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Post by Deleted on Oct 9, 2018 18:19:55 GMT
The Greatest Showman: Reimagined to be released this November. Pop stars doing covers of the songs. 01. The Greatest Show – Panic! at the Disco 02. A Million Dreams – Pink 03. A Million Dreams (Reprise) – Willow Sage Hart 04. Come Alive – Years & Years and Jess Glynne 05. The Other Side – MAX and Ty Dolla $ign 06. Never Enough – Kelly Clarkson 07. This Is Me – Keala Settle, Kesha and Missy Elliott 08. Rewrite The Stars – James Arthur and Anne-Marie 09.Tightrope – Sara Bareilles 10. From Now On – Zac Brown Band Bonus tracks: 11. The Greatest Show – Pentatonix 12. Come Alive – Craig David 13. This Is Me – Kesha 14. Rewrite The Stars (Acoustic) – Zendaya www.playbill.com/article/kelly-clarkson-sara-bareilles-brendon-urie-more-to-sing-on-the-greatest-showman-tribute-album
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Post by Deleted on Oct 9, 2018 18:24:44 GMT
Meh, not a fan of this. But of course they are gonna keep making money out of this.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 9, 2018 18:41:03 GMT
Make it stop, ffs.
'As precedent, Atlantic had done “The Hamilton Mixtape,” a similar album of all-star covers, and “I said this deserves that treatment and same caliber of attention.”'
This film has 58% on Rotten Tomatoes, the music was largely slated in reviews and the big song couldn't even win the Oscar. It does not 'deserve' the same treatment and caliber of attention as one of the most critically acclaimed pieces of art ever made. Not to mention The Hamilton Mixtape was how Lin originally envisioned Hamilton existing, it was a natural progression unlike this. Just say you want more money and go.
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Post by andrew on Oct 9, 2018 20:27:26 GMT
The Greatest Showman: Reimagined to be released this November. Pop stars doing covers of the songs. 01. The Greatest Show – Panic! at the Disco 02. A Million Dreams – Pink 03. A Million Dreams (Reprise) – Willow Sage Hart 04. Come Alive – Years & Years and Jess Glynne 05. The Other Side – MAX and Ty Dolla $ign 06. Never Enough – Kelly Clarkson 07. This Is Me – Keala Settle, Kesha and Missy Elliott 08. Rewrite The Stars – James Arthur and Anne-Marie 09.Tightrope – Sara Bareilles 10. From Now On – Zac Brown Band Bonus tracks: 11. The Greatest Show – Pentatonix 12. Come Alive – Craig David 13. This Is Me – Kesha 14. Rewrite The Stars (Acoustic) – Zendaya www.playbill.com/article/kelly-clarkson-sara-bareilles-brendon-urie-more-to-sing-on-the-greatest-showman-tribute-albumI am actually a fan of the album, but...
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Post by vabbian on Oct 12, 2018 15:13:40 GMT
The Greatest Showman: Reimagined to be released this November. Pop stars doing covers of the songs. 01. The Greatest Show – Panic! at the Disco 02. A Million Dreams – Pink 03. A Million Dreams (Reprise) – Willow Sage Hart 04. Come Alive – Years & Years and Jess Glynne 05. The Other Side – MAX and Ty Dolla $ign 06. Never Enough – Kelly Clarkson 07. This Is Me – Keala Settle, Kesha and Missy Elliott 08. Rewrite The Stars – James Arthur and Anne-Marie 09.Tightrope – Sara Bareilles 10. From Now On – Zac Brown Band Bonus tracks: 11. The Greatest Show – Pentatonix 12. Come Alive – Craig David 13. This Is Me – Kesha 14. Rewrite The Stars (Acoustic) – Zendaya www.playbill.com/article/kelly-clarkson-sara-bareilles-brendon-urie-more-to-sing-on-the-greatest-showman-tribute-album
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Post by Deleted on Oct 12, 2018 15:27:07 GMT
I'm quite into it. If it were a stage musical and we were coming up to a cast change, we'd be excited then to hear what new voices would bring to the songs we already know and love, so I don't see why this is so wildly different. These maybe aren't the artists I would've chosen, but Panic! at the Disco, Kelly Clarkson, and the Zac Brown Band are a pretty great start.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 6, 2019 21:33:31 GMT
As of Friday, the Soundtrack became the first number one album of 2019, with its 25th week at number one in the UK. Having now taken over Adeles record by two weeks, it is now the seventh longest running number one album in UK chart history.
