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I've still been wanting to see this. I think tomorrow. I think this might be the last film I see in 2012.
"Les Miserables" has passed the first hurdle in breaking the movie musical curse. The Tom Hooper adaptation of the London West End and Broadway stage musical grossed another $12.1 million on Tuesday for a spectacular $30.2 million in its first two days of release and the no. 1 spot at the box office. Most stage musical adaptations end up with a big opening, but can fade fast after the hardcore fan base dissipates. That does not appear to be the case with "Les Miserables." Even with mixed reviews, word of mouth is strong and the Universal Pictures release could easily be at $80-90 million by end of day on New Year's Day. I dreamed a dream, indeed.

I wonder if the success of this will bring more musicals like it to the big screen.
I personally would love to see "Man of La Mancha", the Don Quixote musical, done right. Clint is too old now but he would have been a great Don imo.
Also "Notre Dame de Paris" would be great (the French musical has some really good songs in it.) Bardem for Quasimodo and his wife for Esmeralda.
And to all those who really loved Les Miserables, I highly recommend going back to the original Victor Hugo novel, a true monument of literature.
God, I wish I knew people like that - I don't know anyone that wants to see any movie more than once. I may have to go again by myself. I was bombarded on Christmas Day as soon as I walked into my sister's house about this movie, everyone asking when I was going to go. Not because THEY wanted to go, because hardly any of them go to a movie or even know what Les Mis is about (yes, I'm related to a bunch of rubes), but they were kinda making fun because I couldn't go on opening day and they know what a big Hugh fan I am. And then one of my sisters says "it only got 2-1/2 stars in my paper" (yes, they rely on reviews!) and I responded back "well, my paper gave it five stars, it depends what you read" (I actually lied as I don't get a newspaper but she pissed me off LOL). So this is what I'm dealing with. If I went to a movie twice (heaven forbid!) and they knew about I would never hear the end of it.My mom is now texting me again, asking when we can see the movie again.![]()
God, I wish I knew people like that - I don't know anyone that wants to see any movie more than once. I may have to go again by myself. I was bombarded on Christmas Day as soon as I walked into my sister's house about this movie, everyone asking when I was going to go. Not because THEY wanted to go, because hardly any of them go to a movie or even know what Les Mis is about (yes, I'm related to a bunch of rubes), but they were kinda making fun because I couldn't go on opening day and they know what a big Hugh fan I am. And then one of my sisters says "it only got 2-1/2 stars in my paper" (yes, they rely on reviews!) and I responded back "well, my paper gave it five stars, it depends what you read" (I actually lied as I don't get a newspaper but she pissed me off LOL). So this is what I'm dealing with. If I went to a movie twice (heaven forbid!) and they knew about I would never hear the end of it.



I hate when people try to sway me from a film I wanna see with reviews. Like before I saw the hobbit, a few people mentioned that they heard the reviews weren't great when I told em I was gonna see it. But I ended up loving it likei thought I would

Thanks for the infogwynplaine,
Cameron MacIntosh has said that if Les Mis is successful then Miss Saigon will be next.

I wonder if the success of this will bring more musicals like it to the big screen.
I personally would love to see "Man of La Mancha", the Don Quixote musical, done right. Clint is too old now but he would have been a great Don imo.
Also "Notre Dame de Paris" would be great (the French musical has some really good songs in it.) Bardem for Quasimodo and his wife for Esmeralda.
And to all those who really loved Les Miserables, I highly recommend going back to the original Victor Hugo novel, a true monument of literature.



I love the original cast of Rent (I was lucky enough to see Anthony Rapp and Adam Pascal in their roles on stage), but that movie was very poorly misjudged.
I saw the original cast as well (in NY and in London), but yeah, the movie was such a mess. Turning the sung dialogue into spoken dialogue - but not changing it at all so it just sounded awkward. Cutting the reprise of Goodbye Love. Leaving out chunks of the story so that the characters all looked like spoiled brats who just didn't want to work.
All that, plus the original cast just being far to old. A bunch of young 20-somethings crying about rent, fine. But 30+ year olds? Not cute...

I have to say, while listening to the soundtrack for the umpteenth time in the last two days...
...I'm totally loving Russell Crowe's version of "Stars".
There it is, I said it. And I ain't taking it back.![]()
Hong Kong reports that in addition to applause at the end, some people are rushing out to the box office to buy tickets for the next day. A lot of "Must Watch Again" comments online.
Hong Kong grossed $194k and set the record as the biggest opening day for a musical of all time and the biggest Russell Crowe opening day of all time. The total with previews is $536k.
http://www.boxoffice.com/latest-news/2012-12-26-global-les-misrables-reaches-234-million