Les Miserables: Even the thread will make you cry - Part 2

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OMG!!! :doh::doh::doh: Yeah, sure..... I thought that snippet was GREAT, not like someone standing on a stage belting to the back of the theater. You can see the anguish in his face and hear it in his voice.

I thought that clip was great. She had the same problem with Anne Hathaway in the trailers, and said she should just "sing the dang song!" :doh: It's like she's not really listening to the lyrics or understanding where the characters were supposed to be at all.

I remember seeing this years ago, and it looked great...but I still remember thinking that if they ever made Les Mis into a movie, doing it like this would never work. (it starts about a minute in)

[YT]4yhWGsdETcA[/YT]
 


Eddie Redmayne is certainly giving me a "peasant uprising," if you know what I mean.



**gets dragged away by moderators**



I was referring to an increase in my core body temperature! CORE BODY TEMPERATURE!! :(
 
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Eddie Redmayne is certainly giving me an "peasant uprising," if you know what I mean.



**gets dragged away by moderators**



I was referring to an increase in my core body temperature! CORE BODY TEMPERATURE!! :(

:lmao:
 
I think I'm gonna hold out listening to any music from the movie. No matter how big my curiosity gets. :csad:
 
::swoon::

His Empty Chairs is going to be goddamn brutal, isn't it??
That one is already one of the more brutal songs of the entire musical, IMO. Having a nice voice to go with it...:waa:
 
IMO the closeups aren't that bad. They're pretty much like what they were in TKS and John Adams? :huh: Why are people complaining excessively about it?
 
I am fangirling SO HARD. I ****ing LOVE Russell Crowe!!!
 
Beautiful.

Except for Amanda. Ah well.
Eddie! :hrt:

Amanda has a pretty tone to her voice, but she's enunciating it all wrong, not to mention the lack of support. If you have a weak and fragile voice, you should NOT be singing soprano, for Pete's sake! :funny:

Samantha!

You can hear how the singing is live in that "Who Am I" clip, when Hugh shuffles papers and the camera changes angles, you can hear how the sound is a little muffled from the wall in front of him. :yay:

The clip with Javert releasing Valjean was not as compelling as the others. I just pictured them...doing more with that. Crowe's voice is...okay. He's supporting his tone, but his range doesn't comfortably go that high.
 
IMO the closeups aren't that bad. They're pretty much like what they were in TKS and John Adams? :huh: Why are people complaining excessively about it?

My issue isn't with the closeups themselves, it's that the clip is made up of nothing but those closeups. This is the scene where Cosette and Marius are connecting, and yet only one at a time is shown in frame. Why not a shot with both of them in frame? How about an angle from behind Cosette as she approaches the gate? How about having both of them in the background as Eponine watches them in the foreground?

I can only judge based on this one clip, but for me the emotion of the story is being undermined by the way the story is being told.
 
My issue isn't with the closeups themselves, it's that the clip is made up of nothing but those closeups. This is the scene where Cosette and Marius are connecting, and yet only one at a time is shown in frame. Why not a shot with both of them in frame? How about an angle from behind Cosette as she approaches the gate? How about having both of them in the background as Eponine watches them in the foreground?

I can only judge based on this one clip, but for me the emotion of the story is being undermined by the way the story is being told.
I had this issue for the Rent movie adaptation. Some of the climatic songs were shot with the characters just standing there singing at each other, with one singer per frame. It was downright infuriating. :cmad:
 
Eddie! :hrt:

Amanda has a pretty tone to her voice, but she's enunciating it all wrong, not to mention the lack of support. If you have a weak and fragile voice, you should NOT be singing soprano, for Pete's sake! :funny:

It just occurred to me that she's the only one not singing in a British accent... her and Russel Crowe actually, although I don't think the latter was intentional. :oldrazz:
 
Guess who's getting his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on the date of the Hollywood premiere?

WalkOfFamelogo.png
HUGH JACKMAN TO BE HONORED WITH
STAR ON THE HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME​
WHO: Hugh Jackman
Emcee: Hollywood Chamber of Commerce,
President/CEO Leron Gubler
Guest speakers: TBD

WHAT: 2,487th Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
in the Category of Motion Pictures

WHERE: 6931 Hollywood Boulevard
in front of Madame Tussauds Hollywood

WHEN: Thursday, December 13, 2012 at 11:30 a.m.

The star ceremony event will be live-streamed on www.walkoffame.com


HOLLYWOOD, CA—
Hollywood Chamber will honor Hugh Jackman with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Thursday, December 13, 2012. His star will be unveiled at 6931 Hollywood Boulevard in front of Madame Tussauds Hollywood where his wax figure depicting him as Wolverine is on display. “Fans from around the world have been consistently asking when this star will be dedicated,” said Walk of Fame producer Ana Martinez.

“We are happy to say that now is the time! Hugh is one of the world’s most popular actors and we are excited that he is joining our Walk of Fame family.”

