Tag: moulin-rouge

  • The ‘Moulin Rouge!’ Musical Looks Insane — and Awesome

    The ‘Moulin Rouge!’ Musical Looks Insane — and Awesome

    Moulin Rouge! The Musical/YouTube

    Baz Luhrmann‘s trippy, trailblazing musical “Moulin Rouge!” made waves when it hit theaters back in 2001, thanks to its anachronistic soundtrack, flamboyant production design, brash, quirky characters, and general bonkers vibe. The upcoming Broadway adaptation aims to recapture that magic, and a new trailer for the show makes it clear that the live version will indeed feature all of those things — seemingly cranked up to 11.

    This latest clip — dubbed “TRUTH!” in a nod to the bohemians’ core beliefs of truth, beauty, freedom, and love — features lovesick penniless writer Christian (Aaron Tveit) dipping into a bottle of absinthe with artist Toulouse-Lautrec (Sahr Ngaujah) and generally getting into all kinds of shenanigans with his fellow bohemians and the performers of the Moulin Rouge.

    There’s also a tender moment between Christian and Satine (Karen Olivo), the star of the Moulin Rouge who also happens to be a courtesan. It looks like that latter job title will once again cause trouble for the lovers, as we get a glimpse of the nefarious Duke (Tam Mutu) offering Satine some money. And yes, the bombastic, fantastic “El Tango de Roxanne” will be featured in the stage version, too.

    It all looks so incredibly crazy and delightful, and we can’t wait to see how it plays out on stage. Tickets are now on sale for “Moulin Rouge! The Musical,” with Broadway previews beginning this summer. More information can be found here.

  • The 15 Greatest Movie Musicals of the Last 20 Years

    The 15 Greatest Movie Musicals of the Last 20 Years

  • Ewan McGregor Almost Froze His Face Off for ‘Fargo’ Season 3

    FARGO -- Year 3 -- Pictured: Ewan McGregor as Ray Stussy. CR: Chris Large/FXEven an actor of Fargo.” But doing it in the voices of two distinct characters? That’s another kettle’a fish, donchaknow?

    Taking on his first major television role, McGregor headlines the third season of FX and creator Noah Hawley‘s critically acclaimed Midwestern noir series spun out of the beloved 1996 Coen brothers film — and just to nudge the bar a notch higher, he’s playing two far-from-identical brothers: handsome, successful business Ray Stussy, who saved his company’s fortunes but found himself entangled in some not-so-legal paypack; and balding, scraping-by Emmit Stussy, whose desire to settle a lingering score with his brother leads him into a potboiler of a plot involving theft and murder.

    As he gathered with a small group of reporters, McGregor revealed that landing that distinctive regional dialect was job one, “The challenge is, first of all, to master that accent, which is really very, very difficult — it’s a very strange accent to lock into!” says McGregor. “I sort of wish that I was coming at it from an American accent as opposed to from a Scottish one. It’s the hardest accent I’ve ever done — and I did Dutch once in something! I thought that was quite hard, but this is worse!”

    “Also it’s very familiar, it’s an accent that everybody we know from the movie and from Season 1 and 2, so our audience’s ear is attuned to it. Anyway, it’s a challenge, and then within that accent to try to find Ray’s voice and Emmit’s voice obviously not to be the same. So there’s lots to play with here, which is great.”

    While the storyline was still top secret, McGregor revealed even more of the behind-the-scenes tidbits, including acting opposite himself, the difference between how he and another Obi-Wan actor tackle multiple characters, and the other tricky accent for a recent role that left him burning the candle at both ends.

    Are there a lot of occasions where you do act with yourself?

    Ewan McGregor: There will be scenes where Emmit and Ray are in the same scene. At this point, I don’t know how many … They’ve made it as easy as it could be, in that we’ve cast an actor to be Ray, and another actor to be Emmit. When I’m Ray, I act with an actor who’s playing Ray. So we can shoot over his shoulder. They’ve cast it very well, and the makeup and hair department, and wardrobe department, make him look very like me. So we’re able to use over his shoulder. Then we have another actor.

    This is actually really helpful. So when I’m Ray, I’m looking at a guy who looks like Emmit, and when I’m Emmit, I’m looking at a guy who looks like Ray. They’re good actors, so that’s really all I need. Then I’m acting with somebody, so when we cut back and forward, it should work. In my experience in the other two projects, it can work very well.

