Why the Music in Les Misérables (2012) is Worse than you Thought

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  • čas přidán 30. 05. 2024
  • Do you hear the people sing?
    Me neither
    Twitter: / sideways440
    Twitch: / sideways440
    Patreon: / sideways440
    Sources and Links:
    "Beyond the Barricade: Adapting Les Misérables for the Cinema" by Ian Shapiro
    I only found this source after going through my music library after going to grad school, well after I'd made this video. Had I had access to it while making this video I naturally would have cited it because it's such an amazing source on the production for this film.
    Sorry to Ian Shapiro, and I wish finding academic sources while outside of academia was easier and not behind a paywall
    "Beyond the Barricade: Adapting Les Misérables for the Cinema" by Ian Shapiro
    Mackintosh's comment on the rights to Les Mis
    www.contactmusic.com/les-mise...
    Fantastic document listing the leitmotifs in Les Mis
    www.yumpu.com/en/document/rea...
    Great post about Les Mis being symmetrical
    mdn.chanvrerie.net/has-anyone...
    Russel Crowe on Shazam!
    • Shazam! - 26 Nov 1985 ...
    New York Vocal Coaching, an absolutely AMAZING CZcams channel that you should sub to if you're at all interested in Vocal Tech
    • Ep. 89 "How To Sing Fa...
    Russel Crowe discussing his audition process
    • Russell Crowe on Audit...
    The French version of "Do You Hear The People Sing?"
    • À La Volonté Du Peuple...
    The cast warming up before the 85th Oscars
    • Les Misérables 85th Ac...
    Erik Olsson's post about Bernadette Peters and Sunday in the Park with George
    / 1272925565813698563
    Hugh Jackman discussing his weight loss
    • Interview: Les Miserab...
    Anne Hathaway's interview about her singing experience on set
    • Les Miserables - Inter...
    Kevin Lynch's FANTASTIC video about "Bring Him Home" - I cannot recommend his channel enough, he's AMAZING
    • Break Down the Score t...
    Crowe and Jackman singing live
    • The Confrontation live...
    Jackman singing live
    • Hugh Jackman performs ...
    For posterity, just in case you don't believe me when I say that musicals are all about speaking - singing - dancing
    www.pbs.org/thinktank/transcr...
    if I forgot anything please do not hesitate to let me know
    I want to be sure that everyone gets properly credited!
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 15K

  • @ODoyleRulz
    @ODoyleRulz Před 3 lety +6596

    In reference to water I once had a voice teacher who said, “If you wanna sing right, you gotta pee white.”

    • @TheAndersDanilet
      @TheAndersDanilet Před 3 lety +336

      Healthy pee is 1 to 3... 4 to 8, you must hydrate.

    • @MidasOfMesses
      @MidasOfMesses Před 3 lety +502

      My marching band in high school was very competitive, and my director used to tell us that if our pee wasn’t clear we weren’t drinking enough and were letting the other members down lol

    • @bubblehead9548
      @bubblehead9548 Před 3 lety +224

      When I used to sing stuff the vocal teacher I want to said 'sing wet, pee clear'

    • @jirachisob5633
      @jirachisob5633 Před 3 lety +82

      WHITE?

    • @nishantsingal
      @nishantsingal Před 3 lety +195

      @@jirachisob5633 prolly means "clear" or as close to clear as possible

  • @NicoDavisPurington
    @NicoDavisPurington Před 3 lety +21662

    I love the fact that the pianist is in a cage. Naughty pianists go to piano jail

  • @ShayLaLaLooHoo
    @ShayLaLaLooHoo Před rokem +4036

    Hearing the actors _actually_ singing makes me wish they got a director who respects musicals. We could've had so much!

  • @LaineyKismet
    @LaineyKismet Před rokem +3395

    I understand the show is LITERALLY called Les Miserables, but that's doesn't mean EVERYONE INVOLVED HAD TO BE ACTUALLY MISERABLE 😣 So much respect to everyones sacrifice to make this movie, seriously hats off
    Also I never knew the tearing of the paper was supposed to go with the orchestra beats but that hits SO MUCH HARDER when it does! My god that was exhilarating to see for the first time in this video

    • @happinesstan
      @happinesstan Před rokem +45

      Finally, somebody who appreciates the sacrifices of those who created this fabulous production.

    • @erikbihari3625
      @erikbihari3625 Před 9 měsíci +19

      @@happinesstan. The film is still bad.

    • @nbriggs133
      @nbriggs133 Před 7 měsíci +8

      Watching the Les Miserables 25th anniversary show is such a revelation. They do everything so perfectly in that show.

  • @lucyskyler21
    @lucyskyler21 Před 3 lety +8461

    good god i am sick of directors and actors literally almost killing themselves for "authenticity" and the oscars rewarding them for it

    • @theghostinthemirror8158
      @theghostinthemirror8158 Před 3 lety +842

      Being inhumane to your cast is not a ‘sacrifice for the art’ it doesn’t matter if you pay them 500 million dollars, it’s abuse from an employer. The oscars awarding this is so repulsive it makes my skin crawl.

