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Review: ‘Sweeney Todd’

Directed by Tim Burton. Starring Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman and Sacha Baron Cohen.

 
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The first thing to be said about Tim Burton's "Sweeney Todd" is that it's quite faithful to Stephen Sondheim's 1979 musical while being every inch a movie. The second is that it's bloody wonderful. Emphasize bloody. The title character has a few anger-management issues. Sweeney is a revenge-obsessed Victorian London serial killer who slits the throats of his victims as they sit in his barber chair. The bodies are then dumped in the cellar, ground up and served as meat pies in the shop of Mrs. Lovett, his partner in crime. These murders, which transpired from an almost comic Brechtian distance in Hal Prince's original stage production, become something else in Burton's loving close-ups. The highly stylized blood doesn't just ooze, it spurts and sprays like water from a garden hose. All of this accompanied by some of the most beautiful, witty and disturbing songs in the musical-theater canon.

"Sweeney" is not always easy to watch, but you can't turn away. From our first glimpse of Johnny Depp's haunted, vengeful eyes as the ex-convict barber sails into London on a mission to kill the man who stole his wife and child and sent him off to prison, we're swept into Burton's pitch-black vision. It meshes perfectly with the bitter curl of Sondheim's lyrics. Burton isn't interested in class warfare or the industrial-age political metaphors that Prince emphasized onstage: his "Sweeney," from John Logan's adroit screenplay, is an up-close-and-personal tale of blighted passions and dark obsessions. It has an emotional intimacy that allows you to see the work with fresh eyes. The object of Todd's rage is the evil Judge Turpin (Alan Rickman), a villain right out of a 19th-century melodrama. Todd learns that while he was serving his time, his wife poisoned herself, and his now grown daughter, Johanna (Jayne Wisener), became Turpin's captive ward, whom he aims to marry. There's a romantic subplot in which Todd's traveling companion, the young sailor Anthony (Jamie Campbell Bower), falls in love with Johanna, which remains the lamest, most conventional aspect of the story. The pretty Wisener and prettier Bower are decorative, and not much else.

The rest of the cast, however, could hardly be better. No one will claim this is the most beautifully sung "Sweeney Todd" he's ever heard, but that's not the point: they act the songs with hair-raising conviction. This anti-hero may have a one-track mind—he can't see anything beyond the rage that drives him—but Depp is such a soulful presence he gives you a glimpse of this maniac's pain and pathos. Bonham Carter is extraordinary. She reinvents Mrs. Lovett from the inside out—underneath her tough, practical hussy lurks a haunting melancholy, the yearning of a woman in love with an unreachable man, sucked into his madness in the vain hope he'll open his black heart to her. Sweeney's idea of a love song, however, is the inspired "My Friend," a passionate serenade to his barber's blades—he's like a twisted Edward Scissorhands in love with his own metallic fingers. Sacha Baron Cohen (a.k.a. Borat) makes a delicious, scene-stealing appearance as the charlatan barber Pirelli, who makes the fatal mistake of trying to blackmail his rival.

The performances are pitched at just the right scale: theatrically exaggerated but untainted by "Broadway" bombast. Who knew Burton would have such an uncanny feel for how to film a musical? His strength has never been storytelling—his Gothic imagination flowers episodically—but "Sweeney Todd," his best movie since "Ed Wood," keeps its eye on its dark prize. It has the relentless forward momentum of a shark in blood-stained waters.

© 2007

 
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  • Posted By: rrspyke @ 05/05/2008 4:36:29 PM

    Comment: Oh what a wicked and marvelous piece of art this is. Mr. Burton, Mr. Depp and Ms. Bonham-Carter are all at the top of their artistic form. I had nearly given up on the Musical Form in Cinema, and had long abandoned live theater. But this haunting, lyrical dark romance will echo in the very depths of our human souls for a long time to come. Lest we forget the man who truly served us this pie; Stephen Sondheim. Not since West Side Story have I felt Mr. Sondheim had actually created something new in music. With Sweeney Todd, Mr Sondheim, I must congratulate you. Your music is buzzing in my head days after watching this movie...and that is a joy I never thought I would feel again. Bravo to all involved. A Piece of Magic!

  • Posted By: Funnygirl @ 01/19/2008 6:07:38 AM

    Comment: I totally agree........this is the best movie I have seen since Zeffarelli'ls Romeo and Juliet...........haunting, disturbing and wonderful. You cannot ake your eyes off of it........I don't know who is better, Johnny Depp or Helena Bonham Carter.

  • Posted By: hembree @ 12/29/2007 3:47:34 AM

    Comment: This movie/musical is awesome!!!!! I saw it yesterday and it was totally captivating. Johnny's singing was wonderful as well as the others. It was very gothic, haunting and done with such an edgy twist of a musical... I would recommend this to anyone who knows of Tim Burton's work and probably not for those Christian people that will watch the movie just to give their opinions even though the reviews state "demon barber", but whatever then don't watch it if you are one of those people this is for the people that love this kind of stuff and it is our choice!

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