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Let me just say that Ewan McGregor is the luckest man alive. First he gets to be a Jedi Knight...Ole' Ben no less...In Episode One. And here, he gets to get all naked and intimate with Nicole Kidman. Damn you Ewan! DAMN YOU! I can't stress how perfect Kidman looks here. That ivory skin! Thouse blue eyes. The flaming red hair atop a leggy, more-curves-then-a-curvy-place bod. And she can sing...really well..well enough so that one word pushed past though glossy red lips is enough to melt me into a warm little puddle. Lastly, let me just finish this before I get my raving all over you, this is NOT a movie for everyone. Particullary people who go into sezuires easily or like movies to be soft and quite. It's loud and frantic and the editor seems to have downed a few dozzen Mochacenios before getting to work. It's not perfect, the climax of the movie seems to come 10 mintues before the movie ends, and one song number...a rendetion of "like a Virgin" just comes off as very wrong. However, it's worth it to see something I'm sure no one has seen without the use of powerful drugs, a musical surrealist movie decked in techicolor dream blasts with enough soundtrack and laughs to kill most people. If none of this makes sense, it will after you see the movie.
Moulin Rouge begins with a vision of what MTV would be if (1) it broadcasted in the 19th century, and (2) had an entire producing team on serious mind-altering drugs. The first section has so little dialogue, and is entirely composed of loud music, sweeping camera shots, and lavish dance numbers. After twenty or so minutes, the film slows down to allow us to catch our breath and assimilate information via on-screen conversations. Even then, we're in danger of musical numbers ambushing the senses at every turn. Moulin Rouge is essentially a fairy tale story (pauper writer falls for prostitute dance star, and their love must overcome forces that threaten to drive them apart) with a lot of singing. Now, I appreciate good musicals when they have good songs. The musical format was what brought South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut far out of the gutter. I like to be able to sing along and dance in my theater seat and make the people next to me very nervous that I might jump up, grab their hands, and force them to do some swing dancing. Moulin Rouge's music isn't original... exactly... since they borrow music from all time periods, from The Sound of Music to Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit. But it's all done with a wild new twist, and there's something bold and refreshing in that (like a good deoderant). At the beginning of the movie, I heard some girls behind me talking. "I don't think the Can-Can is considered classical music," one of them sniffed. This kind of sums up the feelings everyone will have on the film. A lot of people will pan Moulin Rouge because it isn't an original, "true" musical, and it makes their hearts start beating irregularly. A lot of other people will hate Moulin Rouge because they won't know what the heck is going on and can't understand why people have to sing EVERYthing. But us strange people that can accept something a bit different every now and then... well, I won't make up your mind for you. But I saw Moulin Rouge and Pearl Harbor on the same day, and all of the movie compliments that I have go all to Ms. Kidman and Mr. McGregor.
The senses of the audience are challenged at every turn. From the moment the 20th Century Fox logo comes on screen (complete with the Bohemian Revolutionary conductor frantically leading an invisible orchestra) you know this is going to be something different. The music bucks back and forth in time, from the extremely modern Pink/Christina Aguilera/Li'l Kim combo, to the old Can Can theme, back to Queen, and over to Elton John ( in fact, you hear Elton John's music so often you half expect to see Christian wearing oversized sequined sunglasses). And it really, really works. Even as the hilariously overdramatic narcoleptic Argentinian (say that three times fast!) breaks into a version of "Roxanne" that's more growled than it is sung, I found myself just loving the aural experience... it's truly something to pack almost every song about love EVER into one movie, and have it flow in a believeable way. And the eyes are just as dazzled... there's so much to look at in this vision of Gay Paris that it'll take me multiple viewings to get any real hold on it. And during all this sensory overload, I was laughing so much I drew giggles from the girls behind me, and then misting up during the final scenes. (Along with everyone else in the house, mind you.) To have the one-two punch of a wonderful sensory experience combined with the believeable emotional hooks that the actors create makes for one awesome, surreal trip deep into the story. If you haven't figured it out yet, I loved this movie. Seriously loved it. I'm pretty comfortable saying it's cracked my top ten favourites list. Despite having an audio track almost entirely made up of recycled music and a story that has been done a thousand times before, Moulin Rouge comes off as sparklingly new and fresh, and not at all derivative. Whether (director) Baz Luhrmann's picture is going into a shrine in your house or up on the dartboard in your attic, I challenge you not to remember this movie.
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Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
The movie was clearly influenced by the successful operas Baz Luhrmann has directed: "La Boheme" and "A Midsummer Night's Dream." La Boheme is set in the same time and place as Moulin Rouge, while A Midsummer Night's Dream used the same Indian theme as Moulin Rouge's play-within-a-play. Groovy Quotes
Christian: This story is about truth, beauty, freedom; but above all things, this story is about love.
Zidler: She said you make her feel "like a virgin."
Toulouse-Lautrec: Christian, you may see me only as a drunken, vice-ridden gnome whose friends are just pimps and girls from the brothels. But I know about art and love, if only because I long for it with every fiber of my being. [Before kissing Christian.]
Satine: The French are glad to die for love. Christian: Suddenly, a narcoleptic Argentinian fell through my ceiling! Narcoleptic Argentinian: If you fall in love with a woman who sells her love it will always turn out BAD! DVD Review
Documentaries, in-depth probing of costume designs, the deleted scenes are most the shots before Lhurman got his ADD-addled editing on them. Script comparisons to early drafts, which actually included a character named "Count VonGroovy." A mural of all the posters used in the movie, remixes of the songs and extended plays of clips used in the movie. Info on all the special effects, how the Green Fairy changed from an Ozzy Osburn rocker-demon to a seductive pixie. Extended dance numbers for you who really, really like "the tango" plus multi-angle options for watching the Cancan and Indian ending segments, great for seeing what editors have to go through to make a scene look good. Unfortunately if you don't have a DVD remote and are stuck with your computer you can't really switch between the angels. Nutbunnies. Commentaries are standard, "this is how we did that...and that's new..." for such a splendiferous movie the director seems pretty bored talking about it. (although he does show a quality of great directors, knowing what every single frame should look like, how it should look, and not settling for anything else). Ditto the art director and writer. The outtakes are funny, messing up big dramatic lines and very awkward cancan dancing. (Best outtake, Ewan and Nicole fooling around during the Big Song). However, the best feature is the one found on very DVD..chapter selection. Just zoom to the song you want and ignore the rest. (Am I still angry that "the pitch" isn't on the soundtrack? Yes I am.) Soundtrack Review
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