Sunday, June 7, 2026

Power Ballad

I am a huge fan of John Carney (I really like Flora and Son but I absolutely love Once and Sing Street) so I had a lot of fun watching his latest movie, Power Ballad, at the Broadway last night.  Rick Power (Paul Rudd) is an aging American ex-pat who gave up on his dreams of being a rock star to marry Rachel (Marcella Plunkett), an Irish woman, and raise their daughter Aja (Beth Fallon) in Ireland.  He is now the lead singer of a wedding band based in Dublin but he still has dreams of writing and performing his own songs.  While at a wedding gig at a castle, he meets Danny Wilson (Nick Jonas), a childhood friend of the groom who was once a member of a popular boy band but is now working on a solo album.  They end up jamming all night and share the songs they are working on with each other.  When Danny returns to Los Angeles, his manager Mac Darling (Jack Reynor) tells him that his record label is not confident about his new music because they don't think he has a hit single.  He struggles to write one but, when he starts playing Rick's song "How to Write a Song (Without You)" on the piano, his girlfriend Marcia (Havana Rose Liu) loves it because she thinks it is about her.  He ends up recording it and it becomes a huge hit which reignites his career.  Rick immediately recognizes the song as his but he can't prove that he wrote it and his obsession with getting credit alienates both his band and his family.  He travels to Los Angeles to confront Danny but ultimately remembers his reason for writing the song.  I really loved the message about appreciating the life you actually have rather than mourning the life you thought you would have and I was really struck by the differences in how Rick and and Danny sing "How to Write a Song (Without You)" in the final scene.  I also liked the discussion about the high price that fame exacts when trying to stay authentic and I appreciated that Danny isn't portrayed as a one-dimensional villain.  In between the poignant moments are some hilarious ones, especially a scene in which Rick performs one of his songs at a wedding while fantasizing about adoring crowds in a large arena before realizing that the dance floor is empty.  Finally, Jonas and Rudd have great chemistry and I was really impressed with Rudd's singing chops (I can't decide whose version of "How to Write a Song (Without You)" I like better).  I loved this movie and highly recommend it to fans of Carney.

Note:  I immediately recognized Powerscourt Gardens, which I visited on a trip to Ireland, during the scenes at the castle.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Dirty Rotten Scoundrels at Draper Historic Theatre

I was really looking forward to seeing Dirty Rotten Scoundrels at Draper Historic Theatre last night because this show always makes me laugh. Their hilarious production definitely did not disappoint! Lawrence Jameson (Nathan Metcalf), a suave and sophisticated international con man, and Freddy Benson (Ethan Cecil), a two-bit American hustler, both find themselves on the French Riviera. They end up collaborating when Jameson gets in an awkward situation with Jolene Oakes (Madison Twede), an heiress from Oklahoma, but they both take credit when their plan is a success and eventually decide that Beaumont-sur-Mer is not big enough for both of them. They agree that the first one who cons Christine Colgate (Sophie Manzanares), the American Soap Queen, out of $50,000 can stay and the other will leave town. Hilarity ensues when Benson pretends to be a soldier suffering from hysterical paralysis, when Jameson impersonates the famous Viennese psychiatrist Christine hires to cure him, and when Muriel Eubanks (Beth Bollinger), one of Jameson's previous marks, returns to town but who is conning whom? What I enjoy most about this show is all of the physical comedy and this cast does a great job with it. Cecil, especially, is a lot of fun to watch in "Great Big Stuff," "All About Ruprecht," "Ruffhousin' Mit Shuffhausen," and "Love Is My Legs" because he is so over the top and has really funny facial expressions. I also loved Twede's energetic rendition of "Oklahoma" and Bollinger's overly dramatic performance of "What Was a Woman To Do." The ensemble in this show is also a highlight and I was very impressed with how well they perform the dynamic choreography in "Give Them What They Want," "Great Big Stuff," "Oklahoma," and "The More We Dance." The costumes are a lot of fun (the ensemble have so many of them) and my favorites are the cowboy and cowgirl outfits in "Oklahoma" and the couture gowns in "Give Them What They Want." Finally, I loved the stage, which is configured as a luxurious resort with marble floors and staircases, chandeliers, and balconies covered with bougainvillea, the set pieces brought on and off stage by members of the ensemble costumed as maids and porters, and all of the projections used to denote various locations. I had so much fun watching this entertaining show ("It was a blast! It was a ball! It was a gas! I loved it all!") and I highly recommend getting a ticket (go here). It runs at the Draper Historic Theatre on Mondays, Fridays, Saturdays through June 20.

