what does everyone think would be 1. the worst to adapt to screen 2. the most challenging(that would end up being a complete mess) 3. almost impossible
1. wicked, adaptable, but would suck 2. avenue Q 3. avenue Q
"I mean, sitting side by side with another man watching Patti LuPone play Rose in GYPSY on Broadway is essentially the equivalent of having hardcore sex." -Wanna Be A Foster.
"Say 'Goody.' Say 'Bubbi.'" ... "That's it. Exactly as if it were 'Goody.' Now I know you're gonna sing 'Goody' this time, but nevertheless..."
Avenue Q would work. They could just have the puppets be more life sized and be computer animated along with the real people. It would probably be kind of funny, and Sesame Street looking.
1. Grey Gardens - Can't see it as a MUSICAL movie. 2. Wicked - The whole spectacle would be lost on film. 3. I don't think anything really would be impossible to make into a film. Updated On: 5/29/07 at 01:00 AM
I am a firm believer in serendipity- all the random pieces coming together in one wonderful moment, when suddenly you see what their purpose was all along.
1. SUNSET BOULEVARD--no need. 2. CAROLINE, OR CHANGE 3. SONG & DANCE or PACIFIC OVERTURES
"Some people can thrive and bloom living life in a living room, that's perfect for some people of one hundred and five. But I at least gotta try, when I think of all the sights that I gotta see, all the places I gotta play, all the things that I gotta be at"
I could see Avenue Q working if they kept the puppeteers out of frame like in the muppets movies.
I agree that Wicked would be a really bad movie, but I have no doubt, being the cash cow that it is, that it will happen in the future. The great thing is I don't care for it as it is now so I won't care about what they cut. I just hope they bring in a more experienced fifth grader to write the book this time.
i can see grey gardens, actually. and i agree with spelling bee. i still dont think av. q would make a decent movie. for me, it just wouldnt work. the whole concept would be lost on screen.
"I mean, sitting side by side with another man watching Patti LuPone play Rose in GYPSY on Broadway is essentially the equivalent of having hardcore sex." -Wanna Be A Foster.
"Say 'Goody.' Say 'Bubbi.'" ... "That's it. Exactly as if it were 'Goody.' Now I know you're gonna sing 'Goody' this time, but nevertheless..."
Avenue Q is possible and could actually work well.
"I'm tellin' you, the only times I really feel the presence of God are when I'm having sex and during a great Broadway musical." - Nathan Lane - Jeffrey
i can see drowsy working! they could actually do some really neat hings with it.
"I mean, sitting side by side with another man watching Patti LuPone play Rose in GYPSY on Broadway is essentially the equivalent of having hardcore sex." -Wanna Be A Foster.
"Say 'Goody.' Say 'Bubbi.'" ... "That's it. Exactly as if it were 'Goody.' Now I know you're gonna sing 'Goody' this time, but nevertheless..."
Watch Spellbound while humming a little and there's no need to bother with 25th... etc. Drowsy would be nearly impossible, and as for worst, Cats would be awful. Although, of course, one wouldn't necessarily blame that on the show's adaptability.
"Why, I make more money than... than... than Calvin Coolidge! PUT TOGETHER!" ~Lina Lamont
I think Avenue Q would be amazing on the small screen. I think it would work well as a TV show. I actually sent an e-mail to whoever runs the Avenue Q website thrugh the feature on their site suggesting the idea/ They responded back saying that they are busy getting the tour running, but it is a possibility in the future that they may transfer it to television.
See, I don't see a show like Wicked having any problem making a transfer to film. It's a very straight-forward show.
I agree with Tobias that, while not all shows may be obvious film transfers, you can find the right cinematic method for pretty much any show and have a successful transfer. Some are just more difficult than others. I think the hardest ones are going to be the concept musicals where plot takes a backseat. Abstraction tends to be easier to do on stage, and audiences are more willing to suspend disbelief. IMO, anyways.
Are you all mad? Of course Avenue Q would work. Check out the Muppet movies, or go back to watching Sesame Street. It was going to be a TV series originally, it just somehow ended up as a show instead.
I'm going to be annoying and say that with the right creative team, anything could be successfully transferred. Except possibly Spelling Bee...
Most of the movie musicals that have been made, that suck have very little to do with the show itself, and EVERYTHING to do with the director. Look at "Chorus Line." You had potential, and until Sir Richard Attenborough decided it needed a through line of sorts, it wasn't that off the mark. "The Wiz," is another victim of director-gone-bad.
Each musical has it's own life to it, and consequently, you have to find an angle that works for it. That's part of what made "Chicago" so successful. The fact that the musical numbers were presented in a theatrical fashion to highlight their Brechtian qualities.
That said, "Defying Gravity" is gonna look stupid on film, I'm afraid.
I could totally see Drowsy done as an ode to old school movie musicals, with Bob Martin's silhouette commenting down in the corner ala Mystery Science Theater 3000.
Like a firework unexploded
Wanting life but never
knowing how
I can't see LES MISERABLES working. No mainstream audience would sit through a through-sung musical, and it would totally destroy the musical to replace a lot of it with dialogue; however, I could see MISS SAIGON being rewritten with dialogue.
See, I don't see a show like Wicked having any problem making a transfer to film. It's a very straight-forward show.
Yeah, I agree. Opinions on the source material aside, I don't understand why Wicked always comes up when people talk about unfilmable musicals. It would seem it would actually be a musical that very much would lend itself to film, with all its fantastical elements.
"How do you like THAT 'misanthropic panache,' Mr. Goldstone?" - PalJoey
Grey Gardens would work really well on screen, I think. You could have act I as a 'flashback' (might actually be more effective in some ways on screen). I could see it, especially since it's so visually driven it would work.
"A birdcage I plan to hang. I'll get to that someday. A birdcage for a bird who flew away...Around the world."
"Life is a cabaret old chum, only a cabaret old chum, and I love a cabaret!"-RIP Natasha Richardson-I was honored to have witnessed her performance as Sally Bowles.
I can't believe so many of you are saying Wicked, which would be comparatively EASY to turn into a film (albeit an expensive one)!
Impossible: A Chorus Line (Ooops! They did it anyway.) The Drowsy Chaperone Pacific Overtures The Mystery of Edwin Drood Any of the revue shows: Ain't Misbehavin', Black & Blue, Sugar Babies, Jerome Robbin's B'way, Fosse, Movin' Out, etc. Unless you just film the stage show... which really isn't a film so much as a "documentary" of what was done on stage.
Extremely Challenging: Sunday in the Park With George (people walking around in his painting could be very cool or very disappointing, depending on the art direction and SFX--which would be too costly for this kind of film). And the music and book wouldn't easily adapt, either. Follies - would have to be overhauled completely to work on film
Not Easy but worth the challenge: Ragtime Merrily We Roll Along Nine Grand Hotel Into the Woods A Little Night Music - I wish they'd try again, but they won't Once On This Island
More or Less Ready to Go with some adaptive changes: Wicked Jersey Boys Big River The Secret Garden Kiss of the Spider Woman
Don't bother: Titanic Sunset Blvd. Les Mis
"Jaws is the Citizen Kane of movies."
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