Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street

Started by modage, January 08, 2006, 11:49:29 AM

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MacGuffin




'Sweeney' gets Christmas premiere
Johnny Depp musical to open Dec. 21
Source: Variety

Johnny Depp will be singing in time for Christmas -- everywhere.

DreamWorks and Paramount have decided to go wide with director Tim Burton's bigscreen adaptation of Stephen Sondheim's Broadway musical "Sweeney Todd" on Dec. 21, versus a platform release.

Original plan was to give the film a limited bow on the 21st and then go wide on Jan. 11, the thought being that "Sweeney Todd" is less commercial and less accessible than most musicals because of its darker storyline. Along those lines, a platform opening would provide a chance to build buzz.

However, when DreamWorks execs began seeing clips from "Sweeney," they realized it had far broader appeal, particularly with Depp starring as the revenge-seeking barber of Fleet Street who uses his blade in gruesome ways to seek justice for the deaths of his wife and child.

The hope is that "Sweeney" will be the sort of signature role for Depp that Captain Jack Sparrow in Disney's "Pirates of the Caribbean" franchise was.

DreamWorks and Warner Bros. are partners on "Sweeney," with DreamWorks/Paramount handling domestic. Warners will release the musical overseas. The studios believe "Sweeney" will work as a holiday pic.

Also opening wide on Dec. 21 are Disney's sequel "National Treasure: Book of Secrets"; Warner Bros.' dramedy "P.S., I Love You," starring Gerard Butler and Hilary Swank; and Sony laffer "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story," penned by Judd Apatow and Jake Kasdan, who directed. Limited releases include "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly."

"Sweeney" producer Dick Zanuck and Burton already had been pushing for a wide bow, expressing concerns that a platform release could give the impression it was an arthouse title.

At the same time, DreamWorks and Paramount aren't likely to go out with "Sweeney," which is expected to receive an R rating, on more than 1,500 screens. At least that's the thinking at this point.
"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


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MacGuffin

"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


Skeleton FilmWorks

modage

Sleepy Hollow 2: Perfume: The Story Of A Murderer (The Musical)
Christopher Nolan's directive was clear to everyone in the cast and crew: Use CGI only as a last resort.

Pozer

Quote from: modage on October 04, 2007, 02:43:15 PM
Sleepy Hollow 2: Perfume: The Story Of A Murderer... A Murderer With The Voice of Jack Sparrow That Is (The Musical)


MacGuffin

"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


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modage

Christopher Nolan's directive was clear to everyone in the cast and crew: Use CGI only as a last resort.

MacGuffin

D'Works/Par seeks perfect pitch for 'Todd'
Source: Hollywood Reporter

NEW YORK -- The Stephen Sondheim musical "Sweeney Todd" tells the morally complex story of a wronged barber who takes a bloody knife to patrons of his London shop.

But it's nothing compared with the complexity faced by DreamWorks/Paramount in releasing the R-rated musical.

"This has many niche audiences that need to be dealt with, and they don't really cross," said Terry Press, the marketing guru who is consulting on the film for DreamWorks. "There are 'Sweeney Todd' freaks, there's a sophisticated theatergoer crowd, there are the Tim Burton fans, and there are the young girls who love Johnny Depp. It's like threading many needles."

On top of that there's this prickly issue: The movie isn't done yet.

Burton said in an interview Wednesday that sound and visuals are still being mixed. "Probably about two weeks," he said. "I hope."

Still, the studio took the wraps off the Burton-Depp collaboration Wednesday night at a Film Society of Lincoln Center event in New York -- a venue whose appeal lies squarely with the theater crowd -- bringing out Burton to talk up the process of directing a musical and showing 20 minutes of footage including several Depp musical numbers for the first time in North America.

Outside of a Venice Film Festival event, it was the first public unspooling of the film, which has been the subject of a quiet, even stealth campaign since being put on the calendar for a December release. There have been the occasional peeks -- posters at Comic-Con International, a feature in Entertainment Weekly -- but for a movie going wide in five weeks, the rollout has been unusually low-key.

