Based on the hit Broadway musical which tells the infamous story of Benjamin Barker, a.k.a Sweeney Todd, who sets up a barber shop down in London which is the basis for a sinister partnership with his fellow tenant, Mrs. Lovett. Read more
| Starring | Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham-Carter, Alan Rickman, Timothy Spall |
|---|---|
| Director | Tim Burton |
| Genres | Audio Descriptive, Drama, Music/Musical, Thriller |
loading...
Ok, I went in not thinking and hadn't twigged it was a musical, and I loathe musicals, so it was never going to be good for me. But even so, this seems a particularly bad example of the genre. Depp sings like a bad Bowie impersonator (think Phil Cornwell) and the songs are weak. When he and Rickman are singing about pretty women I couldn't restrain my laughter.
My general gripe with musicals is that the songs just get in the way - they don't move the narrative along, so you're just waiting for them to finish and get back to the real film. This is particularly true with this film. But it looks good, and when they're not arseing about with duff songs, it is engaging and enjoyable enough. It's just those songs....
A poor second to the non-musical BBC Ray Winston version. Rent this one and
I dare you ever to sit in a Barber's chair again.
here's a lot of love out there for Tim Burton amongst the cinema going public. His vision reminds us a lot of our own childhood imagination, the fairytales we'd read about and those dark dreams that turn into nightmares. Playing that twisted style he's been able to put some wonderful imagery on screen for everyone from casual observers to more discerning cinema goers and I think that's part of the reason, along with his penchant for using Johnny Depp, why he has such a following, despite the fact that it's thirteen years since his last great film. I get this sense that people are desperate for him to deliver something that can match his wonderful visual style and return to giving the audience something magical. Since Ed Wood most of his films have fallen short of that so anything that's approaching good gets lauded and this falls into that category.
This is by no means a bad film, it does have that rich visual style of Burton and the violence in the film is very explicit if meant to be over-the-top and comic, the performances of the three leads is involving with Helena Bonham-Carter being the pick. Unfortunately that's probably about it. A slasher-musical is certainly different to anything else put in the mainstream of entertainment and that gives the film its interest for me. The originality of that concept, the fact that it's not a rock opera or cheese-laden musical either and the teaming up with Depp/Bonham-Carter more than hint at promise yet there's just something missing. The visual style is great but I'm not sure it's any different to what he's tried to do before. Yes, it's a tweak on his standard gothic style with more dirt and grime, however I wasn't feeling any magic like I did watching one of his great films and I don't know why that is.
Depp is mixed in this, his singing reminding me that he's moved on from Keith Richards to impersonating David Bowie and whilst he has something in him to play that bad-man-with-a-heart I question his ability to play somebody truly dark and menacing. Alan Rickman lifts things when he's on screen and although the music lacks any attraction the orchestration booms out at you, giving you the emotion that Burton has trouble in extracting himself. It is a return to form of sorts for Burton with moments like Mrs Lovett's vision, the pie shop and the lyrics are wonderfully witty at times (when not being drowned out by the score) at times, sadly there is something missing and whilst I'm sure they'll shift plenty more Burton merchandising I think his next film Alice In Wonderland (in 3D apparently) is his last opportunity to convince me he has something to offer besides visual style.
I kinda dragged my boyfriend to see this film (on the basis i would then go see whatever film he wanted) I was all ready to apologise profusley for bringing him to a musical, only to find he enjoyed it too!!!
Of course its cheesy at first to hear johnny depp do a bit of singing, but the dark story and its gloomy take on london life soon took over. I got so into the story that i forgot they were singing!.. one piece of advice.. I would avoid watching on a full stomach, its very gory!! lol.. but i like films like that.. you see all thats necessary! with a twist of humour (but not ridiculous humour..) makes it a perfect film.
Ok, I went in not thinking and hadn't twigged it was a musical, and I loathe musicals, so it was never going to be good for me. But even so, this seems a particularly bad example of the genre. Depp sings like a bad Bowie impersonator (think Phil Cornwell) and the songs are weak. When he and Rickman are singing about pretty women I couldn't restrain my laughter.
