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Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?- Page 2

Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?

WiCkEDrOcKS Profile Photo
WiCkEDrOcKS
#25Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/19/13 at 10:37pm

It's a good musical. And a terrible film.

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GavestonPS
#26Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/19/13 at 10:42pm

I'll say this much for the stage show: giving most of the musical numbers to the women saves the piece from being a mere indulgence of Guido's narcissism.

But, frankly, I was bored to death in Act II until "Getting Tall". And then I was laughing out loud.

Since I had very low expectations, I didn't mind the film so much.

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GlindatheGood22
#27Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/19/13 at 10:45pm

I really dislike Guido in the movie. I feel the same way about Carla. Does she attempt to kill herself in the musical?

For what it's worth, I love the Chicago movie.


I know you. I know you. I know you.

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Mr Roxy
#28Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/19/13 at 10:48pm

Chicago is far superior although I was not thrilled they cut a few key songs & shortened Mr Cellophane


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trentsketch
#29Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/19/13 at 11:38pm

I thought the movie had its moments. Judi Dench and Marion Cotillard did well on their solo numbers. I really liked Cinema Italiano because that meant they at least tried to explain the context of a Guido-like superstar director to a modern audience. Daniel Day Lewis was horribly miscast and I don't understand how the story was rewritten or the chosen songs selected for the film.

The stage musical is stunning when the cast and approach is right. It is a slower, quieter piece but I dig it. A big part of what the movie missed was the utter desperation of Guido by the end. There was never any danger in the film like their is in the stage show.

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tazber
#30Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/20/13 at 6:25am

Brilliant musical. As someone said, one of the greats.

The movie is a strange animal. It's not really meant to be a recreation of the musical but rather something closer to the original 8 1/2, but with a few songs.

And it kind of works in that framework.

But the issue is, why bother making a movie of the musical at all? If you're going to jettison at least half the score, including many sequences that made the theatrical version so thrilling, what's the point?

Also, the movie cast butchered what few songs they did retain (except Fergie and Cruz).

Having said that, I absolutely love the movie's Overture Delle Donne and Be Italian. I often pop in the BD just to watch those two songs.

As a Yeston fan however, even I have to say that Cinema Italiano is an awful song (but props to Hudson for rocking the sh*t of it) and Take It All is sub-par at best.

Oh, one last thought: Penelope Cruz was amazing. Very deserving of her Oscar nomination.



....but the world goes 'round
Updated On: 11/20/13 at 06:25 AM

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henrikegerman
#31Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/20/13 at 7:21am

" really dislike Guido in the movie. I feel the same way about Carla. Does she attempt to kill herself in the musical? "

Unless I've completely blacked it out, Carla does not try to kill herself in the musical. Carla - a heartbreaking Sandra Milo - does try to kill herself in 8 1/2.

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Huey's Pop
#32Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/20/13 at 10:46am

I've listened to the OCR at least 50 times. And I never get tired of it -- still discovering nuances.

The play is good, the movie is ecch, but the music is enthrawling.

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newintown
#33Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/20/13 at 10:55am

Nine is one of the best musicals of the late 20th Century, a brilliant work of art. But, like many ultra-theatrical pieces of theatre, it was done in by the literalness of the American screen.

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jnthnxlent
#34Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/20/13 at 11:05am

I tend to go along with the general opinion of critics 9 out of 10 times because if that many people say something is really bad there must be something truly wrong with it. That being said I really enjoyed the movie Nine and don't understand the harsh treatment its been getting form all sides. It was my first exposure to the musical and I enjoyed the music and performances very much. A lot of actors that I really love are in this movie and I thought that they did a good job. The story was fairly cleat and the cinematography was really really nice. Not having seen the play on stage unfortunately I may not have the expectations others have had but I really did like this film.


SHOW SCHEDULE: 2009: Phantom of the Opera(***1/2), 2010: HAIR(*****), Sondheim on Sondheim(***), HAIR(*****), A Little Night Music(****), A Little Night Music (after reopening)x2(*****), Chicago(*), Mrs. Warren's Profession[09/09/10](***), American Idiot [9/17/2010](*****), Brief Encounter [9/24/2010](****), Lombardi [09/30/2010](****), American Idiot [10/20/2010], Bloody Bloody AJ [10/28/2010](****), Time Stands Still [11/03/2010](****), The 39 Steps [11/11/2010] (***1/2)

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broadway86
#35Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/20/13 at 11:12am

Great musical, very lackluster movie.

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best12bars
#36Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/20/13 at 11:24am

Aren't there three million threads about this? I know I've commented on at least two million of them. Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?