If the studio has been cautious, it's because "Todd" must balance some unwieldy trays.

As a blood-spattered, tragic story told partly in song, it must avoid looking like too much of a songfest so as not to put off Burton fans. But it also must stop shy of seeming too dark and turning off the musical crowd -- all while appeasing voluble "Todd"-heads, who on fan sites have for months parsed every note that may or may not survive the transition to the big screen.

In other words, the stylish gore has to come in equal proportion to the music.

"All these things that could be described as difficulties could also be the movie's greatest strengths," said Walter Parkes, a producer on "Todd." "But it's a challenge, no doubt."

Those challenges has been evident in several aspects of the movie's production and marketing. Instead of playing musical numbers over dialogue-free images, a trailer features only a few seconds of music, delineating story instead.

The questions about how to release the movie are reflected in a two-headed approach that's tried to keep a lid on hype while still aiming big at the boxoffice.

Heartened by Depp's bankability, the studio in August reversed a plan to platform the movie and decided to open on as many as 700 or 800 screens the weekend before Christmas.

But at the same time, lurking behind the DreamWorks campaign is the studio's push for another (admittedly very different) musical last year: "Dreamgirls."

Footage for that film was screened six months ahead of release at May's Festival de Cannes, and awards talk began pretty much at the start of the season. According to some observers, the movie peaked too soon, and AMPAS looked elsewhere for best picture.

So "Todd" is taking an approach more akin to Warners' tack with "The Departed" last year: keeping the early exposure limited and discouraging preliminary awards talk. (Warners actually is handling the international release of "Todd.")

Of course, the fact that the movie isn't finished also has something to do with the quiet rollout -- "a mix of circumstance and intention," in one insider's description.

Still, the quiet hasn't stopped blogs from drawing hard-core Sondheim fans -- the kind who "really want an image of Betsy Joslyn from the 1982 DVD" -- wringing their hands with lines like, "I wonder what great songs they're going to cut from this movie."

A few posts down came a reaction that may encapsulate the DreamWorks challenge more succinctly: "Whoa, wait -- this is a musical?"
"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


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MacGuffin



Tim Burton's slasher film
The filmmaker's seductively dark visions find a new outlet in 'Sweeney Todd,' the musical tale of a vengeance-minded barber.
By Paul Brownfield, Los Angeles Times

TIM BURTON had already traipsed through China, scouting locations for his next big cinematic event, "Ripley's Believe It or Not!," starring Jim Carrey, when Paramount halted pre-production on the film.

Burton describes himself as "pretty devastated" by the development. Robert Ripley was a California-born cartoonist, newspaper columnist and worldwide seeker of curiosities; he once aspired to a career as a pro baseball player. Burton too is California born, the son of a former minor league ballplayer. An inveterate sketcher, he became a filmmaker, populating his movies with a circus-like array of freaks, outcasts and curiosities.
 
"I know it's a business," Burton said the other week, the frustration evident in his voice. "But for those of us working on the film, you get excited, and it's an art form. They should feel lucky that you treat it like an art form."

Burton didn't have to brood all that long, though, for another long-gestating project suddenly found life -- a big-screen adaptation of Stephen Sondheim's "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street," starring Burton's frequent doppelgänger of a movie star, Johnny Depp.

Still, "Sweeney" was no slam dunk. Although recent screen adaptations of the musicals "Chicago" and "Dreamgirls" have been smash hits, "Sweeney Todd" is a different kind of beast. How do you solve a problem like a bloody, R-rated musical about a serial killer, starring movie actors who aren't professional singers?

One way is by giving it to Burton, who has long maintained a head-turning aplomb as he presents each new theatrical entertainment. "Sweeney Todd" nevertheless comes at an interesting time for the 49-year-old director. Burton is a genre unto himself, but maybe lately too unto himself. His brand has lost some of its panache as he's delved into expensive remakes like "Planet of the Apes" and "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," neither of which was highly regarded.