    • @richardbourton4523
      @richardbourton4523 Před 3 lety +374

      Right?! It's this behaviour that led to Leonardo Di Caprio in the Revenant. Fine, he did a great job, but when you get to this point, is it even acting? No disrespect meant to Leo or Annie or anyone else, I really like them both. But aren't those specific Oscars for the best acting performance? I'm sure anyone can react in horror to having their head shaved and wading in the mire to reach an uncomfortable bath all the while trying to sing thirsty and tired. Or go through the awfulness of the plot of the Revenant and look like you're having an awful time. It sounds mean and I again, I don't mean to denigrate them (it is surely on the directors in most cases)... But they could just actually act it without having to actually bear the pain of it. Leo didn't die of hypothermia and drowning in Titanic, but then if he did tbf maybe he would've won an Oscar then? You're right that this system just leads to more and more actors flagellating themselves for roles and then for awards prestige which then leads to more roles and prestige. For example, Christian Bale's body must be a wreck! Reminds me of how Henry Cavill has to dehydrate himself for days in the same way as Hugh for his shirtless scenes in The Witcher. It's not healthy and doesn't it kind of ruin it on rewatches to know that they were suffering? Let them act!

    • @Daniel-cw5yv
      @Daniel-cw5yv Před 3 lety +38

      @@richardbourton4523 I don't see anything wrong with suffering for your art. The Revenant will be remembered as one of Leo's best roles and for good reason. I do think the Oscars is a joke though. Some of what makes certain actors so damn impressive is their dedication to their craft. It comes down to the question of, would you rather be healthy or interesting.

    • @no-qe9tb
      @no-qe9tb Před 3 lety +224

      @@Daniel-cw5yv Healthy and interesting should be rewarded by the Oscars, not just interesting. They're the Oscars for a reason, they should be able to find a film which can do both.

    • @BirchMonkey857
      @BirchMonkey857 Před 3 lety +35

      I mean, I still have respect for Tom Hanks' preparation for Castaway, and some people say that playing Joker lead to Heath Ledger's death (personally I would say unless you're a psychologist don't make claims like that), but the thing is, no one should be _forced_ to do anything like that. Sure, it lead to some great performances, but part of that was it being at least somewhat voluntary.

  • @codeywings10
    @codeywings10 Před 3 lety +8244

    They made the orchestra play for 10 hours straight?? That could have ruined any of those musicians careers. I feel sorry for the conductor.

    • @jimmunster57
      @jimmunster57 Před 3 lety +93

      I'm sure they were handsomely rewarded for their efforts.

    • @LeifLovebug
      @LeifLovebug Před 3 lety +2113

      @@jimmunster57 a-and? For a professional musician, getting hurt permanently as a result of playing music (which often results in never being able to play that instrument at a professional level again) would be a death sentence for their career and rob them of a skill they've built up with thousands of practice hours over the course of decades. How many millions per member of the orchestra would the company have to dish out to sufficiently compensate for that risk? I don't think there's any amount of money in the world that can make up for such a loss.

    • @KCSutherland
      @KCSutherland Před 3 lety +513

      And the music in Les Mis is one of the hardest musicals' music to play.

    • @exactemphasis
      @exactemphasis Před 3 lety +779

      @@jimmunster57 Lol, musicians getting paid. That's something new

    • @valeria-hu8jv
      @valeria-hu8jv Před 3 lety +90

      I think they only had one pianist playing while they sung, not the entire orchestra

  • @isuckateverything.
    @isuckateverything. Před rokem +1338

    As a vocalist and a clarinet player, the fact that anything in this ever happened is horrifying

    • @erikbihari3625
      @erikbihari3625 Před 9 měsíci +17

      So it was basically a method acted musical movie called"The Miserables"?

    • @joedav67
      @joedav67 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@erikbihari3625method acting isn't always good, unless you think a death in a movie should be real

    • @a_little_flame589
      @a_little_flame589 Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@joedav67 the largest r/wooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooosh you will ever have

  • @kninenights
    @kninenights Před 7 měsíci +966

    Having the band going so many hours without breaks is terrifying. Ive only ever played lighter instruments (my specialties are flute and violin) and going for a few hours in band practice without breaks kills my muscles. *EIGHT HOURS* is insane I feel so bad for them especially those with heavier instruments. Their whole bodies would be in serious pain for literal days.

    • @shammyturtle9741
      @shammyturtle9741 Před 6 měsíci +80

      Their fingers/hands/wrists/shoulders, and the throats/mouths/lips of any wind players, must’ve been in such intense pain. The longest I’ve ever played my clarinet in one sitting was about 3 hours and by the end of it the only parts of me that weren’t tired and sore were my legs lol

    • @kninenights
      @kninenights Před 6 měsíci +39

      @@shammyturtle9741 exactly. It’s insane to imagine going for eight whole hours. Three is insanely painful. I can’t even picture how much pain those guys were in.

    • @YelenaSkunky
      @YelenaSkunky Před 5 měsíci +29

      I'm sure Tom Hooper had a thing for overworking his employees.
      Like, he gets a kick out of it.

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI Před 4 měsíci +2

      String instruments aren’t bad to play long. I play for 4 hours at a time on guitar just for fun

    • @fosternova4434
      @fosternova4434 Před 4 měsíci +11

      I have actually played for 8+ hours in high school for honor bands, but I had breaks in between. I play clarinet, and even that little thing had me in pain. My hands ached and my thumb was rubbed so raw I had to ice it on break. My lips were so damn puffy from constant playing, and my jaw was off for a week. Even my back and chest hurt. When we got the chance to get up and walk around I bolt up almost immediately. I've also sang for ridiculously long rehearsals and even that sucks. Breaks are needed if you want top quality performances.

  • @obiwankenobi9141
    @obiwankenobi9141 Před 3 lety +6131

    I think Tom Hooper just wanted to make everyone miserables.

    • @cookiemocher388
      @cookiemocher388 Před 3 lety +81

      I see what you did there

    • @bett1826
      @bett1826 Před 3 lety +27

      Lmaoo

    • @IcePhysicsGaming
      @IcePhysicsGaming Před 3 lety +28

      Ah, very thematic.

