Mark Schroeder’s Movie Reviews

The Greatest Showman

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Grade: A-

If parents don’t take their children to see live theatre, taking them to see The Greatest Showman is the next best thing. It is as dazzling, exciting, entertaining, and invigorating a movie musical as I’ve ever seen. Experiencing it was like watching one of my future favorite musicals for the first time. The cycle would go like this: they would do a song, I’d love it so much, I’d be disappointed when it was over and think the next one couldn’t possibly match it, and then it does, in its own way. Almost every song is in competition for the best. The one that gets reprised at the end is “This Is Me” – a showstopper and house-bringer-downer. Led by the bearded lady (Keala Settle, with a powerhouse set of pipes), it is the most beautiful and powerful message of acceptance and tolerance I’ve heard since “I Am What I Am” from La Cage aux Folles.

Hugh Jackman attacks the leading role of P.T. Barnum with infectious charisma, and makes the strongest argument for a potential Professor Harold Hill if there is ever another Music Man remake. I took issue with his nasal nanny-goat vibrato in Les Miserables, but he is in fine voice here. Michelle Williams, who was recently so memorable in All the Money in the World, charms and shines here as Mrs. Barnum. And who knew she could sing, too? Ditto for Zac Efron as one of Barnum’s first business partners.*

Director Michael Gracey makes his feature film directorial debut here, and he has some interesting projects coming up, like an Elton John biopic called Rocketman, and a Jim Henson biopic called The Muppet Man. If I dock The Greatest Showman half a grade, it’s due to my prejudice against historical stories. I usually prefer new, original tales. A minor quibble. This is a captivating, fantastical film that deserves to be a frequently watched classic among families for years to come. When was the last time I saw a movie like this and kept forgetting I wasn’t at a live production, and therefore kept almost applauding at the end of every number? Oh yeah – never.

Grade: A-

  • – Whoopsie. I just looked him up. Most of the world knew he could sing, as he was in those High School Musical movies. I literally have not seen a single frame or heard one note from any of those. Am I missing out, or am I lucky?

8 responses to “The Greatest Showman”

  1. […] to pat myself on the back too much, but in early 2018 when I wrote about The Greatest Showman, I observed that Hugh Jackman would be a perfect Harold Hill in The Music Man, should there ever be […]

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  2. […] maybe a cure for insomnia. It is beyond me how this turned up on the Best Picture list instead of The Greatest Showman, Coco, or my favorite movie of the last year, The Florida Project. My other favorite line: I […]

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  3. […] appearing in two recent high-profile movies. Michelle Williams is in All the Money in the World and The Greatest Showman. Lucas Hedges appears in both Lady Bird and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. Ditto for […]

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  4. […] throughout is amazing. This is my favorite soundtrack of the year – other than, of course, The Greatest Showman. I, Tonya is quirky, fun, and a darn cool movie that resonated with me a surprising amount when it […]

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  5. […] The Music Man, in which he starred, closed on Broadway). And I caught one second of a song from The Greatest Showman playing on the car radio until it’s quickly changed. Jackman’s sincere, grounded work proves […]

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  6. […] it’s the kind of exciting lightning in a bottle that director Michael Gracey achieved with The Greatest Showman. I definitely thought of “This is Me,” “Rewrite the Stars” and the like, from a production […]

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  7. […] Hand,” an effective, reflective mid-tempo ballad in 6/8. This is the same composing team that did The Greatest Showman. Nothing blew me away like that one did, but the two I mentioned are the ones I was most struck […]

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  8. […] the Spider Woman most definitely isn’t the acting, nor is it the directing. Bill Condon worked on The Greatest Showman and Chicago, which makes him an appropriate fit to be the man behind the camera on this film. It […]

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