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The Fantasticks

 
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The Fantasticks

  • Director: Michael Ritchie
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Musical
  • Movie Type: Musical Romance, Musical Comedy
  • Themes: First Love, Innocence Lost, Parenthood
  • Main Cast: Joel Grey, Barnard Hughes, Jean Louisa Kelly, Joseph McIntyre, Jonathon Morris
  • Release Year: 1995
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 90 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

The longest-running show in the history of the American theater (it opened at an off-Broadway theater in the spring of 1960, where it remained until the production finally closed in early 2002) finally arrives onscreen. Hucklebee (Brad Sullivan) and Bellamy (Joel Grey) are a pair of small town fathers who are scheming to bring their children Matt (Joseph McIntyre) and Luisa (Jean Louisa Kelly) together in a romance. As a carnival arrives to bring some excitement to the sleepy village, the fathers persuade a mysterious interloper named El Gallo (Jonathan Morris) to stage a mock abduction of Luisa, which will hopefully prompt Matt to come to her rescue. However, while El Gallo's plan succeeds, he also awakens his innocent charges to the darker and more disappointing side of love. The Fantasticks was shot and edited in 1995, but beyond a few preview screenings, it went unreleased until the fall of 2000. The film marked the dramatic debut of former New Kids on the Block vocalist Joseph McIntyre, and features Teller (of the magic/performance art duo Penn & Teller) in a rare speaking role. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Making a theatrical film out of Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt's The Fantasticks, the longest running play (and musical) in American history, seems like an improbable project. Devised for an off-Broadway production with a small cast, on a very small stage, The Fantasticks defies the conventions of cinema. The play, for 40 years a favorite of student and semi-professional companies, is something of a relic of the pre-1960s era that spawned it -- a teenaged girl and boy living in neighboring farm houses in some indeterminate time in the past are attracted to each other with help from their fathers who, in a triumph of reverse psychology, pretend to feud with each other in order to encourage the pair. Now it is time to end the feud, but how? Stage a kidnapping with help from a carnival entertainer and let the boy rescue the girl, thus providing a basis for the end of the feud. All goes well and their love is declared, and the second act deals with the couple's disillusionment and unhappiness with each other -- about losing innocence and falling out of love, and discovering a deeper, more enduring and mature form of love in the process.

Director Michael Ritchie has accomplished a nimble conjuring trick, helped by a delightful cast. He has elicited performances from Jean Louisa Kelly and Joe McIntyre (formerly a member of New Kids on the Block) of extraordinary charm and vibrancy, while Joel Gray and Brad Sullivan, as the fathers, make a delightful comic double act as charming curmudgeons with their children's best interests at heart. And Jonathon Morris as El Gallo -- a role that Jerry Orbach originated -- is the sparkplug of the piece, a wry-witted rogue who combines Errol Flynn-style bravado with charming, earthy seediness, and dominates every shot in which he appears. Music director Jonathan Tunick has expanded the score (including the hits "Try to Remember" and "Soon It's Gonna Rain") to fit the needs of the big screen and the expansive setting of Arizona's San Rafael Valley without losing sight of the simplicity of the original work. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Cast

Brad Sullivan - Hucklebee; Teller - Mortimer

Credit

Edward L. Rubin - Art Director, Terry Miller - Associate Producer, Tim Healey - Associate Producer, Rick Pagano - Casting, Michael Smuin - Choreography, Luke Reichle - Costume Designer, Terry Miller - First Assistant Director, Michael Ritchie - Director, William Scharf - Editor, Melissa Kent - Editor, Art Schaefer - Executive Producer, Harvey Schmidt - Composer (Music Score), Jonathan Tunick - Musical Arrangement, Tom Jones - Songwriter, Fred Murphy - Cinematographer, Michael Ritchie - Producer, Linne Radmin - Producer, Alan Hicks - Set Designer, Kim Ornitz - Sound/Sound Designer, Harvey Schmidt - Screenwriter, Tom Jones - Screenwriter, Alan Hicks - Set Decorator, Harvey Schmidt - From Musical by, Tom Jones - From Musical by

Similar Movies

Rooftops; Alegria; The Music Man; Annie; Gypsy; Love's Labour's Lost
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Wikipedia: The Fantasticks (film)
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The Fantasticks

Theatrical poster
Directed by Michael Ritchie
Produced by Michael Ritchie
Linne Radmin
Associate Producer:
Tim Healey
Terry Miller
Executive Producer:
Art Schaeffer
Written by Tom Jones
Harvey Schmidt
Starring Joel Grey
Brad Sullivan
Jean Louisa Kelly
Joey McIntyre
Jonathan Morris
Barnard Hughes
Teller
Music by Harvey Schmidt
Cinematography Fred Murphy
Editing by William S. Scharf
Francis Ford Coppola (uncredited)
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) 1995
Running time 86 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Fantasticks is a 1995 American musical film directed by Michael Ritchie. The screenplay by Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt is based on their record-breaking off-Broadway production of the same name, which ran for 17,162 performances. The two also composed the score's songs.

Contents

Plot synopsis

Amos Babcock Bellamy and Ben Hucklebee scheme to get their respective children Luisa and Matt to fall in love. Knowing they will resist their fathers' interference, the two men use reverse psychology and fabricate a feud, building a wall between their houses and forbidding their children to speak to each other. When their plan works, they enlist the aid of El Gallo, the proprietor of a traveling carnival, to put an end to their supposed disagreement in a manner which will not reveal their deception.

