Great Film: Chicago
Tuneful entertainment with a message
"Chicago" represents the latest salvo in a mini-revival of one of
Hollywood's most venerated genres: the live-action musical. Since the
end
of the golden age of big-budget studio song and dance extravaganzas,
musicals have appeared only at irregular intervals, and most have met
with
mixed critical response and equally indifferent gross figures (the most
recent example: Alan Parker's box-office also-ran "Evita"). But the
holiday-season success of the Coen brothers' music-filled Depression
comedy
"O Brother, Where Art Thou?" (2000) indicated a new song filling the
Hollywood air, a notion confirmed last May with the release of "Moulin
Rouge". Baz Luhrmann's phantasmagorical tale of 19th-century Parisian
decadence, memorably scored with contemporary pop tunes, may not have set
the summer box office on fire, but it was heaped with critical raves, won
an
enthusiastic cult following, and became the first musical in decades to
receive a Best Picture Oscar nomination.
"Chicago", the feature-film debut of veteran stage director /
choreographer
Rob Marshall, is not as radical or experimental as Luhrmann's picture.
Like
"Evita", it is a cinematic adaptation of a hit Broadway show, namely Bob
Fosse's tale of two 1920s murderesses who milk their crimes for
headline-grabbing glory. And, like Parker's film, it doesn't attempt to
re-invent the musical; it's content to be a solid, well-crafted genre
product that knows what audiences expect from a musical and delivers in
spades.
Indeed, the story (adapted from the original musical by "Gods and
Monsters"
scribe Bill Condon) is the most radical thing here, following as it does
the
exhilarating up-and-down fame rollercoaster of two cold-blooded killers.
Roxie Hart (Renee Zellweger) is a wannabe, a small-time song-and-dance
girl
who looks at the bright lights of the Chicago clubs and longs for her
night
in the spotlight. She gets it in a rather unexpected way after she kills
her lover (Dominic West), a sleazy furniture salesman who'd filled her
heads
with lies about showbiz connections. Sent to prison, Roxie finds that
the
public's thirst for scandalous headlines has turned her into a celebrity,
and the scared, confused young murderess transforms into a media monster,
playing the people like an orchestra and turning her crime into an act of
self-sacrifice. Roxie's rise to fame incurs the wrath of her one-time
showbiz idol, Velma Kelly (Catherine Zeta-Jones), a Louise-Brooks-bobbed
former chorine who's doing time for killing her sister and philandering
hubby...and who was the number-one star of Murderess Row until Roxie
sauntered in. Caught between these two vixens is Billy Flynn (Richard
Gere), Chi-town's biggest celebrity lawyer, who's representing them
both...and who has a few "razzle-dazzle" tricks of his own up his
sleeve.
As anyone who ever saw Bob Fosse's films ("Cabaret", "STAR80") can
attest,
the man had a cynical streak a mile wide, so it's not hard to see why the
tawdry material of "Chicago" (based on a real 1920s murder case) was
attractive to him. Condon, fortunately, does not file down the story's
rough edges, and his script scores some trenchant observations on the
curious nature of modern celebrity. Velma and Roxie are just like Lorena
Bobbitt, Kato Kaelin, and all those other small-timers who, through one
stupid action or simply by being in the wrong place at the right time,
become famous beyond any right they actually have to achieve such
heights.
And who lets such undeserved accolades come their way? Us, of course.
The
film's howling chorus of reporters and courtroom gawkers eagerly sucking
up
the latest sensational story are the on-screen stand-ins for the
audience,
whose appetite for scandal and thrills has become so insatiable that the
unremarkable are remarked upon, the unworthy celebrated, the evil
elevated.
It's a deep message for what is essentially a song-and-dance comedy, but
Condon allows himself to engage its darker implications without cramming
"message" down our throats. We are, after all, mainly here to see the
numbers, and Marshall's expertise with choreography and music makes sure
the
songs (composed by "Cabaret's" John Kander and Fred Ebb) pack a
satisfying
punch. "Roxie" is our little killer's exhilarating ode to her impending
fame, complete with her name in big red lights. "Cell Block Tango" finds
Velma and a gaggle of murderesses singing about how their victims all
"had
it comin'", complete with some admirably sleazy choreography. Marshall's
imaginative staging of "We Both Reached For The Gun", a musical press
conference, has Roxie as Billy's wooden ventriloquist's dummy and the
reporters as marionettes under his control. And, of course, there's a
knockout closing duet for Velma and Roxie, the biting, excitingly filmed
"Nowadays". I've never seen "Chicago" onstage, but if this movie
captures
the energy of the show, it must be one showstopper after
another.
Marshall's direction is not always as assured as his staging of the
musical
numbers. Oddly, the film almost feels like it was shot in sequence, as
Marshall's initially choppy editing and scene-pacing grows progressively
more seamless as the picture goes along. This is crucial, as the numbers
all take place in a sort of fantasy nightclub cut off from the main
action.
Still, Marshall generally gets high marks for his debut, and he is ably
abetted by a top-notch technical crew. In addition to the aforementioned
editing (by Martin Walsh), strong work is put forward by costume designer
Colleen Atwood (who nicely recreates the sometimes anachronistically
revealing dance outfits of the stage show), cinematographer Dion Beebe,
and
the set design crew, led by production designer John Myrhe, who are able
to
make their squalor a little more authentic than what one would see on a
stage.
Of course, as with any musical, the lion's share of the picture's success
rests on the shoulders of its performers, and while Astaire and Garland
aren't losing any sleep, "Chicago"'s cast members acquit themselves
surprisingly well as song-and-dance artists. Gere, slick with oily
charm,
displays a witty way with a lyric and a nice relaxed tap-dance style.
Zeta-Jones, a dancer in London before she hit the silver screen, shows
off
the flashiest moves of anyone here, all the while oozing fearsome
sexuality.
Also turning in fine work are Queen Latifah as the corrupt warden of the
women's prison and John C. Reilly as Roxie's hapless cuckold of a
husband,
whose "Mr. Cellophane" poignantly sums up his nowhere-man
status.
As far as I'm concerned, though, this is Renee Zellweger's show all the
way.
For me, Zellweger's onscreen work has been wildly uneven, ranging from
the
agreeable "Jerry Maguire" to "Me Myself & Irene", where she seemed
stunned
to find herself in front of a movie camera. Here, however, her
confidence
is exhilarating, and as Roxie transforms from a timid criminal to a
vampish
media super-vixen, Zellweger projects sex, sarcasm, and sweetness (often
insincerely) like nothing I've seen from her before. Her dancing is not
as
polished as Zeta-Jones's, but she more than holds her own, and her
numbers
are easily the most memorable of the film. Roxie may not be a star, but
Zellweger certainly is here; I'm rooting for her to take home a Best
Actress
Oscar for this.
"Chicago" is not quite the masterpiece some of the early reviews have
suggested. The lack of a more experienced director keeps it from being
more
than a top-notch screen transfer of a venerated stage work.
Nevertheless,
the film is funny and exciting, with plenty of memorable numbers, and it
proves for sure that the success of "Moulin Rouge" wasn't a fluke.
Now...how about that Sweeney Todd movie finally?
Cast
- Bandleader played by Taye Diggs
- Stage Manager played by Cliff Saunders
- Velma Kelly played by Catherine Zeta-jones
- Roxie Hart played by Renée Zellweger
- Fred Casely played by Dominic West
- Mrs. Borusewicz played by Jayne Eastwood
- Police Photographer played by Bruce Beaton