    • @lanni5
      @lanni5 Před 3 lety +81

      The true Miserables was the crew all along

    • @mikeor-
      @mikeor- Před 3 lety +20

      The Second French Revolution took place in 1832, when Victor Hugo published the Hunchback of Notre Dame. It's kind of thematic to Hugo's life, as he wrote Les Mis almost 30 years after he wrote Hunchback, and set it to the same time when he published the latter book. Hunchback is actually pretty miserable, and even though Les Miserables had a happy ending, I think it would have worked better if it was published in 1832 instead of Hunchback.

  • @Noizee821
    @Noizee821 Před 3 lety +18661

    The clips of the director saying "no one asked him to do it" to hugh jackman saying "he asked me to look unrecognizable" are hilariously next to each other

    • @flamepunk8683
      @flamepunk8683 Před 3 lety +2106

      it honestly kinda makes everyone look SUPER suspicious
      at this point, i'm not gonna rule out tomothy here doing some super weird pressuring on his actors to do harmful shit (like what happened with anne hathaway's weight loss and on-camera haircut)

    • @ohwellwhateverr
      @ohwellwhateverr Před 3 lety +45

      @@flamepunk8683 What’s harmful about getting a haircut? Don’t be such a baby

    • @Charbified
      @Charbified Před 3 lety +1933

      @@ohwellwhateverr There's nothing inherently harmful about getting a haircut, yes, you're right. Congrats. But it does make it very demanding for the sake of "realism". It's kinda degrading, lasts for (obviously) a lot longer than just doing it fake, and means you basically get one take which is a lot of pressure on everyone involved. All in all, while it's not the worst thing by a mile, it's just... not necessary?

    • @flamepunk8683
      @flamepunk8683 Před 3 lety +1193

      @@Charbified fucking THANK YOU
      it's also on camera, meaning whatever degradation would be there is gonna be shown around in theatres and shit, it's not something you'd just *do* on a whim, and i doubt it was against her will or anything, but it really just highlights the way the producers saw their actors in that movie.
      Especially when beauty standards and shit in hollywood, mainstream media, etc, for women especially, and concerning their hair, i doubt it would have been all that pleasant, and there's a hundred ways to get the same effect without degrading your performers.

    • @victoriah9421
      @victoriah9421 Před 3 lety +394

      Maybe he could have lost some weight, jacked himself up and not dehydrated himself? Prisoners back in those days would have been drinking water. And there's a difference between the look of a bodybuilder's body and a guy who does a lot of hard labour on low rations all day, so it probably didn't even look that accurate.

  • @bi-product
    @bi-product Před rokem +838

    Hugh Jackman’s “All I did was STEAL SOME BREAD” has lived rent free in my head since I saw this in cinemas.

    • @Dreigonix
      @Dreigonix Před 4 měsíci +47

      He sounds like he’s getting punched in the gut with every word. XD

    • @roseyoung44
      @roseyoung44 Před 3 měsíci +38

      ​@@Dreigonix with how dehydrated he was, he might as well have been punched. It mightve been a better performance

    • @J.P.Robles
      @J.P.Robles Před 3 měsíci +4

      He was trying to sing like someone who was loosing his temper

  • @TobiasTurkelton
    @TobiasTurkelton Před rokem +1636

    Thank you for including that brief clip of Jackman and Crowe singing live together! I appreciate the redemption and proof they're so much better than what ended up in the film.

    • @voguishthrone5887
      @voguishthrone5887 Před 4 měsíci +34

      I like Jackman’s singing… when it’s directed well. He has a nice voice, but like every instrument it needs to be directed well

    • @jbvader721
      @jbvader721 Před 4 měsíci +36

      @@voguishthrone5887 Not to mention, properly hydrated. Still not over that water thing.

    • @voguishthrone5887
      @voguishthrone5887 Před 4 měsíci +17

      @@jbvader721 yeah- that is such a *bizarre* thing to do to yourself, *especially* in a singing role

    • @jbvader721
      @jbvader721 Před 4 měsíci +17

      @@voguishthrone5887 An experienced singer like Jackman should've known better and Tom Hooper shouldn't have encouraged him. But Hooper isn't musically inclined to know how dangerous that was.

    • @ninarances9074
      @ninarances9074 Před 8 dny +1

      I came across this video where Crowe was singing with Jeff Leyton (who played Valjean on stage before and was one of the Valjean actors who sang "Do You Hear The People Sing?" in the "Les Mis: The Dream Cast in Concert" back in 1995) where they sing "The Confrontation". And honestly, Crowe sounds a lot better. Aside from the fact that he was thankfully not overworked and dehydrated during this time, I have a feeling he asked Leyton for vocal help and he end up singing the song the way it's supposed to be sung, which explains why he sounds a lot better.
      czcams.com/video/_AlC__ouuMo/video.htmlsi=_jJmL55bOPtj1a1M

  • @CreoTan
    @CreoTan Před 3 lety +5486

    The way Hollywood treats its actors health and weight is DISGUSTING. The reason Jackman was so casual about literally dehydrating himself is probably because he was USED TO DOING IT in work on other movies. Any time you see an actor with razor sharp cut abs-theyre most definitely dangerously dehydrated. The body needs fat and water.

    • @420catboi
      @420catboi Před 2 lety +39

      Off topic, but I love your pfp. It's adorable.