"Sweeney Todd," which opens Dec. 21, is another ambitious reimagining of a venerable text. The result is a beautifully scored, high-art slasher film, told almost entirely in song and topped off with Depp paying homage to Lon Chaney and Boris Karloff.

Tim Burton, just in time for the holidays.

The making of meat pies

"HAVE you ever had a shave before like that?" Burton said last month in New York of the cringe-worthy aspect of seeing a straight razor hover over an Adam's apple and delicately glide along skin.

"There are places that do it, there are places in London, there are places here. . . . There's quite a vulnerable situation. You know, you're letting some guy that you don't know stick a razor at your throat."

"Sweeney Todd" costars Burton's companion, Helena Bonham Carter, as the meat-pie-making Mrs. Lovett, Alan Rickman as the evil Judge Turpin and Timothy Spall as Beadle Bamford. The story, with its origins as pulp magazine fodder in Victorian England, went through various literary interpretations before Sondheim's operatic 1979 Broadway musical, which starred Len Cariou as Todd and Angela Lansbury as Mrs. Lovett.

Burton first saw the show as a twentysomething CalArts student on holiday in London; he went back over consecutive nights, dazzled both by the music and its sense of the macabre. There is about Todd the mythology of a monster -- a barber turned homicidal maniac after being wrongfully exiled, who then teams with the also-nutty Mrs. Lovett to turn the London gentry into the filling for her meat pies.

Burton started to adapt the musical years ago before getting sidetracked; a movie version was at one time also attached to "American Beauty" director Sam Mendes. According to Burton and producer Richard D. Zanuck, the project fell together again quickly. Zanuck was standing outside an art gallery on La Cienega the night he heard that Paramount was suspending "Ripley's." Inside the gallery, as it happened, was Depp, with a similar hole in his schedule.

The pairing of Depp, with dead eyes and big, scary hair, and Bonham Carter lends a different vibe to the twisted relationship between Todd and Mrs. Lovett. They're almost heroin-chic-looking, the guy thirsting for blood and the girl counseling patience. They don't exactly have heart-to-hearts; as played, the comedy is so dark it's subterranean. Burton likens his "Sweeney" to a relationship movie.

Last month, while Burton was in New York working on the sound, Zanuck was in L.A., hustling a nearly complete version to various studio screenings. Burton, who trained in the business as an animator, will tell you he has never had an easy alliance with big studios, even as he continues to be in business with them. He lives in London and comes to L.A. as seldom as he can, he said, leaving much of the studio interaction to his producer.

With "Sweeney," the hope is that Depp fans (i.e. young girls) and core Burton loyalists will support the box office. Still, it took three studios (Warner Bros., DreamWorks and Paramount) to back a budget of about $50 million; Burton shot the film in less than three months at Pinewood Studios outside London.

"I would have liked a couple more days of shooting things, but, you know, it is what it is," he said. "There's a certain energy to it that's fine. . . . You know what? I prefer it this way. You can have a $200-million budget and feel like you're being choked to death."

In New York, Burton's spartan office had an Elvis throw rug. A Japanese toy version of Willy Wonka, an ode to his "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," sat on the windowsill, still in its box. He seemed harried but engaged; he tends to chase his thoughts as he talks. At one point, the lapel of his jacket quivered as his leg jiggled under the desk. There was another month to go of post-production, while back home Bonham Carter was nearing completion on their second child (she is due in December).

Burton fell in love with London when he was making the first installment in the "Batman" series. "I had this, like, weird past life experience," he said. "I don't get that kind of New-Agey kind of feeling very often, but I just felt, 'Wow, I feel very much at home here.' "

His own back story, given his current station, is kind of remarkable: born and raised in Burbank to a father who worked for the parks and recreation department and a mother who once had a gift store for cats. He escaped into movies and TV more than books and theater. A conversation about eating alone while traveling reminded Burton of a job he once had at a restaurant called Sir George's Smorgasbord on Riverside Drive.

