Not sure which board you're referring to, but I scream at the posts on the broadwayworld.com board.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".
That could describe many of us here when it comes to comic book movies, actually.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".
Fandoms are never too different from each other...Not sure which board you're referring to, but I scream at the posts on the broadwayworld.com board.
I'm extremely easy to please.![]()

Guess who's getting his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on the date of the Hollywood premiere?


I think Dec.13 is the date of the Golden Globe nominations and the Hollywood premiere of the movie.Nice! Go Hugh!!![]()
Wow the songs sung in the stage play are so much more powerful. In the movie here they sound weak as in At the End of the Day which doesn't sound right acoustically recorded in that small room. Shouldn't the factory floor be big with a huge group of women? With more women singing it would sound more epic.
Wut.At The End of The Day is a nice clip:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vHwyCp6ah6U
Apparently when they were singing live, they forgot to sing with breath support, and they decided to "speak-sing" half their verses and avoid proper phrasing I get what theyre going for but thus far, it falls a bit short of what LES MIS is musically. This is going to divide audiences, especially those with knowledge of the show.
It's a little odd that so far Russell Crowe seems to be doing some of the best singing (except for Hathaway).


Hmm I thought they sang pretty well in Chicago. Richard Gere was probably the weakest link.Not really. Theatre kids always ***** about musical adaptations to the screen. Sometimes they make a good point (Gerard Butler in The Phantom of the Opera) and sometimes they miss the forest for the trees for radically clever/reimagined adaptations (Sweeney Todd). Either way, they always complain and are usually a vocal minority relegated to online. Otherwise, Chicago would never have won best picture if their dissatisfaction really represented a "divided audience."
Most people who will see this movie will never have seen the show. In which case, the film will stand or fall with audiences on its own.

Not really. I thought the most powerful part of the clip was Fantine trying to run for Valjean and being dragged out - which didn't happen in the stage version. Where in the text does it say the factory is huge with more women? It's about as big as it was in the stage version, with about as many women.
That's the anniversary concert. They are making it bigger for it to earn its concert title. I have never done a head count, but the numbers are likely smaller in a weekly production in London or when it played on Broadway...certainly on tour like when it came near me. Anyway, it works because the scene is supposed to be intimate in the film. Do not compare it to how it worked on stage, just ask if it works on film. For example Johnny Depp does not have the voice of Len Cariou or George Hearn. But does it work in the movie? Fantastically. Again, Russell Crowe does not impress me much vocally, but as long as it doesn't become a burden for the film, like say Gerard Butler supposedly as the "Angel of Music" and an Opera Genius, it may work. So far, the clips have worked.
That's the anniversary concert. They are making it bigger for it to earn its concert title.
Well the movie could be that big, why not? Why not?
In the 2008 film version with Liam Neeson the factory was a big building with 50 or so workers.
Wow, just wow. It's really starting to hit him home just how determined Anne was for this role. That photo speaks volumes.She looks like Christian Bale in the Machinist...![]()