    • @Soroboruo
      @Soroboruo Před 2 lety +291

      I would much rather watch a movie with blatant practical/computer effects than know the talent put themselves in serious danger to achieve a particular look, I tell you what. And Ann Hathaway immediately going on record saying "*This was not impressive, I did to look like I was dying, don't do this*" and directors still demand dangerous crap... disgusting.

    • @bunniesinatrenchcoat1809
      @bunniesinatrenchcoat1809 Před 2 lety +25

      I would agree but you can also give up the roles for YOUR own health. As adults we like to blame other things for issues we’ve caused for ourselves. I don’t think ANYONE should starve themselves, dehydrate themselves, harm themselves FOR ANY REASON let alone a role but if you do it anyways… knowing better… uhhhh I think both the actor and the directors are to blame, not just one. This does not go for child actors though.

    • @QuikVidGuy
      @QuikVidGuy Před 2 lety +170

      @@bunniesinatrenchcoat1809 under a certain amount of duress, your choices are not entirely your own

    • @jasonuwu767
      @jasonuwu767 Před 2 lety +222

      @@bunniesinatrenchcoat1809 Since it's currently an industry norm, actors don't really have a choice with this. It's like poor conditions for factory workers in sweatshops or the industrial revolution, if you're unwilling to put up with this treatment someone else will be more than willing to take your place and your paycheck.

  • @khoshekhthecat
    @khoshekhthecat Před 3 lety +4487

    I didn't understand how bad this was until he compared it to how bad the orchestra was treated, I play saxophone, and can barely handle one hour of constant play

    • @xx_izzyxx2250
      @xx_izzyxx2250 Před 3 lety +29

      They will have had worse, that’s what orchestras do. They play music hours on end. That’s what they are paid to do.

    • @casamity6755
      @casamity6755 Před 3 lety +322

      pros are trained for long days but for wind players (i’m a clarinettist) i can’t imagine that their embouchure will have held up perfectly. they train for stamina though!

    • @JoelChenFa
      @JoelChenFa Před 3 lety +194

      @@xx_izzyxx2250 you sound like my HR.

    • @crypticcryptid4702
      @crypticcryptid4702 Před 3 lety +374

      @@xx_izzyxx2250 But for 10 hours straight?? Constantly, to the point where they are begging for a 2 minute break? That could have crippled their professional music career. They were not paid enough for that.

    • @Tom-wb8pc
      @Tom-wb8pc Před 3 lety +308

      @@xx_izzyxx2250 Orchestras are NOT paid to play 'performance' level for multiple hours on end. Sure, they may PRACTICE for hours on end, but its often at a significantly reduced strain. They had to go all out for hours.

  • @witchflowers6942
    @witchflowers6942 Před rokem +432

    Russell Crowe singing as an eighties post punk boy is not something i knew i needed in my life.

  • @mycattypedthis2827
    @mycattypedthis2827 Před 8 měsíci +1379

    the fact that this train wreck was Redmayne’s first vocal performance and years later he was cast as Emcee in Cabaret and slayed it so hard he won Olivier in Best Actor in Musical for it is mind blowing to me

    • @carschmn
      @carschmn Před 6 měsíci +14

      He got better!

    • @emhu2594
      @emhu2594 Před 6 měsíci +31

      He probably had singing classes in drama school.

    • @1theatrechick
      @1theatrechick Před 5 měsíci +48

      He was so good that when he first appeared I was like, “Oh, finally! At least they brought *someone* in from musical theatre!” (I had never heard of him before).

    • @ivalicetifalucis
      @ivalicetifalucis Před 2 měsíci +5

      I remember when it was just released people were questioning the non famous names in the cast, if they could perform. And then there was a video of just a sound of Eddie Redmayne singing Ave Maria and it was so good and people were like yup, I think he would be a good Marius. I try to search it again around here but I couldn't find it anymore.

  • @meanya4687
    @meanya4687 Před 3 lety +4749

    It's literally called _Les Miserables_ and people didn't know it was French???

    • @antoinettea6179
      @antoinettea6179 Před 3 lety +299

      Well I’m sure a lot of people knew it was a book originally but I was surprised to hear that the musical itself was written in French first

    • @zxKAOS1
      @zxKAOS1 Před 3 lety +189

      Plus, some Americans probably didn't know it was French and thought it was pronounced "less mi-zur-ah-bels" ;)

    • @JohnnyYCWang
      @JohnnyYCWang Před 3 lety +32

      zxKAOS1 that’s how this video started lol

    • @douglasrau5094
      @douglasrau5094 Před 3 lety +97

      I think people think that the novel by Victor Hugo was written in French but maybe assume that Claude-Michel Schoenberg wrote the songs in English.

    • @zxKAOS1
      @zxKAOS1 Před 3 lety +88

      @@antoinettea6179 Pretty much this. There's the distinction that it takes place in France, or has a French theme, vs. the lyrics itself being in French (language). People are aware _Miss Saigon_ takes place in Vietnam, but wouldn't think that its original adaptation is in Vietnamese (it isn't). Or _Cats_ is about a bunch of cats, but its original language isn't some "feline language" (which it also isn't).

  • @punman5392
    @punman5392 Před 2 lety +6500

    If singing for 8 hours a day can ruin your voice box, then playing a stringed instrument for the same amount every day will absolutely shred your wrists. The bass and cello players must have been on fire

    • @sunchasericeserawings7166
      @sunchasericeserawings7166 Před 2 lety +612

      I played violin from late elementary to early high school. The wrists won't just be on fire, so will the entire goddamn hands, backs, and rears. Oh and arms! Playing for 2 consecutive hours was always hard for me but I managed to push through. I can't imagine 3 without breaks in between. Those poor musicians most likely had something damaged by the end of their recording

    • @themanwithallthewrongopini3551
      @themanwithallthewrongopini3551 Před 2 lety +217

      @@sunchasericeserawings7166 The butt and back was worst for me. Literally no breaks in between playing to lay back made my back try to kill itself. Worse was we sat on those metal folding chairs so our tail bone and hips literally die inside. I think I’ll die at 30 because a clot that built up from my performances will come loose and block my heart.