"A meal fit for a king," he deadpanned. "It was closed down by the health department, finally."

Mechanics of a killing machine

IN the film, Todd's first kill is the blackmailing rival barber Pirelli (Sacha Baron Cohen of "Borat" fame in an electric blue jumpsuit). Blood shoots freely from Pirelli's neck.

Burton has long thought the violence in the show was more illustrative than literal -- an orgiastic release. There were Internet rumors that he was being made to cut back on the gore, which he says isn't true; he says he warned executives early on. "The first thing that came out of my mouth was, 'There's going to be blood in the movie, so don't even ask.' " Burton said he told executives.

Some of his artistic team are new collaborators: cinematographer Dariusz Wolski, who did the "Pirates of the Caribbean" blockbusters, and production designer Dante Ferretti, an Oscar winner on Martin Scorsese's "The Aviator." "Sweeney Todd" is lushly beautiful in its sepia-toned gothicness, a Burton trademark. London is shrouded in fog, the sun just a rumor.

But really the film costars Burton's dreamlike style with Depp's latest acting choice. Their last project together, "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," had a mansion that melts in the heat and Depp seeming to channel Michael Jackson and/or Carol Channing as Wonka.

This time around, Depp has gone off into the ornate insularity of Chaney and Karloff, actors who Burton feels moved in a style all their own. John Logan, who wrote the screenplay, said he and Burton share "stunted childhoods watching Amicus movies," referring to the British company that in the 1960s and '70s produced films such as "Dr. Terror's House of Horrors" and "The House That Dripped Blood."

Here, that aesthetic gets married to Sondheim's music, re-recorded by a 78-piece orchestra. Even by Burton's standards for opening titles, the one for "Sweeney Todd" -- the Bernard Herrmann-esque overture booming as the camera takes a fetishistic tour of Todd and Lovett's killing machine -- is exhilarating.

Burton didn't want patches of dialogue interrupted by song, as is traditional. He cut the show's famous opening number, "The Ballad of Sweeney Todd." Why have a chorus singing about "attending the tale of Sweeney Todd" when you could just go ahead and attend it?

Sondheim had final approval of the cast, although Burton says the finicky composer mostly stayed out of the way.

"I had a lot more traffic with him than Tim realizes," said Zanuck, later hastening to add that Sondheim loved the finished work.

Previous attempts to turn Sondheim's musicals into feature films -- "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" and "A Little Night Music" -- have been less than successful, and no one, perhaps, is more qualified to discuss the risk of big-studio musicals than Zanuck. 20th Century Fox, while he headed it, made such films as "The French Connection" and "MASH," and later, with David Brown, he produced "Jaws." But Zanuck also presided over the box office musical flops "Hello, Dolly!" "Star!" and "Dr. Dolittle."

Zanuck recalled that Sondheim, before seeing a screening of Burton's film, asked: " 'Richard, am I going to like this movie?' "

" 'If you can leave Stephen Sondheim in the hotel, if you go as a movie fan, just lean back and enjoy it,' " Zanuck said he told him. " 'I'll supply the popcorn, you just be the fan.' "

"And he looked at me and said, 'You haven't answered my question.' "

If "Ed Wood" and "Edward Scissorhands" put him on the map, "Big Fish," which came out in 2003, was unusual in that it was the first time that Burton seemed to ask himself why he was drawn to the fantastical in the first place. It will be interesting to see if "Sweeney Todd" is received as a mainstream masterwork or further evidence of Burton's growing reputation as a filmmaker who visualizes stories more than he tells them.

