DREAMGIRLS (take 2)

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I'm boggling at A) walking into this movie not knowing it's a musical

I can't get past this either! How in the world do you miss this?

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 1 February 2007 06:13 (seventeen years ago) link

"I had no idea Star Wars was going to have lasers in this, I just wanted to see old guys talking about spiritual powers."

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 1 February 2007 06:14 (seventeen years ago) link

haha, board full of people who love/obsess over critics and the minutiae of pop culture not getting that vast amounts of people(largely kids/teens)just see an add with eddie murphy/beyonce/jamie foxx and go "hey, let's check it out!"

bobby bedelia (van dover), Thursday, 1 February 2007 06:43 (seventeen years ago) link

I saw this tonight and was surprised at how entertaining it was. Jennifer Hudson stole the movie, with Eddie Murphy a close second. I thought he was excellent. And even though Beyonce does nothing for me as a singer I melted into a big goopy mess whenever she was onscreen.

Jay Vee's Return (Manon_69), Sunday, 4 February 2007 06:54 (seventeen years ago) link

haha, board full of people who love/obsess over critics and the minutiae of pop culture not getting that vast amounts of people(largely kids/teens)just see an add with eddie murphy/beyonce/jamie foxx and go "hey, let's check it out!"

Every single thing said.written about this movie references the fact that it's a musical!

The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Sunday, 4 February 2007 13:36 (seventeen years ago) link

ten months pass...

As far as movies to have on in the background on HBO HD on your parents' nice TV during winter break go this is a minor classic

A B C, Friday, 28 December 2007 01:29 (sixteen years ago) link

yes i still love this movie and have seen it approximately 5000 times.

horseshoe, Friday, 28 December 2007 19:35 (sixteen years ago) link

jennifer hudson is playing sarah jessica parker's assistant in the movie of that awful show. :(

horseshoe, Friday, 28 December 2007 19:42 (sixteen years ago) link

does that represent a faster post-Oscar fall than Cuba Gooding Jr's?!

Dr Morbius, Friday, 28 December 2007 19:44 (sixteen years ago) link

jennifer hudson is playing sarah jessica parker's assistant in the movie of that awful show. :(

Dreamgirls Part 2?

gabbneb, Friday, 28 December 2007 19:45 (sixteen years ago) link

four months pass...

I thought Dreamgirls was pretty meh. The editing was manic. The photography was awful. The plot (like most musicals) was silly, but worse it was paint-by-the-numbers unadventurous. The acting was mostly pretty wooden. But all that is beside the point. It's all about the music, right?

The singers were amazingly talented. But the stuff they were given to sing was rot: consistently overproduced and soulless. Real Motown was fresh and engaging and remains so.

The only number in Dreamgirls that even started to engage me was early on when Jennifer Hudson sang a ditty about how Jamie Foxx was the "perfect man" for her. It was the only nummber where Hudson didn't belt every last word of the lyric.

The writer directed this. He and the producer should be shut up in a comfy, luxuriously appointed, airless box and never let out.

Aimless, Sunday, 25 May 2008 17:47 (fifteen years ago) link

Edie Murphy drops trou.

Abbott, Sunday, 25 May 2008 17:59 (fifteen years ago) link

That was a highlight, yes.

Aimless, Sunday, 25 May 2008 18:04 (fifteen years ago) link

four years pass...
ten months pass...

Oh god I fucking love love love this movie so fucking much. It is basically Motown fan fiction but then they get real pop stars to play the thinly veiled ciphers and just wow wow wow everything about this movie is SO GREBT who cares if the songs are a little showtunes on steroids I fucking love it with the same part of my heart that believes Josie & the Pussycats is the best pop film ever made I love it wow.

Branwell Bell, Saturday, 4 January 2014 23:09 (ten years ago) link

ginormous smiley face

SHAUN (DJP), Saturday, 4 January 2014 23:28 (ten years ago) link

Just about the bit where there is the giant final Queen Bey / Jennifer Hudson sing-off battle I am always just rolling around on the floor going "best! film! EVAR!" There is so much to love about this film, all the 60s trivia just totally gets to me. It is magic!