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Pressure

I always enjoy a well-made movie about a topic I find interesting featuring an actor I like and that is exactly what I got with Pressure last night.  It is June 1944 and General Dwight D. Eisenhower (Brendan Fraser) is preparing for the D-Day invasion of Normandy which could change the tide of World War II.  Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery (Damian Lewis) is pushing for a launch on June 5 so the Allies do not lose the element of surprise but Eisenhower wants a report from his meteorological team, which consists of Colonel Irving P. Krick (Chris Messina), an American who has successfully advised him during several battles in North Africa, and Group Captain James Stagg (Andrew Scott), a Scottish meteorologist recommended by Churchill, because the operation depends upon a favorable weather forecast.  Stagg is distracted because is wife Liz (Tamsin Topolski) is heavily pregnant and immediately runs afoul of Eisenhower, his personal assistant Kay Summersby (Kerry Condon), as well as the entire team with his prickly behavior.  Frick relies on historical weather patterns and predicts clear skies for June 5, which is what Eisenhower wants to hear, but Stagg uses barometric pressure data from weather stations all around Normandy in real-time and predicts a severe storm system.  Eisenhower reluctantly calls off the invasion on Stagg's recommendation, which is ultimately proven correct, but will he believe Stagg when he forecasts a window of calm on June 6?  Even though I knew the date of the invasion as well as its outcome, I was on the edge of my seat when Eisenhower makes the decision to go or not go and when the officers wait to hear the results of the battle because the editing, which features fast cuts between images of the officers at Allied HQ, the atmospheric conditions, and the soldiers preparing to deploy and then storming the beaches, is very effective at building tension.  I have always been fascinated by World War II so I really enjoyed seeing the events leading to D-Day from a new perspective (I knew about Allied efforts to deceive Germany about the location of the invasion but I never considered the importance of the weather) and, as nerdy as it sounds, I found the process of collecting weather data to be strangely compelling.  Finally, I really like Scott as an actor and his understated performance as Stagg is one of his best, especially when juxtaposed with Fraser's brashness as Eisenhower and Messina's arrogance as Frick (one of the biggest highlights is seeing Frick and Stagg go toe-to-toe).  I thoroughly enjoyed this and highly recommend it.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Harmony at HCT