Though his animated "Corpse Bride" was nominated for an Oscar, Burton's live-action work hasn't, and none of his films is on the American Film Institute's top 100 list. He claims that even his first feature, "Pee-wee's Big Adventure," made a lot of worst 10 lists and wasn't appreciated until years later. "The same thing with 'Beetlejuice,' " he said. Reminded that the late New Yorker critic Pauline Kael had loved "Pee-wee," Burton said: "That was kind of an amazing thing, because that was one of the rare ones."

Next for the director is a 3-D version of "Alice in Wonderland" and the remake of his 1984 short "Frankenweenie" for Disney.

Through it all, Burton has remained true to the thing that he does. Told that he seems to have waded into "Sweeney Todd" without feeling the need to steep himself in the entire history of musical theater, he laughed and said: "You're pointing out something; that's why I loved doing 'Ed Wood' so much. I loved that character because he either didn't know he was delusional, or whatever, but it didn't matter."

"Ed Wood," which came out in 1994, was Burton's high-spirited, black-and-white paean to the so-called worst director of all time. In Burton's hands, Wood became an enduring symbol of the filmmaking art as hope beyond all reason.

"That's why I responded to that movie and that character so much, because it's exactly true," Burton was saying. "And I feel kind of blessed with it in a way, because . . . I do worry about certain things, but I also don't, in a way. Which is why I'm able to do things. Otherwise I wouldn't be able to do it."
"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


Skeleton FilmWorks

Gamblour.

Just saw a screening of this. I know next to nothing about Sweeney Todd, except for the revenge aspect and whatever was mentioned in Jersey Girl.

I feel like it's nothing new, we've seen it before. Dreary, gloomy London, HBC as Marla Singer, a gaunt, baggy-eyed Johnny Depp, Alan Rickman being mean, and a young female who looks exactly like Christina Ricci in Sleepy Hollow. Nothing really impressed me, and when my friends said they loved it, I was pretty surprised. I did enjoy some of the movie, but overall it had very boring visuals. I mean, Burton knows how to make the characters, set, and production value look completely unique, but the compositions were very bland.

I didn't want something like Chicago or Moulin Rouge, but that doesn't mean the film had to lack any visual style. POSSIBLE SPOILERS I mean, when the people slide down the trap door, there were literally only two angles used. END SPOILERSThere was no variety in many of the shots. Often the songs were sung with the character just plainly staring, no movement, no energy. I don't want dance numbers, but going the other direction isn't an excuse for boring shots.

Then again, my two friends loved it. I'm not sure I can be trusted on this one.

WWPTAD?

MacGuffin

"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


Skeleton FilmWorks

Ghostboy

I don't know about anyone else, but I really, really loved this. And I actually think it's Burton's most gorgeous movie in I don't know how long. I couldn't get over how great it looked. I haven't seen the original play, so I don't know what I'm missing, but as a simple story of revenge and madness, I thought this was pretty stellar.

w/o horse

Despite being on the ball for most of the year I'm now falling behind in seeing my new releases.  I'm going to blow all those fuckers off and see this one over the weekend because Ghostboy's got me excited.
Raven haired Linda and her school mate Linnea are studying after school, when their desires take over and they kiss and strip off their clothes. They take turns fingering and licking one another's trimmed pussies on the desks, then fuck each other to intense orgasms with colorful vibrators.

Pozer


Ghostboy

I think I'll see it again on Christmas day, too. I  can't think of a better movie to celebrate the holiday.

My longer review can be read here.

modage

saw this today.  short review (cause its that or nothing these days): i liked it.  EASILY EASILY EASILY burton's best since Sleepy Hollow which is 8 years or so.  it took me a LONG time to accept the entire film being sung.  for anyone else that doesn't know the play, (i didn't), its more of an opera than a musical.  and as such, i'm not sure that film is the proper medium to perform it because it just seems SO awkward for the LONGEST time.  BUT if you CAN look past that, there is lots of good stuff here.  the ending rules.  i'm glad to see burton doing something different and the story seems completely made for him, but should this have been a movie in the first place? 
Christopher Nolan's directive was clear to everyone in the cast and crew: Use CGI only as a last resort.