Across
the Universe
2007
turned out to be a great year for quality movies, and Julie Taymor's
Across the Universe was one of the crown jewels of the group.
It is a musical depiction of life and culture across the Sixties that
uses Beatles songs to define the emotional and spiritual states
of the characters and to evoke, with a comprehensive authority, nostalgia
for the times. Released as a 2-Disc Deluxe Edition by Sony Pictures
Home Entertainment, it makes a fantastic DVD, not just because the picture
looks amazing during the psychedelic digressions and the 5.1-channel
Dolby Digital sound keeps your room spinning, but because this is the
kind of movie that, if you like it, you're going to want to watch it
over and over again.
The last musical
to use wall-to-wall Beatles songs was an unmitigated disaster, Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. In part, its flaws were simply
a result of marketing hubris, bad direction and an innocuous fantasy
narrative, but it also failed because Beatles producer George
Martin was too involved with creating the soundtrack and generally
did not let the songs' interpreters find their own voices. Many of the
songs in Across the Universe begin a cappella, and even those
that don't often have radically different orchestrations than the original
numbers. But that is what becomes so riveting, at least the first few
times you watch the film. No other group of songs is so well known down
to the minutest changes in pitch or rhythm, and so their application
in the movie not only works from the familiar, but from where the choices
are made to alter the familiar. Early in the film, a gay cheerleader
sits on bleachers watching the other members of her squad while singing
"I Wanna Hold Your Hand," and it is the explosion of feelings
that comes from what is expected with the song crashing into what is
unexpected that makes the sequence so rapturously powerful.
The film's true
spiritual doppelganger is Milos Forman's Hair. Several
parts of the plot appear to have been lifted from the stage version,
as the central character comes from England and hangs out with another
group of characters living in New York City's bohemia during the Sixties,
while the Vietnam War and other social upheavals loom around them. There
are shots in the marvelous draft induction sequence (posters of Uncle
Sam come alive, singing "I Want You" ) that are taken directly
from Forman's designs, and there is the general atmosphere of hippies
breaking into song, supported by often subtle and always transcendent
choreography. Viewers who don't understand or connect with musicals
are likely to dismiss both films as inconsequential fluff, but what
is missed in judging the aesthetic of all musicals is that the music
is a valid substitute for drama, even though its payoffs are less quantifiable.
The joy the music brings to the viewer is a legitimate alternative to
the more detailed exploration of human relationships that a non-musical
must deliver. Across the Universe runs 132 minutes, which would
seem to be way too long, but what could Taymor possibly have cut out
to the movie's advantage? There is one poor little 57-second deleted
number that appears with the film on the first platter, and you wish
that even it had been left in. The narrative has several romantic plot
strings, which are all strummed in exquisite harmony, and the emotional
performances back up fully what is being exchanged in the dialog and
the songs. The characters are in love, the viewer loves the music, and
from the music and the characters, then, the viewer's capacity for love
is massaged and enlivened. That's all you need, right?
The picture is presented
in letterboxed format only, with an aspect ratio of about 2.35:1 and
an accommodation for enhanced 16:9 playback. There is an alternate Spanish
track in 5.1 Dolby (with English songs) and optional English, French,
Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, and Thai subtitles ("Quelqu'un
va-t-il écouter mon histoire? A propos de la fille venue pour
rester
"), a nice collection of production stills, and two
alternate takes, running six minutes, of Eddie Izzard singing
"Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite," one of the weakest sequences
in the film, because it is the one segment that brings to mind nightmares
of Sgt. Pepper, where George Burns did the number.
Taymor and music
orchestrator Elliot Goldenthal supply a commentary track. Goldenthal
explains how he approached each tune. Taymor spends some time describing
what is happening on the screen, but she does provide details on how
the major sequences were conceived and shot, speaks eagerly about the
young cast members, explains some of the inspirations for the different
passages (although she fails to give credit to Magical Mystery Tour
even as she lifts not just allusions but actual cinematic tricks from
the film, commenting upon the latter as if they were her own idea; she
doesn't acknowledge Hair, either), and deconstructs some of the
film's cultural influences. "The thing about the music is, a lot
of it has that tremendous inspiration from black American music, and
so when you are starting to produce and rearrange it again, in some
ways it was interesting to go back to some of the sources in the orchestration
of that music, and that gives it, also, variety, so all the songs aren't
done with the same orchestration a band would have."
The second platter
features an excellent 29-minute production featurette with lots of behind-the-scenes
footage where you can watch Taymor coming up with ideas as well as seeing
to their execution. There is also a good 27-minute segment about the
cast, a 15-minute segment about adapting the music, a nice 9-minute
segment on the choreography and a 7-minute piece on the special effects.
Finally, there is a 35-minute collection of extended song numbers, which
makes an ideal encore for the film
February 28,
2008
DVD
Roundup: This Week's DVD Releases
The
Review Vault
- by
Douglas Pratt
Douglas Pratt's DVD-Laser Disc Newsletter
is published monthly.
For a free sample, call (516)594-9304 or go to his
website at www.DVDLaser.com