El Gallo pretends to kidnap Luisa with the help of his troupe, which includes elderly Shakespearean actor Henry Albertson and his mute sidekick Mortimer, and arranges for Matt to rescue her. The couple settles into what they anticipate will be domestic bliss, but through the eyes of El Gallo and company they see the harsh realities of the world, and their innocent romanticism is replaced by a more mature understanding of love.

Production notes

The film was completed in 1995 and scheduled for a Thanksgiving release, but executives at MGM/United Artists, discouraged by indifferent preview audience response, lost faith in the project and shelved it. Due to a contractual obligation to Jones and Schmidt to give the film a theatrical release, MGM Board of Directors member Francis Ford Coppola was enlisted to trim the film from its original 111 minute length to 86 minutes [1], and the abridged version finally was released in four theaters in September 2000. It grossed only $49,666 in the US [2].

The theatrical production traditionally is performed on a bare stage with two-piece musical accompaniment. The film adaptation transposed the action to the farm country of the 1920s American West, affecting a look similar to Oklahoma!, and most of the songs were rearranged for a full orchestra.

The songs were performed live by the actors rather than dubbed in afterwards, as is the usual practice with a musical film.

Principal cast

Principal production credits

Soundtrack

Joey McIntyre and Jean Louisa Kelly
  • "Much More" ..... performed by Jean Louisa Kelly
  • "Never Say No" ..... performed by Joel Grey and Brad Sullivan
  • "Metaphor" ..... performed by Joey McIntyre and Jean Louisa Kelly
  • "The Abduction Song" ..... performed by Jonathon Morris, Joel Grey, and Brad Sullivan
  • "Soon It's Gonna Rain" ..... performed by Jean Louisa Kelly and Joey McIntyre
  • "Happy Ending" ..... performed by Joel Grey, Brad Sullivan, Jean Louisa Kelly, and Joey McIntyre
  • "This Plum Is Too Ripe" ..... performed by Jean Louisa Kelly, Joey McIntyre, Joel Grey, and Brad Sullivan
  • "I Can See It" ..... performed by Joey McIntyre and Jonathon Morris
  • "'Round and 'Round" ..... performed by Jonathon Morris and Jean Louisa Kelly
  • "They Were You" ..... performed by Joey McIntyre and Jean Louisa Kelly
  • "Try to Remember" ..... performed by Jonathon Morris

Critical reception

In his review in the New York Times, A.O. Scott said the film "wobbles between the timeless and the anachronistic. For all its robust good cheer it's a timid and uncertain creature . . . what looks like magic on stage can seem manic by the light of the screen. Live theater can tolerate outsize gestures, rickety sets and willful illusionism more easily than film, which is a stubbornly literal-minded medium . . . The Fantasticks is, at bottom, a tribute to the transformative power of theater, and the theater is where it should have been allowed to remain. The movie version overflows with affection and good intention, but unwittingly turns a bauble of cheerful fakery into something that mostly feels phony." [3]

Scott Foundas of Variety called the film "little more than a curio, notable more for its lavish, labored efforts to revive the old-fashioned movie musical than for its success at reimagining the intimate tuner for the bigscreen . . . The Fantasticks is hampered almost from the start by the distinct lack of chemistry between McIntyre and Kelly as well as by McIntyre's seeming inability to alter his expression from that of perpetual, wide-eyed bewilderment. Kelly acquits herself more adequately as a singer than does McIntyre. But neither performer ever seems truly in thrall of the various fanciful goings-on . . . while the film is inarguably Ritchie's most visually adventuresome since Downhill Racer 30 years ago, the songs and performers seem overwhelmed by the sheer vastness of the visual design. The relative claustrophobia of the carnival set is the film's greatest aesthetic strength, the big skies of big-sky country its greatest weakness, wherein the private dreaminess of the text seems to evaporate. The attempt to make a film of The Fantasticks that would function as the same playful homage to movie musicals that the play itself is to musical theater is admirable, but the resulting film is one of too much reverence and not enough satire." [4]

In the San Francisco Chronicle, Edward Guthmann said, "The Fantasticks doesn't try to reinvent the screen musical, as Cabaret did in 1972, but revives the conventions of the '50s, when big-screen musicals were opened up for wide-screen formats and actors still broke spontaneously into song . . . [it] has slow patches and requires a generous suspension of disbelief. But it's also sweet and optimistic - a welcome antidote to gloom." [5]

Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times called it "pure enchantment that emerges as an inspired transposition of a musical to the screen - one that manages to honor the theatricality of the source yet becomes a fully cinematic experience . . . [it] is a gem, but so virtually extinct is the screen musical that the looming question remains as to whether people will care. It's one thing to pack Manhattan's small Sullivan Street Playhouse with The Fantasticks decade after decade, and quite another to pull crowds with gossamer, lyrical make-believe to the country's multiplexes." [6]

Peter Travers of Rolling Stone said, "It was folly for Ritchie to shoot a spare theatrical piece against the sweeping landscapes of the Arizona prairie. But the folly sometimes pays off. Joe McIntyre, of New Kids on the Block, and Jean Louisa Kelly catch just the right note of youthful yearning in their voices . . . even as the movie threatens to derail, the charm of the score . . . keeps breaking through." [7]

TV Guide says, "While the cast and songs are top notch, the predictability of the madness makes it pretty clear that this musical shouldn't have left the stage." [8]

References

External links


 
 

 

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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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