Hairspray Review
by Tim Basham
"Look at that little girl Look like a Georgia Peach She doing that thing From her head to her feet Oh, they got that thing On American Bandstand." -Buddy Guy “American Bandstand”
Hollywood
never ceases to surprise. This time, they’ve taken the director of some
embarrassingly mediocre films (Adam Shankman: Cheaper by the Dozen 2, The Pacifier, Bringing Down the House), combined his efforts with the inventive talents of a truly twisted independent filmmaker (John Waters: Pink Flamingos, Polyester) and made the most refreshing and enjoyable musical of this century - Hairspray!
Adapted from the 2002 Broadway musical, which was adapted from Waters’ 1988 film, Hairspray
follows teenager Tracy Turnblad (Nikki Blonsky) as she pursues her
dream of being a dancer on The Corny Collins Show, Baltimore’s version
of American Bandstand. In spite of being ridiculed for her obesity,
Tracy falls in love, becomes a wanted fugitive and integrates her
community - all at once. Her mother Edna (John Travolta) attempts to
hold her back before having an awakening of her own by leaving the
house for the first time in years. Mother and daughter are soon dancing
their way through the adversity of 1960s racism.
Travolta is
wonderful as the insecure and demure Edna, giving a thoroughly
impressive performance. But Blonsky is the true star of the film. Not
since Judy Garland in The Wizard of Oz has a young girl charmed and endeared herself so effectively in a musical. But don’t assume Hairspray
to be your standard, white-bread comic opera. In keeping with the
spirit of Water's original script, which included plenty of sexual
innuendo despite its PG rating, double entendres run rampant in this
modern day version. Michelle Pfeiffer is supremely villainous as the
station manager who wants Tracy off the show, and Amanda Bynes is
adorable as Tracy’s best friend who falls in love with a black man
named Seaweed (Elijah Kelley), much to the dismay of her puritanical
mother (Allison Janney). The film’s songs jump with enthusiasm from the
opening number to the closing credits and are tempered by moments like
Queen Latifah’s “I Know Where I’ve Been,” which is movingly sung during
a civil rights protest march.
Summer film-going is often known
for its effects-laden, terror-yielding blockbusters. Despite the
current saturation of just this sort of release, the
simple-but-glorious Hairspray tops them all. 4.5 out
of 5 Hairspray Australian
release: 13th September,
2007
Cast: John Travolta, Queen Latifah, Amanda Byrnes, Nicole Blonsky, Zac Efron Director: Adam Shankman
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