Australian native, Hugh Jackman made his first major U.S. film appearance as Wolverine in the first installment of the “X-Men” franchise, a role he reprised in the enormously successful X2 and X-Men: The Last Stand in 2006. Most recently in the franchise, he played Wolverine in X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which serves as a prequel to the popular series and grossed an outstanding $85 million domestically in its first weekend of release in May 2009. Audiences will again see Jackman in the popular role in the next X-Men chapter titled The Wolverine, which just wrapped in Australia.

Jackman will next star in the much-anticipated film adaptation of the hit musical, Les Miserables, directed by Tom Hooper (of The King’s Speech), co-starring Anne Hathaway and Russell Crowe. The Universal Pictures film is slated for wide-release on December 25, 2012.

Most recently, Jackman lent his vocal talents to the DreamWorks family holiday adventure, Rise of the Guardians. He also starred in director, Shawn Levy’s successful robot boxing drama, Real Steel in October 2011.

Jackman made his return to the Great White Way in his one-man show “Hugh Jackman – Back on Broadway” in the Fall of 2011. Backed by an 18-piece orchestra, the revue, which previously opened to rave reviews during its limited engagements in San Francisco and Toronto earlier that year, was comprised of both Broadway hits and a selection of some of his personal favorite standards. Although the show ran only until the end of the year, Jackman’s continued dedication to the Broadway community was feted at the 2012 Tony Awards, where he received a Special Award from the Tony Awards Administration Committee, recognizing his accomplishments both as a performer as well as a humanitarian.

In the fall of 2009, Jackman appeared on Broadway in the Keith Huff penned “A Steady Rain.” Co-starring Daniel Craig, the play tells the story of two Chicago cops who are lifelong friends and whose differing accounts of a few traumatic days change their lives forever.

On February 22, 2009, Jackman took on the prestigious role of hosting the 81st Annual Academy Awards. Live from Hollywood, he wowed those in attendance and helped ABC score a 13% increase in viewership from the previous year. This wasn’t, however, Jackman’s first foray into Awards show hosting. Previously, Jackman served as host of the Tony Awards three years in a row from 2003 – 2005, earning an Emmy Award for his 2004 duties at the 58th Annual ceremony, and an Emmy nomination for his 2005 appearance at the 59th Annual ceremony.

In late 2008, Jackman headlined the 20th Century Fox’s romantic action-adventure epic, Australia directed by Baz Luhrmann. The film, set in pre-WWII northern Australia, sees Jackman as a rugged cattle driver who assists an English aristocrat (played by Nicole Kidman) in driving a herd of 2000 cattle across hundreds of miles of rough terrain where they must also face the Japanese bombing of Darwin, Australia.

Additional film credits include: Darren Aronofsky’s The Fountain, Christopher Nolan’s The Prestige, Woody Allen’s Scoop, Happy Feet, Flushed Away, Deception, Someone Like You, Swordfish, Van Helsing, and Kate and Leopold, for which he received a 2002 Golden Globe nomination.

For his portrayal of the 1970s singer-songwriter, Peter Allen in “The Boy From Oz,” Jackman received the 2004 Tony Award for Best Actor in a musical as well as Drama Desk, Drama League, Outer Critics Circle and Theatre World awards.

Previous theater credits include: “Carousel” at Carnegie Hall, “Oklahoma!” at the National Theater in London (Olivier Award nomination), “Sunset Boulevard” (MO Award - Australia's Tony Award) and Disney's “Beauty and the Beast” (MO Award nomination).

Jackman's career began in Australia in the independent films Paperback Hero and Erskineville Kings (Australian Film Critics' Circle Best Actor award and The Australian Film Institute Best Actor nomination). In 1999, he was named Australian Star of the Year at the Australian Movie Convention.
Jackman is involved in various aspects of philanthropy and works with Laughing Man Worldwide, Harlem Village Academies and World Vision to name a few.
http://www.walkoffame.com/pages/upcoming-ceremonies
 
I had this issue for the Rent movie adaptation. Some of the climatic songs were shot with the characters just standing there singing at each other, with one singer per frame. It was downright infuriating. :cmad:

There were so many infuriating things about the Rent movie...
 
It just occurred to me that she's the only one not singing in a British accent... her and Russel Crowe actually, although I don't think the latter was intentional. :oldrazz:
When you're singing, you're supposed to enunciate in a British accent. Otherwise it sounds nasally and painful. :oldrazz:

There were so many infuriating things about the Rent movie...
I know. :csad:

At least they got the original cast to do it. Rosario was a pretty good replacement considering.
 
I think he sounds great. Specially when he sings "5 years.." and that rock-rasp comes out.
 
God, that other forum...if I hear one more person complain with the words: "I'm a purist..."

I've always translated "I'm a purist" with "I'm an unreasonable pain in the ass who's going whine like an infant about anything that isn't like the thing I'm used to".
 
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