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Post by justfran on Jan 20, 2019 21:29:03 GMT
Soundtrack has now had 27 non-consecutive weeks at number one and is just behind Sgt Pepper’s record!
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Post by peggysue on Jan 26, 2019 21:07:32 GMT
Soundtrack has now equalled Sgt Pepper’s run at no 1 😊
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Post by oxfordsimon on Jan 26, 2019 21:08:53 GMT
I find that quite a dispiriting achievement.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 26, 2019 22:30:55 GMT
Soundtrack has now equalled Sgt Pepper’s run at no 1 😊 The official charts are announced on Monday, so still two days to go until it equals them. But based on the midweek charts, it seems very likely it will batch that record.
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Post by peggysue on Jan 26, 2019 22:45:27 GMT
Actually the charts come out on a Friday and also Hugh Jackman has announced it 😉
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Post by Deleted on Jan 26, 2019 22:49:32 GMT
Actually the charts come out on a Friday and also Hugh Jackman has announced it 😉 Oh no you're right, I got confused sorry. 😂 I had the midweek charts in my head for some reason, apologises. But as I say, amazing news that it has matched that record now!
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Post by Deleted on Jan 27, 2019 0:33:27 GMT
I find that quite a dispiriting achievement. Getting to and staying at number one is a lot easier these days though given it's mostly on downloads (and therefore on profile). I doubt any physical sales records will ever be broken now.
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Post by anthony40 on Jan 27, 2019 7:03:26 GMT
You know at the time my sister and I attended the first ever UK preview screening of this movie, along with a champagne reception and the final thing the woman making the introductory speech was "I dare you to walk out of here without those songs stuck in you heard".
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4,215 posts
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Post by anthony40 on Jan 28, 2019 19:20:46 GMT
the final thing the woman making the introductory speech was "I dare you to walk out of here without those songs stuck in you heard". This was before she then chucked some specially-sharpened copies of the CD into the crowd like Frisbees, I assume? Lol! There were canapés, champagne (Moet), make-up, a karaoke booth and a filmed interview afterwards but (surprisingly in hindsight) no free CDs
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Post by Deleted on Jan 29, 2019 17:03:22 GMT
My choir appears to be singing all of this (or so it feels) this term. Pray for my soul. (I don’t dislike it I’m just not sure I have 3 months of “Rewrite the Stars” in me)
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Post by Polly1 on Jan 29, 2019 21:37:50 GMT
My choir appears to be singing all of this (or so it feels) this term. Pray for my soul. (I don’t dislike it I’m just not sure I have 3 months of “Rewrite the Stars” in me) *and every other choir in the country... altogether now "Ne-ver, ne-ver..."
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Post by Deleted on Jan 30, 2019 10:13:36 GMT
My choir has been doing Never Enough for months now. I don't mind too much; I still think it's the worst song in the whole movie but doing it in three part harmony does at least make it interesting. We were going to start Re-Write The Stars but for some reason haven't got round to it yet...
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Post by Deleted on Feb 11, 2019 11:50:35 GMT
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Post by Nicholas on Mar 3, 2019 16:26:20 GMT
Finally saw this (because everyone wants my opinion over a year too late, right?). It’s not good at all, is it? It fails in every way as a musical. It’s just a dozen “Be yourself” cheesefests are knitted together by the least factually appropriate, most underdeveloped protagonist. The book is badly written, the song structure is all over the place, the songs have no relationship to the action. The marriage between book and songs is the biggest flaw in this lazy, lousy work; lyrics like “a zombie in a maze” or “when the bullets fly (from muskets?)” are pathetic anachronisms, whilst ideas integral to Barnum’s character – showmanship and self-confidence – never appear in the words themselves. “We are bursting through the barricades” – THAT’S THE WRONG MUSICAL!
Ultimately, this terrible musical is a low-end jukebox musical – Pasek & Paul wrote twenty-odd platitudinous pop bops, then strung them to whatever plot came their way (they more or less admitted, on Neil Brand, that they deliberately wrote stand-alone pops to get the gig). Find the word “circus” or “freak” in any of the songs – it’s about circus freaks, it should be easy! You can’t, can you? It’s a really bad musical.