HCT is the first theatre company to get the rights to produce Harmony after its run on Broadway so I was really looking forward to seeing this new musical last night. It features music by Barry Manilow with lyrics by Bruce Sussman and tells the true story of a vocal ensemble who found great success in Germany during the 1920s but were forced to disband after the rise of the Nazis. It is one of the best productions I've seen at Hale and I loved it! Josef "Rabbi" Cycowiski (Ric Starnes) reminisces about when his younger self (Landon Horton), Bobby Biberti (Brandon LaMar Buckner), Erich Collins (Anson Bagley), Erwin "Chopin" Bootz (Jonathan Avila), and Ari "Lesh" Leshnikoff (Ben Hahn) answer an advertisement placed by Harry Frommerman (Tanner Sumens), form a six-part harmony group, practice in the empty subway, get their first gig singing back-up for Marlene Dietrich from behind a curtain, get their big break singing at a club (a mishap forces them to go on stage dressed as waiters and this gives them their name the Comedian Harmonists), and achieve international success. At the same time, Rabbi, who is Jewish, falls in love with a Christian seamstress named Mary (Megan Yates), Chopin, who is Christian, falls in love with a fiery Jewish revolutionary named Ruth (Tearza Leigh Avila), and the two couples marry despite the challenges. While the group is on a world tour, the Nazi Party and Adolf Hitler come to power in Germany and they briefly consider staying in New York but Bobby convinces them to return home. Eventually, the group must take drastic steps to protect the three Jewish members in the group and the older Rabbi laments their decision to return to Germany in hindsight because he is the only one left who remembers the Comedian Harmonists. The story is moving and surprisingly funny but, more than anything, it is a powerful reminder of what happens when good men stand by and allow evil to happen. I enjoyed the music, especially "Where You Go" when Mary and Ruth tell their husbands that they will follow them everywhere they go (one literally and one figuratively), and the performances are incredible, particularly the tight vocal harmonies in "Harmony," "Lost in Shadows," "How Can I Serve You, Madame?," "Hungarian Rhapsody 20," and "Stars in the Night." The staging is absolutely riveting and I loved the use of multilevel metal platforms, which are configured and reconfigured throughout the show, in "This is Our Time" as Ruth and her revolutionaries protest with signs and red flags while the group simultaneously celebrates an audition above them, the use of projections in "The Wedding" when a rock is thrown through the synagogue window (this is very dramatic), and the use of archival footage in "Tour of the World" as the Nazi Party comes to power while the group performs (this gave me goosebumps). The choreography is also very compelling and I was particularly struck by the use of silks when the group performs as marionettes in "Come to the Fatherland!" The period costumes, especially the Nazi uniforms and evening gowns cut on the bias, are incredibly striking as are all of the Art Deco elements used in the set design. I was so impressed by every aspect of this production and I cannot recommend it enough! Tickets may be purchased here for performances that run on the Sorenson Legacy Jewel Box Theatre through August 1.

Note:  Don't forget about HCT's loverly production of My Fair Lady on the Young Living Centre Stage through July 11 (go here for tickets).

Monday, June 1, 2026

Backrooms

Last night I went to see Backrooms at a late night screening and I found it very interesting and quite unsettling.  Clark (Chiwetel Ejiofor) is an alcoholic who is angry about his recent divorce and his failed ambition of becoming an architect.  He frequently rants to his therapist Dr. Mary Kline (Renate Reinsve) and she tries to help him see how his patterns of behavior have created an endless cycle of unhappiness from which he cannot escape but she is also suffering from her own never ending loop of trauma stemming from a childhood spent with a mentally ill mother.  Clark, who is now living in the discount furniture warehouse where he works, notices flickering lights in the basement and goes to investigate which leads him to a portal to another reality filled with a seemingly endless space that reflects whoever enters it.  He wanders through a maze of rooms that are connected by long hallways before he is chased out by an unseen entity.  When Mary is skeptical about what he has experienced, he starts spending more and more time in this alternate reality and eventually becomes trapped.  Mary gets a disturbing message from Clark which prompts her to go to his warehouse to find him and she ends up in the space as his hostage.  Can she escape?  While the metaphor is a bit on the nose, I liked the exploration of how you can get trapped inside your head by memories that can be warped by time and a skewed perception.  Both Clark and Mary encounter malformed objects and people within the space because they can't remember them correctly and I was particularly struck by how Mary's experience becomes increasingly more distorted as she moves down through the levels because she has buried her trauma so deeply within her subconscious.  The visuals, which feature a drab monochromatic yellow color palette, uncanny architecture, and harsh fluorescent lighting, are incredibly disconcerting and the sound design evokes a sense of dread that is almost unbearable (I hate the buzzing of fluorescent lights so this just about drove me crazy).  The camerawork is very effective at building tension because it is from each character's POV, especially when grainy found footage is used, and you are never entirely sure what will be lurking around the corner.  Both Ejiofor and Reinsve give highly restrained performances that ground the dreamlike sequences in reality and this kept me engaged even with so much repetition in the space (see also Exit 8).  This might not be for everyone (some might find it too ambiguous) but I can't stop thinking about it!

Note:  I enjoyed this more than Exit 8 (movies about liminal spaces are having a moment) because my attention never wavered.
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