CHICAGO
Article courtesy of Andrea
Chase of KillerMovieReviews.com
CHICAGO
, USA/ CANADA , 2002, MPAA Rating : PG-13 for sexual content
and dialogue, violence and thematic elements
Just when you thought wed lost the knack for producing
a live-action musical film here in the States, along comes CHICAGO.
Set in 1920s in that toddling town, this hard-as-nails tale
of sex, politics, fame, and most of all jazz, is a big, splashy,
brassy confection wrapped up in a bow with enough bugle beads
and sequins to circle the globe twice and finish with a flourish.
Our heroines, as such, are Velma Kelly, who killed her husband
and her sister when she caught them doing unorthodox acrobatics,
and Roxie Hart, who killed her lover when she found out he couldnt
help her get her show biz career going so that she could leave
her dull as dust husband. Theyre murderers, sure, but
the sordid heat-of-passion type of killer rather than the cold,
calculating kind. The calculation comes after theyre in
the slammer awaiting trial. Thats when their silk-shirted
sleaze lawyer, Billy Flynn, in the person of Richard Gere, whos
never lost a case, tries theirs in the media before a trial
date is even set. Velma, played by Catherine Zeta-Jones in a
sleek bob and vamp eye makeup, and Roxie in the person of kewpie
doll Renee Zellweger, trade insults, give press conferences,
and jockey to stay in the public eye all while never leaving
prison. Not that that stops the eye-popping production numbers,
each one topping the last, though none captures the ladies
gestalt like a chorus line of murderesses done up as bondage
babes and doing a little number entitled He Had It Coming.
Director and choreographer Rob Marshall has done a first-rate
job of translating the Bob Fosse stage play to the big screen,
blending, as Fosse did, the production numbers into the action
with a smooth as silk emcee in the person of Taye Diggs, adding
his own piquant narration. From the three-ring circus complete
with spangles that erupts during the courtroom sequence, to
Queen Latifah in gold lame as the prison matron, Mamma, explaining
the rules to the prisoners, to the soulful solo by John C. Reilly
as Velmas long-suffering cuckold of a husband, they dont
so much move the action along, as fill out the emotional life
of these characters. Thats right. For all the sizzle theres
a whole lot more than glitz going one here. Theres smarts
in this script by Bill Condon based on the the original musicals
book by Fred Ebb and Bob Fosse and lyrics by Ebb, that nail
our obsession with scandal and play it for knife-edged laughs.
Add to that actors who dont just sing the words, but sink
their teeth into them with the meaty bravura that they deserve.
And while its stars vary in their dancing abilities, none is
asked to do more than he or she can muster. In fact, the way
the dance sequences are cut, showing each to perfection, you
cant fault a flourish or a twirl, whether its Zeta
Jones giving her all with a high-energy pitch for a post-incarceration
road show with Roxie, or Gere doing a tap dance, literally,
intercut with some similar fancy verbal footwork in the courtroom.
As for the trademark Fosse chorus line, its here with
all its sexual posing complete with blank expressions and writhing
contortions that just dont seem quite humanly possible.
If youre a fan of CHICAGO on stage, you wont be
disappointed by its apotheosis to the silver screen. Youll
also enjoy the cameo by the original Velma, Chita Rivera. If
youve never seen it before, so much the better to be dazzled
by the twists and turns the story takes as it sings and dances
its way into your heart. In short, its a win-win situation
and I dont get to say that often enough about a movie.
ANDREA
CHASE
My
Rating:





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