Classical Music Forum banner

Best musical on film?

4.7K views 35 replies 22 participants last post by  Harrowby Hall  
#1 ·
For my money it has to be: Oliver!

There were some fine musicals in the 50s and 60s - but nothing beats Oliver.
 
#10 · (Edited)
Hard to choose, so I'll say all of the above. Can't say how many times I've watched Oliver!. Probably in triple digits by now.

I'd say post WWII to 1970's was the golden age. 1920's and 30's musicals never appealed to me much, even when the songs and music were good. They had a pretentious and cheesy sophistication, too many tuxedos, cigarette holders and champagne* glasses for my taste. In the late 1940's musicals came down to Earth, which is where I live.

The only DVD's I buy are film musicals because I know I will keep going back to them and they wont just sit there and gather dust on my shelf.

To the above I'd like to add:

The Music Man
On The Town
Gypsy
Sweet Charity (they shot two endings for this movie. I think opting for the sad ending was the right call, it was devastating, I cried like a baby)

Would this be considered a guilty pleasure in a classical music forum? - If so, I'm guilty. I mean not guilty.

*I've got nothing against champagne, a good champagne buzz is a thing to behold.

Best wishes
Metairie Road
 
#13 · (Edited)
OLIVER! is one of my favorite musicals, and probably one of my favorite movie musicals(?) I actually don't like a great many musical versions of stage shows. CAROUSEL, for example -- I watched the movie of it over the weekend, and thought it was terrible. On the other hand, I do like the movie versions of OKLAHOMA! and THE KING AND I; those are two of the best, in my opinion.

As far as movie musicals not based on stage shows -- AN AMERICAN IN PARIS is my favorite.
 
#18 · (Edited)
Well by no means have I seen all of them....but yeah, I'd agree Cabaret is pretty much the top...probably one of the best movies anyway.... and it is also a musical...thus making it one of the best movie musicals. ;)

Then personally, I like The Rocky Horror Picture Show...haha....and Tommy (by the Who) brings back nostalgia. For some reason I loved that one as a kid, so the nostalgia plays in for me now. I doubt either of those would be considered "the best," but I like them. As far as more classic, West Side Story and My Fair Lady are nice, too. I feel like I'm forgetting something.

Oh! I really like the Jesus Christ Superstar movie, too.
 
#21 ·
I really enjoy Rodgers and Hammerstein productions put on film. South Pacific (1958) with Rossano Brazzi and Mitzi Gaynor is probably my favourite, although The King and I and Oklahoma! (the Todd A-O version) are right up there too.

I love My Fair Lady, Rex Harrison is brilliant, and Audrey Hepburn is, well, Audrey Hepburn!

I recently watched the restored director's cut of 1776, a Stuart Ostrow production with music and lyrics by Sherman Edwards. This was made back in 1972. I remember watching this on television as a young adult and not being very impressed by it, however this extended edition, with several previously cut songs is relevatory. It's so much better.
 
#22 ·
Altman's Nashville ... if it counts

If not, I'll go with Cat Ballou (also comedy & western, and quite funny at that!). Not far below that, I'd say Cabaret, or Singin' in the Rain.
 
#32 · (Edited)
"Carousel" has always been my favorite musical.

"Carousel" was the musical adaptation of "Lilith," a film starring Charles Boyer. It was much darker, with the Boyer character in Purgatory, not Heaven.

Frank Sinatra was apparently the original star contracted to play "Billy Bigelow" but left just before shooting started. I've always liked the performance of Gordon MacRae in the film, but would really, really, really have wanted to see Sinatra in the role.

The "Carousel Waltz" and "You'll Never Walk Alone" are gorgeous and elevate the film to the status of an operetta, for me.

Edit: Oops, the Charles Boyer film was "Liliom" not "Lilith" - sorry.
 
#34 ·
I have never like the movie of 'West Side Story'. It starts great with that panorama of New York and the street dancing but then retires to the studio for the rest of the film where the sets are more stagey than the stage. Natalie Wood was OK as Maria but the beefcake they got to play Tony was useless. Neither of them sang.
 
#36 · (Edited)
Best musical on film

What a subject for my first post on this forum!

I saw the original London production of West Side Story
at her Majesty's Theatre and I saw the 50th anniversary production when it visited Birmingham. I have always regarded the film version as entertaining but not as immediate, as powerful, as intimate as the stage play. I love the theatricality and constraints of theatre - the work was conceived for theatre, after all. The small pit orchestra adds an astringency that the film's symphony orchestra cannot match. That the West Side is in a major world city is immaterial. The play, the story, is an intimate one involving just a handful of characters, it is about a minor tragedy that will go completely unnoticed a couple of streets away.

Maria, in the 50th anniversary production was Sofia Escobar - her Maria was fragile. On-one could say that of Natalie Wood.

An aside - I heard a performance of the Symphonic Dances by the CBSO a few years ago. At the end (and the conductor played no part in this) there was total silence from the audience. It must have been about fifteen seconds before any applause started. West Side Story is inside all of us.

As far as favourite film musical? Probably South Pacific (but the film WAS flawed) and My Fair Lady.