![]() ![]() Larson is upset over learning something about a friend and is running through Central Park, and the minute he jumps a fence, I knew exactly where he ran to. ![]() There’s a moment in this movie when Andrew Garfield as Jonathan Larson sings “Why” that truly felt like such a theatre kid/New York moment, and I don’t think it would have worked had it not been directed by someone who gets it. Lin-Manuel Miranda, who made a name for himself in musical theatre first and foremost, clearly understands that and, in his directorial debut, shows that having a love for these stories and how they are told makes the movie that much better. Chu, two men who understand the scope of a musical and the importance of their structure. The only other directors I can think of in recent years to get it have been Dexter Fletcher and Jon M. I’m saying that having someone telling this story with the care that Larson had in his own work makes this movie feel so lived in and special in a way that other (recent) movie musical adaptations have not. ![]() I’m not saying that Tom Hooper doesn’t care about Les Misérables or Cats or that Michael Gracey fundamentally misunderstands musicals and how they should be told with The Greatest Showman. So why does this all work so well? Because there’s someone behind the lens who cares. Sobbing in a theatre to the point where my mask was actually wet with tears, the movie manages to bring a musical to life with nods to the videos of Larson that exist online, as well as connecting back to musical theatre as a whole (with wonderfully fun cameos for theatre lovers). But I was not emotionally prepared for the journey that tick, tick… BOOM! would take me on. I loved Rent, and I loved that what Larson would unintentionally give me as my favorite musicals on Broadway tend to lean more towards the rock side of things. He’d go on to change the modern idea of musical theatre with Rent, and he’d be known for bringing rock music into the genre, but his next musical after Superbia was tick, tick… BOOM!-Larson’s response to his agent telling him to “write what he knows.” I went into the movie knowing a few songs from the show, but knowing Larson’s Rent more intimately. While working on a musical called Superbia, based on George Orwell’s 1984, Larson turned 30 years old and was worried that he was running out of time to be the next great thing in musical theatre. Larson, who is famous for his musical Rent that won him a Pulitzer Prize, reached fame later in life. That leads me to tick, tick… BOOM!, a movie musical translated for the screen by Lin-Manuel Miranda and Steven Levenson, two men who clearly understand musical theatre and the importance of Jonathan Larson’s work. With the exception of Rocketman and In the Heights, I think the problem stems from people behind the lens who are, frankly, misunderstanding the significance of these musicals or what they are trying to say in the first place. From not our best musicals to bad adaptations, there are few musical movies in recent years that really worked for me. Being a fan of musicals can be hard, not because we’re made fun of for our love of musicals (we are) but because, recently, the musical movie landscape has not been that great. ![]()
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