My general gripe with musicals is that the songs just get in the way - they don't move the narrative along, so you're just waiting for them to finish and get back to the real film. This is particularly true with this film. But it looks good, and when they're not arseing about with duff songs, it is engaging and enjoyable enough. It's just those songs....
A poor second to the non-musical BBC Ray Winston version. Rent this one and
I dare you ever to sit in a Barber's chair again.
Similar to Tim Burton's other works, 'Sweeney Todd - The Demon Barber of Fleet Street' is dark, bloody, deals with loss and pain... and is a musical. A proper musical. From the opening salvo to the closing scene all the cast get their vocal chords out (metaphorically and sometimes literally) and give it all they've got. So if you don't like musicals you may want to check out the BBC adaptation, which doesn't include any singing. But you would be missing out on one of the weirdest, darkest, most striking films of recent years.
Anyone familiar with Tim Burton's works will have a general idea of what to expect. If you've never 'got' his twisted take on tales then be warned that 'Sweeney Todd' is no exception. We begin by meeting the eponymous hero upon his return to London seeking his revenge on the judge who sent him away on a false charge fifteen years previously. But Sweeney has no hesitations when it comes to killing anyone and everyone that gets in his way. Which is useful for the house owner Mrs. Lovett and her pie shop downstairs...
Full of violence, laughs and blood (reminscent of the syrupy stuff used in Hammer Horror movies) 'Sweeney Todd' is not for the faint hearted. And as the songs are pretty constant throughout it will also have trouble satisfying the classic 'gore' crowd who may be put off by all the tunes. Also there is a lull during the film, as the middle doesn't come close to matching the striking beginning or the frenetic ending. But these are more than made up for by the outstanding performances from Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter, who play such vile and evil individuals so well you can't help but like them and hope they get away with it. This does mean that other characters tend to disappear into the background and the time they are on screen seems rather dull in comparison.
This isn't Burton's best but it certainly isn't his worst and is an excellent film if you give it a chance. The visuals are amazing, with a brilliantly simple colour scheme (black, grey and red - lots of red), alongside the dark humour running throughout and the performaces he gets from his leads all add up to make 'Sweeney Todd' an experience you wouldn't want to miss.
one word for this film!!!! CRAP.
Like being trapped in a nightmare. Not even good as a musical.
I
So bad couldn't actually make it to the end. What is Johnny Depp doing?
Absolute TRIPE! Wasted 2 hours of my life on this garbage at the cinema with my girlfriend, if it wasnt for the fact that I like most of Tim Burtons older films I would have got up and walked out long before the end.
Tim Burton has gone so far up his own $&* that if he went any further hed disappear (hopefully) maybe then hell stop casting Johnny Depp and his annoying wife (Helena Bonham-Carter) as the lead roles in everything he does.
The appalling fake English accents wanna make me smash things and thats not good.
The songs, which crop up far to regularly will make you laugh in hysterics, I dont think that was there intention though.
My high schools production of this play was a 110% better than this version, dont waste your rental, watch something else
anything else!
I've never written a review before but I felt so strongly about this terrible movie.
Basically this is a musical so there is singing through the entire film.
If you watch the trailer you might be fooled into believing that there is a lot of talking but about 95% of this movie is singing and about 5% talking.
I watched this at the cinema and I kept praying that it would improve but sadly it didn't.
Probably the worst piece of garbage that I've ever paid money to go and see.
By the way I am a big Jonny Depp and Tim Burton fan but this movie is awful.
Just awful.
I hated it. I cannot give it a full review as I left the cinema after the first hour which was about 55 mins later than I would have like.
The film was slow due to the endless (bad) singing and the murder scenes were too much red paint and almost laughable!
Believe this to be one of the worst films I have ever seen - at the end I wished Sweeney would slit my throat it was so poor.