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Showing posts with label Les Miserables. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Les Miserables. Show all posts

Sunday, 24 February 2013

Oscar Best Picture Rundown #7:

 LINCOLN
When recounting the synopsis of each nominee, it’d be easy to assume Lincoln has won this race already; a grandiose focus on American president Abraham Lincoln – played by two-time winner, Daniel Day-Lewis – and his plan to both abolish slavery and end the Civil War, directed by Steven Spielberg. The screenplay cleverly encapsulates just a few months of the President’s life, meaning tension is squeezed out of a renowned historical turning point in America’s history, directed with a detached skill by one of the world's most famous directors. It's epic (in length) and oh-so talky... a true actor's film rather than a cinematic experience.

Will it win?
Let me put it this way; if Argo doesn’t win, Lincoln will. It sounds like a sitter. Day-Lewis is a shoo-in for Best Actor (him and Anne Hathaway for Les Mis can sit very tight tonight,) and Spielberg will be providing close battle in the Directing category – but the Academy seems to be favouring underdogs this year - well, in the nominations, at least. My call is that Lincoln won’t be winning half as much as everybody first expected it to, perhaps providing the biggest upset of the ceremony.


My Guess: Big shout, but nothing other than Best Actor for Daniel Day-Lewis 
Film: 4/5 
Chances of Winning: 4/5


Read my Lincoln review here

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Oscar Best Picture Rundown #5

LES MISÉRABLES 
A film adaptation of mammoth musical Les Miserables (itself an adaptation of the Victor Hugo novel,) directed by a previous Oscar winner (The King’s Speech’s Tom Hooper) was always going to bait the Academy. Throw in the mixer the fact that this is the ‘first’ film to have had its actors sing on-set live (to this scale, anyway,) and the blistering performances – namely from the deadest cert of the night, Anne Hathaway (she’ll scoop Best Supporting Actress.)

Will it win?
This is the strange thing – no. It isn’t even deemed a frontrunner. In a year where Lincoln, Zero Dark Thirty, and now Argo, have been firmly fixed on everybody’s lips, Les Misérables has been largely ignored. In a sense, this means good ‘ole Les Mis could pose a threat – but it probably won’t. Hooper missing out on a Director nomination for a film directed better than the one he won for pretty much confirms this. This doesn't stop me having a strange feeling about it though.
Film: 4/5
Chances of Winning: 3/5 


Read my Les Misérables review here

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Thursday, 17 January 2013

Les Misérables

2012, 12, Directed by Tom Hooper
Starring: Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe, Eddie Redmayne, Anne Hathaway, Samantha Barks, Amanda Seyfried, Helena Bonham Carter, Sacha Baron Cohen, Aaron Tveit   



Usually, you find that people don't tend to like Les Misérables, the theatre sensation seen by over 60 million people across 42 countries... they unconditionally love it; an unthinkably tough undertaking then for Tom Hooper (looking for another King's Speech-sized hit) who has been potentially disastrously tasked with applying the Claude-Michel Schönberg, Alain Boublil and Herbert Kretzmer pinnacle of all musicals to cinemas. If that wasn’t pressure enough, Hooper has opted to shoot his subjects singing as the action transpires – in other words, live. Three cheers for none of that distracting miming! This does mean the film requires – due to this bold directorial decision (something of a revelation for a film this big) - actors who can actually hold notes. 

The story, for those not included in the hefty stats mentioned above, tracks prisoner Jean Valjean, first seen lugging warships from the ocean alongside thousands of his fellows. Prison guard Javert releases him on parole, but Valjean skips town and 8 years later, is an established factory owner in the town he has become mayor of. But through an encounter with factory worker Fantine, struggling to fend for her illegitimate daughter Cosette, he happens upon a chance encounter with Javert, who swore 8 years previous to one day bring the escaped convict to justice. Fans know this is the tip of a very large and loud iceberg – bear in mind, the musical’s source material is Victor Hugo's five-volumed brick of a novel – but at its heart, Les Misérables is Valjean’s story, a moral man who fears his petty villainy of the past may threaten whatever happiness he aspires to reach. Hugh Jackman plays the man, showcasing this moral crisis through the emotion-layered vocals. A much-loved character in theatre, Jackman won't be to everybody's taste as Valjean, but what he adds to the role in this different medium amounts to breathtaking; a career best, even. He is backed up by a supporting cast of individuals who each grab their moment when it presents itself, Anne Hathaway the one on most people’s lips. Her Oscar-winning (c'mon, she's a dead cert!) portrayal of Fantine may be brief but it lingers throughout the film, her effect on Valjean's life echoed through the lingering lyrics of the hugely enjoyable, and bloody catchy, songs. Russell Crowe's performance should do enough to put a full stop to all the critical comments undeservedly hurled his way - as Javert, he seems humbled and contained; a welcome screen presence whenever he rides his horse into the frame. The remainder are all able: Amanda Seyfried (the film's weakest addition, as Cosette,) Eddie Redmayne (the singing student revolutionist, Marius,) and plucked from the stage in her first screen role, Samantha Barks (she doesn't so much become Éponine as use her to showcase a burdgeoning film career ahead of the actress.)  Mention must go to the Thénadiers AKA Helena Bonham Carter and Sacha Baron Cohen rollicking around amongst all the doom and gloom in their crazy garb. In what could have been a serious bout of scene-stealing, it's a disappointment that the flamboyant pair (especially the former) underplay it as much as they do. 

At 158 minutes, it's no wonder that Les Misérables threatens to become a slog - but the fact it evades this ensures Tom Hooper's adaptation is the resounding success it deserves to be. The cast do all they can without going overboard, and the merging of the epic visuals and contrasting close-ups, filled with much more than your daily dose of falling tears, clenched jaws and warbling throats hits the right level of entertainment - theatre die-hard or hesitant boyfriend; plenty here for all to sit back and enjoy. 

Once the climax rolls by, regardless of whether that lump has formed in your throat or not, you'll have to fight the irrepressible urge to stand and applaud the cinematic experience that has just been offered to you. You will hear the people sing, alright.

4/5


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