    • @sunchasericeserawings7166
      @sunchasericeserawings7166 Před 2 lety +62

      @@themanwithallthewrongopini3551 oof. Yeah as I'm older with a back and tailbone injury I think those would kill me more nowadays. Good goddess... I feel so bad for all these musicians

    • @starkman78
      @starkman78 Před 2 lety +45

      @@sunchasericeserawings7166 I was lucky to have a front row seat to see Ben Folds performing with YMusic. The violinist played with her whole body so much so that her hair was swinging about. She must have gotten completely exhausted but she gave that violin LIFE!

    • @sunchasericeserawings7166
      @sunchasericeserawings7166 Před 2 lety +7

      @@starkman78 oh yeah, that would be exhausting but worth it

  • @happygolightly
    @happygolightly Před rokem +1146

    Let's talk about how incredibly painful this must have been. This is so sad. Les Mis is a beautiful and heartbreaking musical they didn't have to torture the cast & crew to get this shitty performance.

    • @dronesclubhighjinks
      @dronesclubhighjinks Před rokem +49

      This CZcams channel has a video about the same Director and how horribly he messed up the music in Cats (2019). After this nightmare production, I'm surprised he was allowed to continue in his profession. I can't imagine he ever had the best interest of the actors and their health on his priority list. Not to mention the orchestra. You can imagine how he treated the camera crew and everybody else on set if he's that horrible with star actors.
      I really recommend the Cats analysis. It's one hour and five minutes, but if you start around the 50th minute, the narrator goes into overdrive.
      There are a lot of comments on that video saying how many times they have watched it because of how good the analysis is, and how much passion the CZcams creator has.

    • @sorashirogami1729
      @sorashirogami1729 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Considering the name, story and meaning of the name of Les Mis, torturing the cast and crew netted a remarkably more realistic performance than they would have otherwise.

    • @erikbihari3625
      @erikbihari3625 Před 9 měsíci +8

      @@sorashirogami1729. Wow, so you think the real world is a piece of turd. Why do you think clean places exist? Because people built and keep them tip top!

    • @sorashirogami1729
      @sorashirogami1729 Před 8 měsíci

      @@erikbihari3625 Your reply has the faintest of relations to my comment, juuust enough for me to be unable to say that it has nothing to do with my comment at all. Well done.
      Just so we're clear here, I was making a joke about how the cast and crew were miserable when making a production titled, you guessed it, The Miserable People. That's what Les Miserables mean. That's all there is to it. Evidently, it flew over your head, although considering how this joke is so lowbrow it's a tripping hazard in hell it is actually impressive how fucking stupid you have to be to miss my point so hard. Well done, you dingus.

    • @hamingnu6610
      @hamingnu6610 Před 8 měsíci

      @@sorashirogami1729 Still, I'd argue that the entire performance could've benefited if the 'musical' part of the entire production didn't have to be the one to compromise when everything quite literally originates from a musical. It's one thing to make a good normal dialogue-heavy film, but it's another to make a musical act like a dialogue-heavy film with all the sacrifices of a dialogue-heavy film. It just doesn't work to serve the same purpose, and if Hooper wanted that he could've done that - but instead he opted for a half-assed gimmicky setup. They told the story of Les Mis but didn't bother trying to do it the way Les Mis wanted it to be done.
      Was the performance in the movie itself great? It was emotionally riveting, so of course it wasn't bad. But it's more of a luck of the draw that the cast itself was just competent and lucky enough to have at least made it into what it was. Had they been 1% less lucky, the performance would have toppled, and they wouldn't have gotten at least a half-decent musical film out of it. They shouldn't have risked that and should've opted for the more secure and more impactful decision of just keeping the musical's integrity as a musical, and to have allowed their actors to facilitate that by ensuring that the production kept their eye on the integrity of their vocal performances. But they didn't, because Hooper couldn't care less.

  • @Queen_Cnidarian
    @Queen_Cnidarian Před 4 měsíci +170

    The fact no one received permanent vocal damage because of this is a mother fucking miracle.

  • @fancyborscht
    @fancyborscht Před 3 lety +2227

    "We just sing at each other on an otherwise deathly silent set" God....how awkward...

    • @hakasims
      @hakasims Před 3 lety +108

      Reminds me of that wrestling video with the empty arena where Bray Wyatt monologues at John Cena and it's dead quiet, and suddenly wrestling taunts turn into a soliloquy from a conceptual play, and John looks sooo uncomfortable

  • @andrewf9126
    @andrewf9126 Před 3 lety +4707

    Jackman: I didn’t drink water for 36 hours before preforming
    Me: *franticly drinks water in secondhand pain and panic*

    • @The_Jovian
      @The_Jovian Před 3 lety +136

      I'm feeling mighty thirsty right about now

    • @akunekochan
      @akunekochan Před 3 lety +76

      Hydrohomies spotted

    • @AlexVicture
      @AlexVicture Před 3 lety +4

      Saaaaaaaame

    • @Orynae
      @Orynae Před 3 lety +4

      Same

    • @rebecanolasco
      @rebecanolasco Před 3 lety +35

      Man, I literally got up and went to drink water after that part, that sounds painful

  • @sweet_bruiser5144
    @sweet_bruiser5144 Před rokem +423

    Just to correct something: Eddie Redmayne did musical theater when he was younger and was in tons of school productions.