HOWEVER… It’s not a musical. It’s clearly an MTV special. “This Is Me” is not “I Am What I Am”, it’s “I Don’t Give A f***”. And you know what? Swallow my pride. It’s actually a very good MTV special. There’s a reason an album of stadium-rock songs with messages like “I am who I’m meant to be” and “Our love will rewrite the stars” has bested Sgt Peppers – they’re quite good stadium-rock positivity anthems, music everyone likes with messages everyone needs but music no-one is making anymore*. Its precedents AREN’T Cy Colman et al, to which it embarrassingly pales in comparison, but Thriller and Trapped in the Closet, and, um, low bar to leap there, moving on…
*(I think it’s no coincidence that this and Bohemian Rhapsody – with those reviews, but with those standalone stadium-rock scenes – did well in the same year. It’s been a stellar year for diverse musicals (A Star is Born, Mamma Mia 2, Song of the Tree)*, but a better year for bombastic rock concerts (Bo-Rap, “Encore” A Star is Born, and this), and I think the lessons to be learnt from these movies aren’t cinematic, but musical. People will pay to see music they like, even in the cinema, whatever the cinematic quality. Film producers aside, music producers should leap on this.)
Through this prism, the direction is brilliant. The OTT choreography throws trapezes and elephant when it suits, and breakdancing when it doesn’t, with our televisual short attention spans never bored, often amazed. Better still, the camera moves with the motion as music videos have innovated, some surprising camera choreography zooming between time and place, fantasies and realities, in ways the stage can’t – fantastically, impossibly, entertainingly – with slo-mo and CGI emphasising the emotions as only cinema, or MTV, can. I truly believed in the Zac/Zendaya romance, despite the book giving nothing between them – the choreography and camerawork did the trick and filled those gaps. Slick, stylish and sexy – Michael Gracey is Busby Berkley meets Michael Bay – whilst this is just a bunch of music videos, they’re good music videos.
And is there a movie star today who’s as much a MOVIE STAR as Hugh?
(And if I’m honest… Much as I hate the phrase ‘guilty pleasure’ and the terrible book offers no pleasure… Oh boy, I hate this as a musical, so I hate myself for saying this, but I really do like this. I’ve been to amateur shows where they’ve opened with “The Greatest Show”, and forget Hugh opening the O2 with a dance-along, a stranger in a top hat gets me dancing along! These are perhaps the WORST songs for a Barnum musical – which is why this is a terrible musical – but they’re not bad songs in and of themselves – which is why it’s a successful music video.)
So there we go. As a movie musical I’d give it one-and-a-half stars, and would be hyperbolic enough to call it a) the worst book of a musical ever, and b) the worst mismatch between situation and songs in a musical ever. But to call it a movie musical is to misunderstand its genuine pleasures and its runaway success. The songs are fun, the visuals zippy, and the messages (though platitudinous) are positive. So what to make of it overall? Well, it’s so self-aware of its clumsy obviousness that its pretentious critic swallows his pride and says “I didn’t like your show, but…”. And however much I hate myself for falling into that trap, I didn’t like The Greatest Showman, but…
And they are quite good platitudinous songs. Perhaps that’s what people need now.
*When I say “A stellar year for musicals”… Seriously. Seriously. From America – A Star is Born; Greatest Showman; Bohemian Rhapsody; Poppins; 1/6 of Buster Scruggs. From our shores – Mamma Mia 2; Anna and the Apocalypse; Been So Long. From the Philippines – a four hour opera. From Portugal – a Ken Loach musical. From France – rockin' nuns do Joan of Arc. From Russia – fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa. From Kyrgyzstan – the FIRST EVER Kyrgyzstani musical, and a bloody masterpiece to boot!
Plus, whether the reprises of Renee Fleming and Townes van Zandt in Three Billboards or Baby Driver’s choreography, the actual Fred-and-Ginger number in Shape of Water, or the Citizen Kane of musical numbers in a non-musical, more and more films seem to be using the high emotions of the musical number in non-musical films, and getting away with it!
So has there been a time for movie musicals since their golden age like there is now?
And maybe not a movie musical, but the best movie of the year was a musical movie:
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