    Is there double pay involved?

    I missed that one, actually! I tell you what there is, there’s double the learning. “Fargo’s” quite wordy. Like I said, we’re going to be shooting an episode, an hour, in eight days. There’s a lot of learning involved. Also, because [of the way] “Fargo” is written, nobody finishes a sentence, it’s very broken up, and it’s very particular. And if you don’t learn it exactly, it doesn’t sound right. It’s like a monster learning. I’m either working, or I’m at home learning lines.FARGO -- Year 3 -- Pictured (l-r): Michael Stuhlbarg as Sy Feltz, Ewan McGregor as Emmit Stussy. CR: Chris Large/FXAlec Guinness is one of the great masters of playing multiple characters, and you, of course, share a sort of an acting bond with him.

    Yes, I do!

    Did you look at his work and how he did it to get a sense?

    No, I think you have to look inward at the character. You’re looking from the inside out. I think Alec always used to start with the shoes. That’s the legend, is he used to find the character’s shoes first, and work from there up. I try to find the soul of the character. So my focus is very much on who these two people are, and their interesting story with each other.

    What was it about Season 3 of “Fargo” that you said, “Yes, I’m going to commit to a full season of TV right now”?

    The writing is so very good. The flavor of it is exactly what I want to be doing. I really enjoyed watching them. I ventured into television before. I made a pilot with HBO for Franzen’s novel “The Corrections,” which they decided not to make. As a film actor, that’s when I made my decision to go into television. And they didn’t pick it up, so it didn’t happen. Since then, I’ve been just keeping my eyes open as to what’s around.

    And it is interesting to come into something in its third season. But in a way, it’s because the first two seasons were so very good. It’s quite tempting. I know and trust the writing and the creators, because Noah Hawley is an extraordinary man, an extraordinary writer and director. And I can look at his work and see that it’s really good.

    These two characters are very appealing to me, and the other cast members. It’s great to be with this bunch of actors.

    The structure of “Fargo” is such that you won’t likely come back for a fourth season, or, if you do, it’s for a brief moment. So do you want to pursue finding other TV projects in the future?

    I think now, you’re looking for the right work. You’re looking for the work that satisfies you. The work that you feel reflects you as an actor. It doesn’t matter. It doesn’t really matter what it is anymore. I’ve sort of danced between theater and film, and will absolutely now make that between feature film and television.

    I directed — there’s something about my experiencing of having directed a film, and then watch it go into the cinema, and disappear. I think it’s not a coincidence I’m doing television right now, somehow, in the way the planets have lined up.

    You shot in Calgary during the winter. How’d that hit you?

    I think below minus-40 is when things become inoperable. But anything up to there is fair play, I think … It’s good. It’s not miserable. It’s really beautiful, the countryside up there. The temperature is extreme, but it’s not like standing in the rain in Glasgow for four hours. In a way, that’s worse. I don’t know why.

    Minus-20, when it’s blue skies and snow, it’s not too bad. It’s a funny feeling when you come out of your trailer or out of your house in the morning, on your face. Like, I walked a couple of blocks one day, and I thought maybe I was doing something permanently bad to my face, it was so cold. It started feeling weird, and my eyes were going a bit weird. I thought I might be doing myself permanent damage. So I jumped into a shop to let my face thaw.

    We finally saw you in a musical again with “Beauty and the Beast.” Why did you decide to return to the musical genre?

    Just because I was never offered one after “Moulin Rouge!” I went on stage doing “Guys and Dolls” in London in the West End for six months after “Moulin Rouge!” And then I was never offered another one!

    But there’s not many around to be honest. I had hoped, and I thought, after “Moulin Rouge!” came out, and then there was a great musical movie called “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” that came out around the same time. I felt a combination of “Moulin Rouge!” and “Hedwig” might be the start of a new musical cinema.

    Then the next thing that happened was “Chicago,” which was very much a film version of the stage play, which wasn’t pushing the musical into a new area, like “Hedwig” had done. It just didn’t sort of materialize. I don’t know why. Now of course with “La La Land,” that might do it. I don’t know.

    Would you be open to doing another one?

