hey Jude.” That the real Paul McCartney is still touring and playing many of these same songs at age 71 is obviously no impediment to Let It Be’s success, although personally I would rather hear Sir Paul himself lead an audience in a corny “nah nah nah” sing-along than these faceless imitators.
 
Rodriguez and Levi in First Date (photo: Joan Marcus)
 
If you enjoy undercooked Broadway musicals, then First Date is for you. This slight one-acter (90 minutes, stretched perilously thin) plays out a couple’s blind date in real time, and if that doesn’t sound like much, obviously its creators thought the same. So we get diversionary tactics throughout, as Aaron and Casey—meeting in a sparsely-populated Manhattan bar—are accosted by his ex-GF Allison and best friend Gabe, and her sister Lauren and ex-BFs of her own, along with an annoying waiter and other permutations of the show’s supporting cast.
 
The jokes are plentiful but only fitfully funny in Austin Winsberg’s book, which comprises so many one-liners that, if they were taken out of the show, there wouldn’t be much conversation left. Winsberg also desperately tries to make this pair fully-formed, so Aaron is given a mournful moment about his dead mother and Casey’s gruff exterior armor is gradually chipped away.
 
Director Bill Berry’s swift pace helps, since the clunkier moments—Casey’s gay friend Reggie, who continuously calls to help her end a bad date, gets three “Bailout” interludes, and Aaron’s clichéd Jewish family carries on, Fiddler on the Roof-style, in reaction to a possible shiksa girlfriend—come and go quickly, happily. If Alan Zachary and Michael Weiner’s lyrics alternate cleverness with insipidness, their tunes are pretty much routine pop, with the exception of “I’d Order Love,” the waiter’s old-fashioned showstopper.
 
Making First Date palatable are its charming leads Zachary Levi and Krysta Rodriguez, who transcend the stereotypical nerd and hipster they are forced to play through force of sheer personality. They can also sing: Rodriguez especially has a set of powerful pipes, but never overdoes it a la American Idol. If First Date is mostly disposable, Levi and Rodriguez are anything but.
 
The cast of Harbor (photo: Carol Rosegg)
 

Harbor
playwright Chad Beguelin spends a lot of time trying to make his characters—irresponsible (and pregnant) single mom Donna, her wise-beyond-her-teen-years daughter Lottie, Donna’s immature gay brother Kevin and his husband, architect Ted—so wittily with-it that every comment tumbling out of their mouths is a fully formed epigram or, failing that, a wisecrack. In that, the play shares a lot with many current movies and TV sitcoms in which everyone is improbably smart and cutting with every line of dialogue. The trouble is, it sacrifices plausibility and sympathy for crass humor (“Fag Harbor,” Donna sneers when arriving at Kevin’s beautiful Sag Harbor home).
 
Beguelin’s plot—homeless Donna and Lottie show up on Kevin and Ted’s doorstep in their beaten-up van, and misunderstandings and would-be hilarity ensue—is an excuse to throw these people together and have them toss zingers at one another while they dissect Donna and Kevin’s long-dormant relationship. Director Mark Lamos’ spirited cast keeps a spiffy pace, but with an intermission and running time of two-plus hours, the already slim comedy becomes stretched out of all proportion to its meager rewards.
 

Let It Be

St. James Theatre, 246 West 44th Street, New York, NY

http://letitbebroadway.com

First Date

Longacre Theatre, 220 West 48th Street, New York, NY

http://firstdatethemusical.com

Harbor

59 E 59 Theaters, 59 East 59th Street, New York, NY

http://primarystages.org


Film Review: "Prince Avalanche"

"Prince Avalanche" 
Directed by David Gordon Green
Starring Paul Rudd, Emile Hirsh, Lance LeGault, Joyce Payne
Comedy, Drama
94 Mins
R
 
Prince Avalanche starts slow, aims lows and won't make any dough. It's a pretentious channeling of Terrence Malick, infected with self-importance and devoid of any meaning. Attempts to pull an "Emperor's New Clothes" gag, Green's film openly mocks you if you don't "get it". But it's clear, there is nothing to get here, little to take away and zero to cherish. The equivalent of an imitation Jackson Pollock, this is a festering pile of trash wrapped up with fancy names and presented as craft. From the childish performances to the wandering story, and all along the gimmicky art-house road, this is a bad movie that made me jealous of the people storming out in the middle of it.