The movie has some great moments. Next time you watch it, cut that first (horribly morose) scene from the beginning of the film where Guido tells you about his "art." It's so heavy-handed and sets the wrong tone right away.

Start the movie with the Overture, and the whole thing plays a lot better. Not perfect, but much better (lighter, more appropriate).

Daniel Day-Lewis is still miscast, as wonderful an actor as he is. He can't find the humor in Guido, which is essential to keeping that role likable and sympathetic. He has to laugh first at himself before the rest of us laugh, or he is dead in the water.

The tone and the leading man are the missteps.

Most of the numbers are fine, some of them great, but they gutted way too much of the score.

The problem is that the entire story takes place in Guido's mind, not just the musical moments or certain scenes. This is a "life flashing before his eyes" during his lowest point of midlife crisis. It only works if the whole thing is surreal, not segregated musical numbers inside a Roman ruins playground on a sound stage. The entire movie should be the cinematic playground of his mind.

They tried a few times to suggest it was in his mind with his mother appearing and some of the chorus girls showing up at odd moments. But those instances were few and far between.

Anyway, I still find much to like about it. Not a great film, but not a total failure either.

As for the stage show, the original was brilliant, and the revival was good. The music really is the star of the show, so it was a bit of a crime to cut so much of it from the movie.

And I don't think Rob Marshall was the problem. He didn't write the script. The screenplay was/is the problem. It should have incorporated more of the musical sequences and songs. And Robert Downey Jr. is the only movie star I can think of right now who could have pulled off Guido successfully.

So give Marshall a new screenplay and new leading man, and let Judi Dench actually play a French producer (her accent was great!), and I think it would have been a brilliant movie.


"Jaws is the Citizen Kane of movies."
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Updated On: 11/20/13 at 11:24 AM

Roscoe
#37Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/20/13 at 11:46am

It is a mediocre musical that profited from a splendid original production from Tommy Tune, which wisely adhered to Fellini's warmer comic tone. The film is an abomination, for many reasons: miscast from top to bottom and re-written for the screen (by the abominable Anthony Minghella, among others) in such a way as to leech all energy joy and fun from the proceedings, really unforgiveably in a film derived from a musical based on a particularly joyous Fellini film, and Rob Marshall's direction doesn't help matters any.





"If they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about the answers." Thomas Pynchon, GRAVITY'S RAINBOW "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." Philip K. Dick My blog: http://www.roscoewrites.blogspot.com/
Updated On: 11/20/13 at 11:46 AM

Roscoe
#38Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/20/13 at 11:49am

"Carla - a heartbreaking Sandra Milo - does try to kill herself in 8 1/2. "

Is it a suicide attempt? I seem to remember she just gets terribly sick from drinking too much of the spa's mineral water.


"If they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about the answers." Thomas Pynchon, GRAVITY'S RAINBOW "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." Philip K. Dick My blog: http://www.roscoewrites.blogspot.com/

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BwayGeek2
#39Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/20/13 at 1:00pm

Not a fan of the movie, but the musical is beautiful!

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jv92
#40Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/22/13 at 9:04pm

See, aside from Bennett's brilliant staging of DREAMGIRLS, I don't get why people love the show itself. It's a bloated soap opera with some catchy pastiche songs and truly awful lyrics.

Tune and Bennett were in the same predicament Fosse and Bennett were in back in 1975. Fosse was "King of Broadway" and came in with a slickly staged extravaganza (with far better material than DREAMGIRLS, however) and Bennett surprised everyone by using actors, a bare stage, and some mirrors to create theatrical magic. In 1982, Bennett had his slick "I'm the God of Director-Choreographers" show come into town and Tommy Tune caught him and New York by surprise by making theatrical magic with very little but actors, a great score, and white blocks.

Tune had his "slick" moment in 1991, but by then Bennett was dead, and the next crop of masterminds were likely sick with or victims of AIDS. But gosh, I would love a new Tommy Tune musical on Broadway soon!

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BobNC
#41Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/23/13 at 1:02pm

"Nine" was without a doubt the best musical I have ever seen -- and I've seen nearly everyone since the 70s. I am referring to OBC. The Banderras revival and the film pale in comparison.

jemjeb2
#42Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/24/13 at 1:54pm

Now I feel so wrong to have liked the movie and Daniel Day-Lewis in it. I loved the opening number, the cast and the whole damn movie! There I said it. - but (oops) I never saw the original musical or listened to the score - so I guess I missed something superior.

Mattbrain
#43Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 11/24/13 at 4:36pm

No, jem, like what you wanna like. But to say the original show is worth a look is an understatement.