    I love it. I’m a musical person. I love music and I love singing and dancing. It’s very much in my wheelhouse. Expressing yourself through song is a very effective way. If you sing I love you to someone, with a full orchestra behind you, it’s very powerful. It’s hard to get that feeling by just saying the words, although we try to. So I’d be totally up for it, yeah. I hope that that happens.Lumiere, the candelabra in Disney's BEAUTY AND THE BEAST, a live-action adaptation of the studio's animated classic which is a celebration of one of the most beloved stories ever told.What was the fun of bringing Lumiere — a character that’s iconic in animation — to life, and figuring out how you were going to personify that essence.

    I never think about whose done it before. The only time I would have done that before I suppose is “Star Wars.” I had to think about that because I was trying to play Alec Guinness as a younger man. Or on stage playing Iago in “Othello” — of course that’s been done before. But the last thing you do is think about is who did it, how they did it before. You’re trying to find your version of it.

    I was in very good hands with Bill Condon, the director, and I didn’t think very much about it. I just did it. Partly that was interesting because I had to do a French accent. I’ve been married to a French woman for 22 years and my house is full of French every day. My kids all speak French, only to their mother, and I find it very difficult to do. I rather arrogantly thought I’d be able to do this French accent without doing very much work, and when I tried to do it, I didn’t do it very well.

    What I did was I came back to it afterwards and rerecorded the whole thing again with Bill Condon in a studio. So we had two shots at it and we improved it. By that time, I’d got a handle on my French accent. Then singing, I got a chance to sing of course “Be Our Guest,” the big musical number. And singing in French, again, was fun. I did that twice, too, because I hadn’t been in a recording studio for a long time. I was in a recording studio in London when we recorded the song for the first time.

    That was an enormous amount of pressure I felt. I’d only just arrived. I was jet-lagged from LA. I got off a plane one day, and the next day, I was in the recording studio. It’s very nerve-wrecking recording because you’re in a quiet room and through the glass there’s people who are looking at you and they speak to each other and you can’t hear them. In this instance, there was like 50 people in there, and I was standing, jet-lagged, alone, trying to sing in a French accent this big number.

    Every time I stopped they would go, “OK, Ewan. Hang on.” I became terribly scared that they were going, “What the f*ck are we going to do with him?” We did it, and it was fine. Then I asked Bill, I said, “Look, when we’re working on the dialogue next time, can I have another shot at it?” So we went just privately, me and him and a few people in New York, and we recorded it a second time.

  • ‘Moulin Rouge!’ Is Finally Being Made Into a Stage Musical

    This Spectacular Spectacular news is long overdue! “Moulin Rouge!” arrived on screen in 2001, looking and sounding like a film adaptation of a hit Broadway musical. But no, it was Baz Luhrmann‘s cinematic vision, as brought to life by Nicole Kidman and Ewan McGregor as star-crossed lovers.

    Now the eight-time Oscar nominee is finally being developed into a stage musical. The news was announced Thursday by Global Creatures, although fans have to wait for details on the timeline, opening, and how they can-can-can get tickets.
    According to The Hollywood Reporter, Alex Timbers will direct the production, featuring a book by screenwriter and playwright John Logan. Baz Luhrmann, who directed, produced, and co-wrote the original film, offered a statement on the new stage show:

    “I first encountered Alex Timbers through the remarkable and inventive production of ‘Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson’ and the brilliance of ‘Here Lies Love.’ I immediately recognized the young director’s creative spirit and felt we shared similar sensibilities and instincts. So I’m tremendously happy to celebrate that ‘Moulin Rouge!’ will be under his direction and that the book will be the creation of the gifted Tony Award-winning playwright John Logan whose writing I also admire deeply. It’s immensely gratifying to know that a new wave of artists will be leading ‘Moulin Rouge!’ into its rightful theatrical realm.”

    It only took, what, 15 years and counting? Come what may, we know it will be amazing!

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  • Top Rated Movies From the ’00s

    The Dark KnightThe 2000s were a great decade for movies. They saw the emergence of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and the rebirth of the movie musical. It was a decade when unconventional genres like science fiction and fantasy took home the Oscar for Best Picture. And it was a decade that had directors pushing the boundaries of what the medium can do. So what movies stand out as benchmark moments? Read on to find out.

