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Rob Marshall, director of Chicago and the soon-to-be released musical Into The Woods, is the focus o

Rob Marshall, director of Chicago and the soon-to-be released musical Into The Woods, is the focus of our YouTube Director Spotlight. 

With no prior film directing experience, Marshall proved his worth as Chicago went on to win six Oscars, including Best Picture.

Read more here.


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movie-gifs:Chicago (2002) dir. Rob Marshallmovie-gifs:Chicago (2002) dir. Rob Marshallmovie-gifs:Chicago (2002) dir. Rob Marshall

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Chicago (2002) dir. Rob Marshall


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Meet the cast of Disney’s The Little Mermaid, starring Halle Bailey, Jonah Hauer-King, Awkwafi

Meet the cast of Disney’s The Little Mermaid, starring Halle Bailey, Jonah Hauer-King, Awkwafina, Daveed Diggs, Jacob Tremblay, Melissa McCarthy & Javier Bardem. Directed by Rob Marshall, featuring music from the animated original & new music by Alan Menken & Lin-Manuel Miranda


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New titles announced! This is straight from Oh My Disney“Cruella with Emma Stone set for the title r

New titles announced! This is straight from Oh My Disney

“Cruella with Emma Stone set for the title role and Kelly Marcel writing.

A Wrinkle in Time with Ava DuVernay attached to direct and Jennifer Lee writing.

Jungle Cruise with Dwayne Johnson set to star and John Requa and Glenn Ficarra writing.

Dumbo with director Tim Burton and writer Ehren Kruger.

A sequel to Mary Poppins with director Rob Marshall, starring Emily Blunt and Lin-Manuel Miranda.

Maleficent 2 with Angelia Jolie set to return in the title role and Linda Wolverton writing.

The Nutcracker and the Four Realms with director Lasse Hallstrom and writer Ashleigh Powell.

The Jungle Book 2 with both director Jon Favreau and writer Justin Marks returning.

A Tinker Bell project with Reese Witherspoon set to star and Victoria Strouse writing.

The studio has also updated their release schedule with the following dates:

UNTITLED DISNEY FAIRY TALE (Live Action) previously dated on 12/22/17 moves up to 7/28/17

UNTITLED DISNEY FAIRY TALE (Live Action) now dated on 4/6/18

UNTITLED DISNEY LIVE ACTION now dated on 8/3/18

UNTITLED DISNEY LIVE ACTION now dated on 12/25/18

UNTITLED DISNEY FAIRY TALE (Live Action) now dated on 12/20/19″


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シカゴ@目黒シネマ 2022.03.

基本クズばっかり出てくる話好き

“Chicago” at Meguro Cinema, Tokyo

It’s hard to believe that my favorite musical has finally made its way onto the big screen. As Phil said, we’ve been obsessing over every detail for over a year now. Our family tradition is to go see a movie on Christmas Day and there was no debate over what our choice would be this year.

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Into the Woods weaves together several classic fairy tales. We see Jack and the Beanstalk, Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, and Rapunzel all in the same story. But how do you connect them? Easy. Invent a witch!

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The witch on the big screen is played by Meryl Streep. Hailed by many to be the greatest living actress, I personally think she is the worst. Most of the time, I cannot stand her performances. She doesn’t really seem to understand subtlety or nuance and that really gets to me. So needless to say, I was majorly upset when I heard she had been cast. But I’m glad to report that she was fine as the witch. That’s about the highest praise I can give. I’m so used to Bernadette Peters as the role that it’s hard not to compare. Streep did interpret the character a little differently, but she’s worked on her vocals a lot since Mama Mia (because UGH that was terrible) . So all in all, I wasn’t mad at the end of the film concerning her, and that’s pretty good.

Anyway, the witch is the connecting factor between all the stories. She cast a spell of infertility upon her neighbors, the Baker (James Corden) and his wife (Emily Blunt). In order to reverse the curse, they must retrieve four items before three days has passed: the cow as white as milk, the cape as red as blood, the hair as yellow as corn, the slipper as pure as gold.

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It’s through this adventure that we meet the other characters of the story. Cinderella is played by the wonderful and always fantastic Anna Kendrick. Kendrick has made a series of musical films lately and she’s definitely on the right track. I’m sure she doesn’t want to only do musicals, but she has a natural talent for it. Her performance as Cinderella is charming to say the least. This Cinderella is much less passive that the classical telling and I’m all for that! As you all know, I love a strong female. While the typical love story is still present, we see a much more level headed princess who doesn’t get swept away by “happily ever after”.

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Jack (Daniel Huttlestone) is the proud owner of a cow named Milky White. Huttlestone really knocked me off my feet in Les Miserables. For one so young, he has such a strong presence. This is no less true in Into the Woods. As a naturally curious boy, Jack enters the world of the giants, much to his mother’s (played ever so perfectly by Tracy Ullman) dismay. The transition from poverty to riches at the hand of the giants is not lost on Jack’s mother who eventually comes around to his involvement with the giants. Little do they know how much small acts of thievery will effect everyone.

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Little Red Riding Hood (Lilla Crawford) must face her wolf (Johnny Depp) deep in the woods. On her way to her grandmother’s house, she meets the creature bent on her demise. Red is another strong female character and my personal favorite. Although she survives the wolf only with the Baker’s help, she evaluates what has happened and actually learns from it. She is feisty and funny and I’ll always want to be her.

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The highlight of the film for me was the duet between the two princes, Cinderella’s prince (Chris Pine) and Rapunzel’s prince (Billy Magnussen). Brothers who are always in competition with each other, they play off one another perfectly. They escalate their bravado with every new phrase and I haven’t laughed so hard in a while.

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Fairy tales are stories meant to inspire us to find happiness. At least that’s how we view them now. But when these tales were written, they often held much darker moral teachings. Stephen Sondheim in his infinite brilliance returns to this idea after “Happily Ever After” in the second half of Into the Woods. We see that things are often not happy at all. Fairy tales last only for a little while and then life gets in the way. Our choices effect those around us, hurting the ones we love and doing things we thought we could never do.

While the Broadway version is plenty dark, Disney made a few choices to lighten the mood in small ways. There are fewer deaths, no unwed pregnancies, no sexual affairs. And for a family friendly movie, I’m fine with it. I understand why they scaled back on the dark tone of the second act. It was sad to see a few of my favorite songs cut, but it’s hard to fit it all in a feature film.

Visually, the film was stunning. Rob Marshall definitely has a way with visuals and this movie is no exception. It’s lavish without looking fake. There is CGI, but it’s sporadic. The woods look and feel like woods. What more could we ask for? The orchestration was also totally on point. It was a beautiful adaptation of the original score, weaving in songs that didn’t make the cut in with the songs that did. The cast is fantastic and all of them play their parts well. I was majorly impressed with the vocals of a few of the cast members who I didn’t know could even sing, especially Chris Pine.

Even with all the changes, the movie itself was enjoyable and true to the spirit of Into the Woods. Life may seem perfect, but it never is. Tales are just stories, not real life. Life is hard, but worth the journey.

-Angela

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