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Tuesday, 6 February 2018

The Life, Death, and Rocky Rebirth of the Movie Musical

By Sophia Stewart

Can Steven Spielberg resuscitate the genre?

Musicals have quite the bad rap. Skeptics complain their most essential component — characters sporadically bursting into song — demands an impossible suspension of disbelief. Others dismiss them as “light” entertainment that can’t convincingly convey drama. The genre’s lack of realism and inherent camp can certainly be alienating for modern audiences, and they may appear out of place in the cinematic landscape of today, as a result. But it hasn’t always been this way.

The musical helped catapult movies out of the Silent Era. For decades they were also incredibly lucrative, drawing large audiences with creative productions and megastars. Then they fell out of fashion. Hollywood’s most recent attempts at returning the movie musical to its former glory have been markedly feeble, supplanting theatricality with realism and sacrificing talent for celebrity draw.

In the midst of this musical drought, Steven Spielberg’s recently confirmed remake of the iconic West Side Story could serve as a beacon of hope. In order for the movie to plot a new course for the genre, Spielberg will need to consider what made movie musicals great in the first place, where they went wrong, and how they can be saved.

The inception of the musical film is generally traced back to the 1927 release of The Jazz Singer, the first feature-length “talking picture” to feature spoken dialogue and sound-synchronized musical numbers performed by the film’s titular musician. This catalyzed the mass production of movie musicals by every major studio, all of them eager to show off the vast capabilities of sound.

In the 1930s, choreographer Busby Berkeley revolutionized the movie musical, incorporating the camera into the musical numbers like never before. In films such as Footlight Parade (1933) and Dames (1934), he drew on movies’ uniquely cinematic capabilities to enhance the theatricality of the numbers, emphasizing their grandeur and visual beauty.

With the right moves, the genre could be restored to its former glory. This means learning from all the successes and pitfalls that color the long history of the movie musical. Damien Chazelle’s sweet but hollow attempt at genre restoration, La La Land (2016), does an admirable job honoring and learning from the past, paying overt (if sometimes lazy) homages to multiple classic movie musicals. But its untrained leads and unpolished numbers keeps it from truly elevating the genre.

Now it’s time for Spielberg’s West Side Story remake to step up to the plate. To succeed, the movie must not only amalgamate the elements of successful musical films but also improve upon them. Trained and talented stars are crucial: sacrificing skill for star power has time and time again precipitated failure. Spielberg may not have the likes of Judy Garland or Gene Kelly to choose from, but he certainly can launch rising stars on the basis of their talent.

We already know this is where he’s headed, as his recent casting call asked for actors who “must be able to sing” — a welcome requirement considering that, in the original film, the singing for every main character was dubbed.

 

In addition, the casting call is looking solely for Latinx actors to play the musical’s Latinx roles. This also improves upon the original, which cast white actors in brownface to play most of the Latinx leads. Whitewashing has been frequently featured in movie musicals, perhaps most notably in The King and I (1956), which cast Russian-born Yul Brynner as the King of Siam.

Racism isn’t just a pesky byproduct of the genre, but integral to its origins: The Jazz Singer is a heinously racist film about a white singer who wears blackface and performs in a minstrel show. Reviving the movie musical requires reckoning with this past and doing better; creating space for nuanced characters of color played by actors of color is a promising first step.

Beyond being an obviously skilled director, Spielberg also has a surprising musical sensibility, demonstrating a knack for capturing musical sequences in 1941, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, and The Color Purple. By blending theatrical competence with his dramatic skill and cinematic inventiveness, he could single-handedly breathe new life into the genre.

And a modernized story — perhaps one incorporating the current political and humanitarian frustrations bubbling within Puerto Rico — could be the point of attraction for today’s audiences.

Just as the success of The Jazz Singer prompted a mass movement towards musical films, the potential success of Spielberg’s West Side Story could prompt a monumental resuscitation of the dying genre. The fate of the movie musical is in your hands, Steven. No pressure.

The article The Life, Death, and Rocky Rebirth of the Movie Musical appeared first on Film School Rejects.

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