To get a grasp on what exactly makes Prince Avalanche so bad, first comprehend what it could have been. The combination of director David Gordon Green (Pineapple Express), Paul Rudd and Emile Hirsch screams comedy gold. Even the trailer presented this as a quirky comedy about two offbeat guys doing goofy things - nothing could be more misleading.

Read more: Film Review: "Prince Avalanche"

August '13 Digital Week II

Blu-rays of the Week

Aftershock and The Demented
(Anchor Bay)
Disaster and horror go together, but these movies show how hard it is to get the balance right. Aftershock turns a real event—the 2010 Chilean earthquake—into an excuse for exploitative violence, including rape, along with a crude ending that makes the title painfully literal.
 
The Demented, a so-so zombie flick, also uses a shockeroo ending—“it was only a dream…or was it?”—to try and distinguish itself from the pack. It doesn’t work. The Blu-ray images look good; Aftershock has featurettes and a commentary.
 
On the Road
(IFC)
Jack Kerouac’s classic “Beat Generation” novel has resisted adaptation since its 1957 publication, and Walter Salles’ honorable failure—from Jose Rivera’s script—shows why.
 
There are some good scenes, and even better casting (Sam Riley is dead-on as Kerouac’s alter ego Sal Paradise, as is Garrett Hedlund as Dean Moriarty), but the jazz-filled atmosphere pervading the book corrodes a movie which, for two hours, never approaches Kerouac’s originality. The hi-def transfer is excellent; some deleted scenes are the extras.
 
Smiley’s People
(Acorn Media)
Alec Guinness dominates this involving BBC adaptation of John Le Carre’s classic spy novel, made in 1982 by director Simon Langton. The second go-round for the “retired” expert, following Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, features superb supporting actors, authentic location shooting and an expansiveness which suits the book’s complexity.
 
Above it all hovers Guinness, whose slightly inscrutable presence makes Smiley endlessly fascinating. The Blu-ray image is good and grainy; lone extra is an interview with the normally reticent Le Carre.
 
Street Trash
(Synapse)
This 1987 cult flick has been resuscitated although, considering its ineptitude, one might ask why. Admittedly, its scenario—a new liquor causes the homeless winos who drink it to literally melt away—is ridiculous, and filmmaker James Muro knows it, so it’s played (mostly) tongue in cheek.
 
Still, that doesn’t excuse the lousy acting, script and directing. Oh well: its fans will find it, at least. The Blu-ray image looks decent; extras include a two-hour retrospective documentary, interviews, commentaries and the original short.
 
West of Memphis
(Sony Classics)
The unfortunate West Memphis Three case—permanently immortalized in the triptych of Paradise Lost films—has been adroitly summarized by director Amy Berg for anyone who hasn’t seen those films or who wants to learn what’s happened since a trio of “devil-worshipping” goth-dressers supposedly murdered three young boys in 1993.
 
It’s straightforward and unsurprising, but its new interviews and footage make it as much a “must-see” as its predecessors. The Blu-ray image looks fine; extras include commentary, deleted scenes, interviews and the Toronto Film Festival press conference with Berg, one of the three, Damien Echols, and one of their celebrity champions, Johnny Depp.
 
What Maisie Knew
(Millennium)
In their modern-day adaptation of Henry James’ story about a young girl who, after her immature parents split up, gradually builds a new life for herself, directors Scott McGhee and David Siegel smartly keep the focus on little Maisie, enacted with unforgettable intensity by newcomer Onata Aprile.
 
The adults are precisely played by Julianne Moore, Steve Coogan, Alexander Skarsgard and Joanna Vanderham, but it’s Aprile who creates an indelible character whose wise-beyond-her-years stratagem is rendered plausibly. The Blu-ray image is excellent; extras include deleted scenes and directors’ commentary.
 
Zombie Massacre
(e one)
More zombies are afoot in this generic horror flick about a soldiers who attempt to ward off a bunch of cretinous undead created after a biological disaster. The main reason for any zombie movie to exist is to come up with new ways of mauling humans and destroying the undead, and there are the usual gory ends for those who can’t enough of it.
 
Otherwise, you’ve been warned: dust off an old copy of any George Romero “dead” flick instead. The Blu-ray image is good; lone extra is a making-of featurette.
 
