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chigaco
American flag (2004)
113 minutes



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by S. James Wegg
(12/10/03)

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Catherine Zeta-Jones
Catherine Zeta-Jones dazzles early

Renée Zwellweger
Renée Zwellweger struts her stuff
(photos by David James)

Chicago looks better than it sounds

“Ah five, six, seven, eight,” and with the classic count in we’re off to Chicago where the dancin’s hot, the music’s grand and integrity is a definite “no show.” 

From the opening sequence of Lady-Macbeth-hits-the-boards, director Rob Marshall has fashioned a Musicale vérité that brings Bob Fosse’s original stage production into a visual tour de force of the seedier side of human nature.  It lives for its song cues and production numbers as they intercut (with Academy Award® level editing by Martin Walsh) with parallel reality shots, adding compelling detail to the lyrics and movements of the entire cast. 

Taye Diggs, as our affable host, gives just the right touch to his banters, introductions and asides even as he leads his remarkable musicians from an upright that sounds distinctly grand—ain’t we got fun! 

Despite Richard Gere’s (sleazy, but connected lawyer, Billy Flynn whose good looks and silver tongue win more cases than his briefs ever would) surprisingly fine singing voice and steady if unspectacular tap (but seriously, folks, I just saw some Fred Astaire highlights—cross-reference below) and D.A.-du-jour Colm Feore’s near-menacing delivery, it’s the women who make the show. 

Queen Latifah, as Matron Mama Morton (with a first-act torch song that seared and shimmered to her considerable weight and savvy looks) provided the story’s glue as the two murdering show girls dodge hanging through shameless defence-by-publicity-stunt techniques.   

Catherine Zeta-Jones as Velma Kelley, the surviving half of the sister act doomed by family ties which required a crowbar to break then bullets to end, gave a performance that came out like gangbusters but then seemed to lose fire even as she slipped off the front page.  Whereas Renée Zwellweger (Roxie Hart whose long-suffering husband—Chicago native John C. Reilly—brought new meaning to the term naïveté) went from strength to strength as she reached celebrity status without a review in her pocket and a truly immaculate conception in a womb that would never betray her condition.  “Baby, baby, how I love ya!” 

But it was the production numbers that consistently held my attention as the dancers filled the screen with poise, verve and bang-on attitude.  Their physical beauty and exceptional prowess supported (literally in one unforgettable moment where Gere is rolled over their bodies like a log in a boom) the principals so well, that it allowed their contributions to lift this spectacle over the top. 

Surprisingly, the weak link was John Kander’s score (based on Danny Elfman’s original).  Apart from the saucy and theatrical “All That Jazz,” the charts, although rhythmically vibrant, were melodically light.  And the near-constant use of “variety by chromatic modulation” only added to the sameness of the result.  All the more reason to praise Dion Beebe’s knowing camera that kept our eyes awash with extraordinary visual stimulation. 

Chicago’s fun, pizzazz, and tightly cut structure combine to make this film a remarkable example of what Hollywood does best. JWR

Director

Rob Marshall

Producer

Martin Richards

Screenwriter

Bill Condon, based on the play by Maurine Dallas Watkins

Director of Photography

Dion Beebe

Production Designer

John Myhre

Editor

Martin Walsh

Music

John Kander - based on Danny Elfman’s original score

Main Cast

Taye Diggs, Richard Gere, Queen Latifah, John C. Reilly, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Renée Zwellweger


Cross-reference:   The Great American Songbook

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