    • @frizzygingernut
      @frizzygingernut Před 9 měsíci +57

      Yeah I also thought this- he was a choral scholar through school and then also at Trinity college Cambridge, so he actually had a pretty rigorous background

    • @writerintherye
      @writerintherye Před měsícem +5

      makes sense, because he is the only one who acts like he is in a musical and knows how to sell it (besides Barks obviously)

    • @bettyjojoeharperre-imagina7322
      @bettyjojoeharperre-imagina7322 Před 20 dny

      @@writerintherye
      And Aaron Tveit! He’s so good

  • @C.k.101
    @C.k.101 Před 6 měsíci +292

    I remember watching half of the Les Mis movie on Netflix and I thought it was pretty good. A few months later I watched Les Mis at a huge theatre near me and I was blown away, I loved it and it was actually great. Then I finished the Les MIs movie and I felt disappointed because the musical was just so so good I couldn’t watch the movie and pretend it was decent. Like the musical was so good to me at the end I started clapping so hard my mom thought i was clapping for one of the hot actors. When that kid died I teared up, when the kid died in the movie I just felt nothing. The musical is 1000x better than the movie and now I understand why people trashed on the movie so much.

    • @rkah6187
      @rkah6187 Před 5 měsíci +5

      To this day I have never watched the full movie, even though I love Les Miserables; it was the first musical I ever saw. I read the book as well and watched the BBC film adaptation multiple times. This movie just offends my sensibilities. Of course, Samantha Barks knocks it out of the park but she is the only thing I can appreciate in this disaster.

    • @mxveewz
      @mxveewz Před 4 měsíci +5

      the movie was my first exposure to Les Mis. when I saw it, my first reaction was "so this is the musical that everyone loves so much? it's kinda meh"
      then I went and saw a stage production at a local theater. it BLEW ME AWAY. I was so touched by the story and emotion. I cried so hard at multiple points, that after it was done, the person I saw it with had to ask if I was ok.
      I haven't seen the movie again since then, but I have seen this video about a dozen times, and that's about enough for me lol.

    • @justablur7039
      @justablur7039 Před 4 měsíci +3

      this was me with the into the woods Disney movie versus the 1980 broadway musical on CZcams I can't even get through the movie anymore LMAO

    • @vanitystreak
      @vanitystreak Před 2 měsíci

      I actually watched the movie first, and was like meh about it, couldn't see why it was an award winning musical. Years later I watched the 10th anniversary theatre version and was blown. Away. It made me, an atheist, have a religious experience at the line 'to love another is to see the face of God'. And this video laid it all out so clearly why the disparity is huge! Phantom of the opera (25th anniversary) and Les Mis (10th anniversary) are now my top two musicals ❤️

    • @ChillDfect
      @ChillDfect Před 17 dny

      They made a "mehvie"

  • @alainaleone5120
    @alainaleone5120 Před 3 lety +3560

    This is like a horror movie for vocalists. I audibly gasped in horror when he mentioned DEPRIVING HIMSELF OF WATER FOR 36 HOURS. Like, holy shit

    • @kitsunecookie372
      @kitsunecookie372 Před 3 lety +183

      When I'm doing an hour of PRACTICE I drink at least 4 bottles throughout to keep myself sounding even vaguely presentable. I also gasped and clutched my throat in solidarity

    • @anirudhviswanathan3986
      @anirudhviswanathan3986 Před 3 lety +35

      To quote Joseph Joestar : OH GOOOOODDDD!!

    • @QuikVidGuy
      @QuikVidGuy Před 3 lety +58

      this video is what got me back intodrinkign water. Hearing Davis like that, I couldn't imagine that much damage or what it might feel like

    • @YoO161
      @YoO161 Před 3 lety +7

      im a vocalist, it aint.

    • @shadow_shine3578
      @shadow_shine3578 Před 3 lety +36

      You Can't sing, CAN'T sing with so little water very well. That was terrifying to find out. Plus so little water hurts everything else!

  • @cedricpicard297
    @cedricpicard297 Před 3 lety +16420

    As a clarinet player, it’s absolutely horrifying that they made the orchestra play full force for 10 hours, what in the absolute FUCK

    • @caithemburrow5569
      @caithemburrow5569 Před 2 lety +1579

      As a violinist and flutist I completely agree. That shit would hurt

    • @cedricpicard297
      @cedricpicard297 Před 2 lety +661

      @@caithemburrow5569 tendinitis galore

    • @emilycortes1622
      @emilycortes1622 Před 2 lety +1465

      That’s legit abuse, like marching band performers barely have to play and March for 4-5 hours at a time but at least we’re granted plenty of breaks

    • @lyzziekelly
      @lyzziekelly Před 2 lety +684

      The director is crazy and uneducated, that's all lol

    • @horizonfulcrum8250
      @horizonfulcrum8250 Před 2 lety +627

      Brass commiting suicide in the back row

  • @0average_enjoyer044
    @0average_enjoyer044 Před 9 měsíci +149

    i’m a classically trained vocalist. when i got to the part where jackman admitted to NOT DRINKING WATER BEFORE SINGING i really did have a stroke lol

    • @chavitanwar2126
      @chavitanwar2126 Před 2 měsíci

      Did you recover by the time he explained why was it wrong? 😂
      I bet you needed more time than that.