DVDs of the Week
Community—The Complete 4th Season  
(Sony)
and Political Animals—Complete Mini-Series
(Warners)
The latest season of NBC’s comedy series Community has the same pluses and minuses as the previous three, as genuinely funny banter and characters are balanced by the too-clever school of comedy that’s all the rage; these 13 episodes are inconsistently amusing.
 
The mini-series Political Animals stars Sigourney Weaver as a former First Lady who’s now Secretary of State; it’s too close to current reality to be any more than intermittently dead-on in its satire, despite the cast’s efforts. Community extras are commentaries on all episodes, outtakes, deleted scenes and featurettes; Animals extras are deleted scenes.
 
Cream—Farewell Concert
(Kino)
The musicianship of the fabled supergroup (whose final concert came before its 1968 break up) is unquestioned: guitarist Eric Clapton, bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Ginger Baker are first-class players, and the songs, from the opening “Sunshine of Your Love” to the final “I’m So Glad,” are exhilarating to hear.
 
The film itself, with hilarious narration that “explains” rock music to an audience of what was assumed were idiots, is worth hearing for its insipidness, and band-member interview clips interspersed throughout. The sound never hits that hard despite the 5.1 surround mix, however.
 
Mitchell and Sweet Revenge
(Warner Archive)
These Warner Archives releases resuscitate two forgettable mid-70s action flicks. In 1975’s Mitchell, Joe Don Baker can’t reignite his Walking Tall lightning as a renegade cop; the best scenes are between Mitchell and beautiful Linda Evans as an escort for hire.
 
A young Stockard Channing goes up against a young Sam Waterston in 1976’s Sweet Revenge, Jerry Schatzberg’s by-the-numbers drama about a female car thief and the straitlaced lawyer who enters her life.
 
Old Dog
(Icarus)
Director Pema Tseden’s engaging, thought-provoking drama follows an elderly Tibetan herder who desperately wants to buy back his beloved pet mastiff after his adult son decides that it’s better to sell the valuable animal before he’s stolen and sold for a fortune on the black market.
 
With an effortless documentary realism, Tseden subtly—and even humorously—shows how the pressures of modern society are continually impeding on traditional Tibetan culture.
 
The Thick of It
(BBC Home Entertainment)
Peter Capaldi’s scaldingly comic portrayal of Malcolm Tucker, spin doctor for the British prime minister, is the obvious reason to watch this hilarious BBC series, which begat the still-funny movie In the Loop and less-funny HBO show Veep.
 
Creator Armando Iannucci comes up aces with his cynically witty expose of current politics; his estimable supporting cast notwithstanding, it’s Capaldi’s show all the way, and he runs with it, profanity-laced expletives and all. The seven discs comprise all four seasons and special episodes; extras include commentaries, deleted scenes, outtakes and featurettes.
 
CD of the Week
Bartok—Violin Concertos
(Harmonia Mundi)
Bela Bartok’s two violin concertos are among the 20th century’s masterpieces for solo instrument and orchestra—if not quite up to the level of his three piano concertos—and soloist Isabelle Faust finds, in both works, the folk melodies and the eerie night music of which Bartok was a supreme master.
 
The later, mature Second Concerto sounds brilliant, and Faust and the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra (under conductor Daniel Harding) do the same for the First Concerto—composed 30 years prior—making it nearly as good.

Film Review: "Elysium"

"Elyisum"
Directed by Neill Blomkamp
Starring Matt Damon, Jodie Foster, Sharlto Copley, Alice Braga, Diego Luna, Wagner Moura, William Fichtner and Emma Tremblay
Action, Drama, Sci-Fi
109 Mins
R

At times prone to bluntness, Elysium packs wads of conventional sci-fi action amidst a ravaged view of the future. Nailed together with biting political satire, it's a savage message board that hammers home director Neill Blomkamp's cynical ethos. Offering a glum look at an Earth spoiled by overpopulation and rampant authoritarianism, Blomkamp has perfected his signature sardonic voice and here uses his ruminations on wealth inequality as entertaining, and meaningful, ammunition.

Expanding on the political edge he utilized in District 9, here Blomkamp shifts from apartheid to global health, convicting the duplicitous members of the elite for their crimes against humanity as a whole. As much a pot-shot at the one percent as a sci-fi actioner, this caliber of blockbuster is of the rare intellectual breed, emboldened by Blomkamp's knack for world building. Overflowing with sly wit and stylish cinematography, Elysium is a meaningful addition to a genre that is as much about prognosticating events to come as it is about action.

Read more: Film Review: "Elysium"

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