    The ‘Lord of the Rings’ Trilogy (2001 – 2003)

    It’s impossible to single out one film from director Peter Jackson‘s adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien’s epic, so let’s pretend “The Fellowship of the Ring,” “The Two Towers,” and “The Return of the King” add up to one nine-hour-long movie. Many had thought “LOTR” to be impossible to capture on film, but Jackson’s love for the source material is evident in every frame. He transformed New Zealand into Middle Earth and brought it to life in exquisite detail, creating gorgeous sets and breathtaking action sequences. The casting is perfect, from Ian McKellen‘s gruff but warm Gandalf to Viggo Mortensen‘s noble Aragorn to Sean Astin‘s devoted Samwise Gamgee. “The Return of the King” took home 11 Oscars in 2004, and it was obvious that it was the Academy’s way of rewarding the entire trilogy as a masterpiece.

    ‘Moulin Rouge’ (2001)

    As a genre, the movie musical was at death’s door until Baz Luhrmann shocked it back to life with his spectacular “Moulin Rouge.” A retelling of the Orpheus myth, “Moulin Rouge” follows starry-eyed young writer Christian (Ewan McGregor) as he descends into the Bohemian underground of Paris and falls in love with Satine (Nicole Kidman), the sparkling diamond of the Moulin Rouge nightclub. “Moulin Rouge” is full of razzle-dazzle as it captures the atmosphere of the club with opulent costumes and dizzying camera work. But it was the way “Moulin Rouge” relied on well-known pop songs to convey the emotions of the characters that clicked with audiences. You’ll never listen to “Roxanne” the same way again.

    ‘Finding Nemo’ (2003)

    Pixar’s fourth film, “Finding Nemo,” took the studio to a whole new level. The story of a father clownfish searching for his son who was caught by fishermen, “Finding Nemo” struck the perfect balance in appealing to both kids and parents. For the kids, you have the cute sea turtles and the irrepressible Dory, voiced to perfection by Ellen DeGeneres. For the parents, you have a poignant tale of a parent’s desperate need to protect his child, no matter what the cost. Just hope its sequel, “Finding Dory,” captures the magic of the original.

    ‘Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind’ (2004)

    Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” a bittersweet romantic drama, explores the concept of completely erasing someone from your memory. Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet are Joel and Clementine, a couple that recently went through a painful breakup. When Joel learns that Clementine has undergone a procedure that erased him from her memory, he endeavors to to do the same. However, once the treatment begins, Joel realizes he doesn’t want to give up his memories, sending him and his memory version of Clementine on a trippy journey through his brain. Equally absurd and poignant, “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” is a meditation on relationships and the choices we make when we love someone. “Meet me in Montauk …”

    ‘The Dark Knight’ (2008)

    Batman Begins” was all well and good, but director Christopher Nolan truly blew the world’s collective mind with “The Dark Knight.” Fanboys initially rallied against the casting of Heath Ledger as the Joker, but Ledger proved them all wrong, turning in a brilliant performance that netted him every supporting actor award of the season and became the defining moment of his tragically short career. The sheer amount of life Ledger poured into the role was made all the more potent after his tragic passing in January 2008. Ledger’s untimely death may have brought more attention to “The Dark Knight,” but the movie stands on its own, packed with thrilling action sequences, tense standoffs, and ruminations on what it means to be a hero. Many would argue that it’s the greatest superhero movie of all time — and it’s hard to disagree.

    ‘The Hangover’ (2009)

    What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas, right? “The Hangover” chronicles a bachelor party gone wrong, as three friends (Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, and Zach Galifianakis) wake up after a wild night in Vegas with no memory of what transpired the night before. As they retrace their steps trying to find the missing groom (Justin Bartha), they discover just what happened on their wild night. “The Hangover” is one of those lightning in a bottle type of movies that no one sees coming. It was a mix of the perfect cast, the perfect story, and the perfect amount of raunchy humor that made it connect with audiences.

    Sources

  • 22 Must-See Movies From Australian Filmmakers

    %Slideshow-359717%In honor of Australia Day (Jan. 26), let’s take a moment and pay homage to the great movies (and directors and actors) who’ve come our way from Down Under since the renaissance in Australian film that began four decades ago.

    It’s been a lot more than “shrimp on the barbie” cliches, austere Outback landscapes, and quirky ABBA-loving city folk. Though there have been a lot of all those things as well. If you need a primer on the glories of modern Aussie cinema, you should start with these 22 essential films.