Branwell Bell, Saturday, 4 January 2014 23:35 (ten years ago) link

it is the fuckin best

horseshoe, Sunday, 5 January 2014 01:23 (ten years ago) link

whenever i talk about this movie irl and people dismiss me i always want to be like "D4n P3rry loves it too!" but then i can't ;_;

horseshoe, Sunday, 5 January 2014 01:23 (ten years ago) link

How can people dismiss this movie? How? OK, I guess it's one of those films that reveals itself more and more on repeated watchings. The first time I was all like "glam! glitz! camp! pop! 45 single montages! tap dancing!" but the more times I watched it, the more of the subplots revealed themselves to me. On one level, it's like, yeah, it's a very superficial when dealing with the social changes of the 60s and 70s, but on the other, it's a fucking pop music fantasy! The fact that it tips nods to social change at all is amazing. Because that was what was *so great* about the girl group era songs in the first place, that they seemed quite frivolous and kitchen sink on the surface, but if you looked a little harder, you realised that they were grappling with some quite complex issues that just weren't getting talked about elsewhere. And this film has it all - solidarity, sisterhood, sexual betrayal, INAPPROPRIATE PREGNANCY - swapping out band members, sacking the fat talented one, bands getting screwed over by their managers, white fans being fickle, black fans having long memories but being unforgiving, all the cliches, but also laying bare a lot of things about the music industry that they try to pretend are in the past, or better yet never existed - even while they do the same thing today (white artists appropriating black music, quite literally in places, like, how much more blatantly can they put it out there?) This movie is fun, and silly, and light-hearted and glitzy, but there's a ton of condensed history in there with the sugar. Some of the film's most powerful moments are actually so understated like it's deliberately easy to miss them on first viewing - the bit where James Thunder Early is basically booed off the stage in Florida, for doing his usual salacious audience-baiting at a white woman, yet it's the moment that the black waiter turns around and gives him this *look* and a smile. Seems much more effective than a heavy handed "this is the moral message here" <- though there are those moments, too, e.g. "This is a black-owned business!" as Detroit burns.

A movie about Pop Music is always going to be a hard sell. Make it about GURL COOTIE female pop music, that's a harder sell, make it a film with three strong black female leads, and even if two of them are actual Pop Stars, that's going to be an impossible sell.

It's weird to me that it doesn't even seem to have a cult following among people who idolise the "Girl Group" sound; I've never seen anyone from the indie-pop scene even mention it. But I guess that's the thing, it's easy to listen to Supremes and Vandellas records and ignore race; it's not so easy to watch a film set in 60s America and ignore race.

Branwell Bell, Sunday, 5 January 2014 10:40 (ten years ago) link

(It just reminds me of those dudes who are always all "oh, Motown and 60s girl groups are so so classic" but if you turn up with an Electrik Red or Dawn Richard record they're all NOPE.)

Branwell Bell, Sunday, 5 January 2014 10:47 (ten years ago) link

Reading this thread, some of you (pl) are o_0 with your criticism of vocal styles.

One of the things that really got me was such a classic girl group trope of using vocal style as a shorthand for personality. Effie's singing style is indicative of her ballsy, creative-fire-of-the-band, over the top personality, and it's the bits where she breaks or lets down her tough-girl guard that really get you. And Deena's evolution from personality-free cipher to hugely emotive singer echoes her character development. And I think one of the underrated bits of the film is that moment where perpetual backing singer/doormat Lorelle finally goes from wispy bits of "oohs" and "aahs" to finally busting a gut on "Lorelle loves Jimmy, it's true... but Lorelle and Jimmy are THROUGH!!!!" -- aah, aaah, yeah, it's obvious (this is show tunes, of course it's obvious!) but it fucking gets me every time.

Branwell Bell, Sunday, 5 January 2014 11:01 (ten years ago) link

All of that is massively OTM

SHAUN (DJP), Sunday, 5 January 2014 18:46 (ten years ago) link

Edie Murphy drops trou.

― Abbott, Sunday, May 25, 2008 5:59 PM (5 years ago)

even the beatles had a coinstar machine in their living room (Crabbits), Sunday, 5 January 2014 18:53 (ten years ago) link


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