Charlie No-One
iamamiwhoami
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Anyone who has seen the stage revival, how is it? Do they have the barber chair or is like a concert type setting?
Ew. Your rendering of it leaves out the innuendo. The joke actually goes:-A third of "Little Priest" is missing, including most of the best jokes like "The royal marine? What about his private parts? That's extra."
I always thought George Hearn played the character that way.-Sweeney is far more insane in this version. When he gets to London he is already at the killing point, he just needs a little push.
Yeah, it flows really well.But I find all these changes work and while I would have kept more of the music, particularly in "The Little Priest" I overall think it was adapted brilliantly and works perfectly as a movie, which is what you want.
-Sweeney is far more insane in this version. When he gets to London he is already at the killing point, he just needs a little push. Depp's Sweeney is less sympathetic and much more tunnele visioned in performance and tone than the stage versions I know of, just focusing on revenge with the rest of the world dead to him, as opposed to the angry but bemused righteous man who goes nuts halfway through and even then has a sense of humor.
I disagree. There is a sense of humor to both stage Sweeneys I've seen and the original cast recording. He is bitter and out for revenge but he is fairly righteous for the first third of the play and his attack on Pirelli seems the beginning of the insanity and he just snaps at Epiphany. In the movie he is just dead. There is no humor in him and the only thing lurking behind Sweeney's eyes is a boiling rage. You feel his snapping at Pierelli was inevitable because he was already full of such disgust and contempt for EVERYONE, he never gave the image of righteousness. He was much more tunnel-visioned and a good deal creepier. Like when he says "Send the boy up. SEND HIM UP!" there is such venom and evil lurking there that he has already reached that point before Epiphany he just needed the juice to turn it towards the city instead of Turpin. He was already insane, he just had it tunneled one way and it wasn't a point of recognition but an inevitable outcome when the character decides to kill everybody.
That is why I called it an interperative change.
Wider as in how?Will Sweeney Todd be getting a wider release?
Will Sweeney Todd be getting a wider release?
Yes. SWEENEY TODD is Burton's best film, and is indeed "nothing short of a masterpiece." It's truly phenomenal.I've heard this film has been called "A Masterpiece" already, and is poised to become Burton's finest work. Does it look like this claim is true?
Also, Jonathon Ross stated that it was "Nothing short of a masterpiece"
It opened in about 1200 theaters. That was definitely less than the other films released:
http://www.boxofficemojo.com/weekend/chart/?yr=2007&wknd=51&p=.htm
Yes. Depp's Sweeney is noticeably more melancholy and less joyful than those Sweeneys.There is a sense of humor to both stage Sweeneys I've seen and the original cast recording.
I disagree. I think his insanity is often demonstrated in his very early in the musical. "There's a hole in the world..." like he repeats a few times, he gets furiously enraged at the beggar woman, almost hits Mrs. Lovett after being told what happened to his daughter and Lucy, and if his "My Friends" doesn't demonstrate a sense of brewing insanity, I don't know what does.He is bitter and out for revenge but he is fairly righteous for the first third of the play and his attack on Pirelli seems the beginning of the insanity and he just snaps at Epiphany.
Granted. What humor he has is very dark indeed, and unlike other Sweeneys, he never even laughs during "Epiphany." But I'd argue that's the only major distinction.In the movie he is just dead. There is no humor in him and the only thing lurking behind Sweeney's eyes is a boiling rage.
That's the way it is for every stage Sweeney. Todd has nothing but disgust for everyone from the first moment he appears in the stage show. Hence his very long "There's a hole in the world..." monologue.You feel his snapping at Pierelli was inevitable because he was already full of such disgust and contempt for EVERYONE, he never gave the image of righteousness.
Yes. SWEENEY TODD is Burton's best film, and is indeed "nothing short of a masterpiece." It's truly phenomenal.
I entirely agree.I siply think Depp's Sweeney is darker and more enclosed as Carter's Lovett is slightly more sympathetic and motherly than the usually batty schemer on stage.