Butters, go buy World of Warcraft, install it on your computer, and join the online sensation before we all murder you. --Cartman: South Park ATTENTION FANS: I will be played by James Barbour in the upcoming musical, "BroadwayWorld: The Musical."

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gypsy101
#44Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 12/4/14 at 6:09am

With the advent of Into the Woods and Rob Marshall (seemingly) returning to the light side, I've been thinking a lot about his other work, specifically Nine. I first became obsessed with the score of Nine in 2008 (when I was 16) through the fantastic 2003 Broadway revival recording (which is still my favorite of the 5 recordings I own, despite everyone's accents). I'd never seen the show but I could tell that it must be absolutely fantastic on stage -- it wasn't till later that I learned all about the Tony's and how successful the original production was, beating Dreamgirls and all that, so when I heard later that same year that the film was being made by the director of Chicago, I was thrilled. Obviously when I went to see it on Christmas day, my expectations were thoroughly dashed and I was thoroughly depressed about the whole experience. Where were all the fantastic songs (including the title song)? Where was the musical within the musical? Why was Nicole Kidman there? Why didn't Guido Contini even start to make a movie??? There were many questions running through my mind, the least of which was the question of characters with their ethnicities all messed up from the original; was Judi Dench French or British? Penelope Cruz Spanish or Italian? It's like these characters didn't know what continent they were from and they didn't want us to know either.
So all these five years later after that fiasco, I have only seen the film one more time: late 2011, I got it from the library to see it again with my own eyes...I hadn't been so into the musical lately, so maybe it would be better out of its shadow? It definitely wasn't so thoroughly depressing as the first time. It was just a poorly thought out production. Like Robert Marshall didn't really know what Nine was, which is ironic given the parallels with his life. The cast still isn't right, and probably it was a film that never should have been made in the first place; a movie based on a musical based on a movie? What is this, Hairspray? Movies based on musicals from the 80's have become the thing the last few years, with Les Mis, Dreamgirls, Phantom of the Opera, and Into the Woods all joining Nine, all in controversial adaptations (the only spectacular one so far being Dreamgirls, in my opinion). I have high hopes that this Christmas day doesn't repeat the doom of the one 5 years ago.


"Contentment, it seems, simply happens. It appears accompanied by no bravos and no tears."
Updated On: 12/4/14 at 06:09 AM

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AnthonyB
#45Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 12/4/14 at 7:58am

I agree with WiCkEDrOcKS. It's just (dissapointingly) a REALLY BAD film

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Mister Matt
#46Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 12/4/14 at 9:21am

a movie based on a musical based on a movie? What is this, Hairspray?

Not sure what that has to do with anything, but A Little Night Music did it before Hairspray. Do you believe that if a musical is adapted from any other source that it would somehow be better adapted for film? Nine was a poorly conceived film adaptation. It's not the first nor will it be the last. But it had nothing to do with the source for the Broadway musical.


"What can you expect from a bunch of seitan worshippers?" - Reginald Tresilian

Whileshesleeps
#47Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 12/4/14 at 9:36am

Whilst the movie did butcher many of the fantastic songs and have the feel of a story with songs it certainly did improve upon the story line and characterisation. Like the movie but don't love it, but then I didn't like what was done to Chicago. I thought the 2 new songs were great, but much of the comedy from the musical is lost. However it was beautifully shot and I thought all the leads were great, maybe not Broadway singers but great actors. Well done for having the guts to try to radically retell the story, but not at the expense of losing some many excellent songs.
Having seen the London staging at (which the Broadway revival was based) but on a much more limited budget and smaller cast the simplicity of staging was what sold the show and drew the audience in.

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Mister Matt
#48Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 12/4/14 at 10:31am

Well done for having the guts to try to radically retell the story, but not at the expense of losing some many excellent songs.

That statement seems to contradict itself. The way he wanted to retell the story was to remove most of the music and restructure the narrative, so I don't know why the courage to do so would be deserving of praise. Any film director would have to rethink the musical because it was specifically conceived for the stage. Marshall's product just leaves us wondering why he wanted to direct a film adaptation of it at all.


"What can you expect from a bunch of seitan worshippers?" - Reginald Tresilian

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Jeffrey Karasarides
#49Is Nine a Bad Musical or Just a Bad Movie?
Posted: 12/4/14 at 10:56am

"Movies based on musicals from the 80's have become the thing the last few years, with Les Mis, Dreamgirls, Phantom of the Opera, and Into the Woods all joining Nine, all in controversial adaptations (the only spectacular one so far being Dreamgirls, in my opinion)."

We could also be seeing Cats & Miss Saigon someday on the big screen.

And I thought Les Miz was amazing.