  • @Aussieroth7
    @Aussieroth7 Před 8 měsíci +245

    It also doesn't help that the 10th Anniversary Dream Cast in Concert was as perfect as they come. Seriously, just incredible.

    • @jenniferpearce1052
      @jenniferpearce1052 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Yessssss! It is the best!

    • @shammyturtle9741
      @shammyturtle9741 Před 6 měsíci +4

      I almost exclusively listen to the original London recording because it’s what I grew up on, but I make an exception for the 10th anniversary concert because it’s amazing

    • @Aussieroth7
      @Aussieroth7 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@shammyturtle9741 I get that entirely.

    • @writerintherye
      @writerintherye Před měsícem +1

      fr the comparision cuts made it seem like the movie was a 10th grade school production

    • @Aussieroth7
      @Aussieroth7 Před měsícem

      @@writerintherye And it had NO RIGHT to be that way. Realism comes when you focus on developing your characters, stories and plots, not from developing "The right feeling."

  • @AstraVex
    @AstraVex Před 3 lety +3429

    Seeing Hugh Jackman go from a dehydrated, yellow-eyed raggety pink skeleton covered in hair, to transforming into The Greatest Showman full of smooth melodies and charisma, shows why hydration, rest and rehearsal breaks are important!!! For the love of god, Hollywood, never do this again! xD

    • @420catboi
      @420catboi Před 2 lety +216

      Agreed, it was awful how they were treated, but I didn't really like The Greatest Showman either. Imo, they took an awful man who was literally very abusive and turned him into a hero.

    • @frenchbreadstupidity7054
      @frenchbreadstupidity7054 Před 2 lety +61

      @@420catboi It's all about the perspective from the context. The whole world was abusive towards the 'freaks,' and in that world he was a shining light of acceptance, opportunity and respect. He offered them jobs, gave them a family, etc etc. That there were wage disputes or he teased them for what made them unique and caricaturized them for the sake of the show, may make him something evil in the modern day, in a world where 'weirdos' automatically have more than he offered, thus he would only be taking away. But at the time, all of it was better than what they would have gotten from anyone else, and what more can you ask for besides improvement from where you are now? And they stayed because there wasn't anything better for them- he was peak human rights for them. So to those people, he was their hero, and if we have to polish what he did to make him come across that way to us, so be it.

    • @frde2190
      @frde2190 Před 2 lety +45

      @@420catboi I see what you mean but it see these kinds of films as fictional works. Like the Conjuring films, I really like them but the warrens in real life were frauds

    • @420catboi
      @420catboi Před 2 lety +34

      @@frde2190 I agree. Fictionally, they're stunning pieces of work. But at the same time, I think it's important for people to know the real history behind these stories and why they're so impactful as well. But that's just my opinion. I totally see where you're coming from tho.

    • @lauraj6694
      @lauraj6694 Před 2 lety +10

      @@frenchbreadstupidity7054 I recommend watching Jenny nicholsons video on greatest showman

  • @estebanquinones5918
    @estebanquinones5918 Před 2 lety +8227

    I just realized that Anne Hathaway mage herself cry and sing each take for 8-10 hours my God the fact that she can still talk is insane to me

    • @OmniphonProductions
      @OmniphonProductions Před 2 lety +381

      And THAT is why she won the Oscar!

    • @anisahs2110
      @anisahs2110 Před 2 lety +280

      @@OmniphonProductions Are they awarding the effort instead of the actual end result of the performance?

    • @ivorytickler7777
      @ivorytickler7777 Před 2 lety +89

      Actors are professional vocalists...and speech arts is a real discipline of study. I once saw Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen perform a play without amplification, and I could hear everything from the back row. They are pro stage actors who know how to project without injury.
      Similarly, Audra McDonald did a show as Billie Holliday, in vocal fry for the whole show run. No injuries. She's a master, who knows how to manage the task in a healthy way for her voice.
      My guess is that Anne Hathaway has this type of skill. She makes the sounds in that song without straining her voice like a layperson would...said layperson would probably do far more vocal work than was necessary to produce those sounds. Likewise, a professional pianist isn't really working all that hard, physically, because they've taught themselves a certain economy of motion while accomplishing physical tasks which amateurs haven't internalized yet and thus overdo.

    • @OmniphonProductions
      @OmniphonProductions Před 2 lety +42

      @@ivorytickler7777 Audra McDonald is a _goddess!!!_ Knowing how she usually sounds, when I saw the Billie Holiday performance, I couldn't help wondering whether (metaphorically) making a clarinet sound like a muted trumpet...caused her discomfort. However, as you say, there are techniques by which professionals avoid discomfort (or damage) that laypersons might otherwise incur. Death Metal vocalists and professional voice actors would all have very short careers without such tricks of the trade.
      Having said that, not all professional actors are _singers_ (or dancers for that matter), especially if they have specifically focused their attention on film. (I'm lookin' at you, Russell Crowe!) There's is an added degree of difficulty in Musical Theater that most people simply don't appreciate, largely because people like Audra McDonald make it look so easy. With all this in mind, I think your final paragraph is spot-on; especially considering that Anne Hathaway nailed _I Dreamed A Dream_ on the fourth take.

    • @ivorytickler7777
      @ivorytickler7777 Před 2 lety +15

      @@OmniphonProductions She also grew up watching backstage while her mom sang that same role!

  • @Kerosiin
    @Kerosiin Před 11 měsíci +1309

    Hugh. Hun. Why are you giving a better performance at a god damn karaoke night than in the actual movie

    • @elsie8757
      @elsie8757 Před 10 měsíci +361

      Probably because he didn't go into the karaoke performance after not drinking water for 36 hours

    • @jplayzow
      @jplayzow Před 8 měsíci +174

      ​@@elsie8757amazing what you can sound like when you're not torturing yourself

    • @stellarluna1834
      @stellarluna1834 Před 8 měsíci +60

      ⁠@@jplayzowI want to laugh but this is legit what happened

    • @jplayzow
      @jplayzow Před 8 měsíci +27

      @@stellarluna1834 Yeah go figure doing literally everything the wrong way to get a good product doesn't get a good product

    • @FallenAngel7538
      @FallenAngel7538 Před 6 měsíci +10

      Well because he wasn't drinking water and...did you watch the video?

  • @DarkStormProduction5
    @DarkStormProduction5 Před 7 měsíci +147

    I'm glad you pointed out the health thing. That kind of thing is very dangerous and it's disgusting any production would make anyone go through that.

    • @bettyjojoeharperre-imagina7322
      @bettyjojoeharperre-imagina7322 Před 20 dny +2

      Or outright refuse to allow the actors to abuse themselves like that. If it were me, I’d insist on hydrating. Oh my goddddd

  • @LahDeeDah7
    @LahDeeDah7 Před 3 lety +6031

    "This just sounds like the ravings of a dying woman."
    *Scene shows the ravings of a dying woman*

    • @TicklishCrown
      @TicklishCrown Před 3 lety +376

      I know right? I laughed there, but I guess she’s not suppose to sound like she’s dying. Forfeiting the nice singing for some acting and starving/dying of thirst for “authenticity” is dumb, cause the singing is the hallmark of the show

    • @blauespony1013
      @blauespony1013 Před 3 lety +637

      @@TicklishCrown I disagree on that one. On film we are way closer to the actors and actresses than in a theatre, so for me the acting has to be more important than the singing. In music theatre you have singing with acting and in this film it is acting with singing.

    • @PabloLopez-rp7lq
      @PabloLopez-rp7lq Před 3 lety +177

      @@blauespony1013 Yeah, but the music itself is the narrative device. I'd get it if you said "acting first and stunt work after", but the emotions and impact of the scenes literally rely on the quality of the singing voice. That's what a musical is. And that's why musicals are so hard to make into movies. On stage, the emotions have to be big, and the songs make those emotions big. Film is a medium from which audiences expect subtler performances, therefore, making emotions big through songs work usually to a fault.

    • @LahDeeDah7
      @LahDeeDah7 Před 3 lety +197

      @@PabloLopez-rp7lq but the whole point was to try something different with this musical and put the acting first. It was experimental and I think it worked. It put you in the scene much more than if they were to sing flawlessly no matter the circumstance. But that's just my opinion. That's why I prefer the movie version of the soundtrack rather than the stage version (though I'm sure saying that is straight up heresy on this channel).

    • @liampoulton-king7479
      @liampoulton-king7479 Před 3 lety +118

      TicklishCrown choosing to have the musical performance be less “ethereal” than the stage performance is a choice; you can like or dislike it, but it’s not an inherently invalid one. Personally, I like the effect of having the characters sing in a way that reflects their physical performance.

  • @Krebfest
    @Krebfest Před 3 lety +3120

    “Compare this-“ Hugh Jackman singing plays
    “To this-“ CZcams shoving an old spice ad in my face
    Great timing youtube

  • @brotemca8020
    @brotemca8020 Před 11 měsíci +121

    Even for my shows in high school we were constantly told to break for water and talked through when in the performance we could have a drink, we didn't have dairy or sugar (where possible) in the weeks leading up to the show, and we were marking in our dress rehearsals. Everyone did fifteen minutes of warm-up together, and leads were encouraged to do some in their own time. We had honey-lemon drinks and the best sleep possible. Dehydrating yourself before shows is the most stupid thing I've ever heard - even the nine and ten year olds joining from the junior school were looking after themselves better than professional singers in professional productions. Holy shit.

  • @laurast.martin2421
    @laurast.martin2421 Před 9 měsíci +75

    I'm in shock that anyone could think that 36 hours of dehydration could ever be a good thing BEFORE A LIVE VOCAL PERFORMANCE. Were there no music directors or vocal coaches nearby to say, "Actually, no, Hugh. Please don't do that" ??

  • @fictionmeister
    @fictionmeister Před 3 lety +3249

    This video made me drink a glass of water and I'm not even a vocalist

    • @Elemental-Phoenix
      @Elemental-Phoenix Před 3 lety +106

      I used to sing a ton and this made me go grab several cups of water.
      jesus fuck that's utterly horrifying to me. It's the same thing as taking a hammer to a brass instrument, you just don't fucking do it.

    • @Emily-lb7rf
      @Emily-lb7rf Před 3 lety +4

      SAME

    • @tull3b3ll3
      @tull3b3ll3 Před 3 lety +34

      I drank 24 oz and I still feel thirsty. Why would Jackman agree to that?! My throat is sore just thinking of it. Whyyyyyy

    • @franziska9260
      @franziska9260 Před 3 lety +15

      not a vocalist at all but my throat is screaming at the very thought

    • @Coffeeisnecessarynowpepper
      @Coffeeisnecessarynowpepper Před 3 lety +8

      I drank a cup of jizz!!

  • @janedenktasli3064
    @janedenktasli3064 Před 2 lety +7032

    This director's actions were bordering on criminal. My sister's singing teacher could only speak in a whisper. His voice was completely destroyed by doing one performance with a slight cold. Damaging your voice is a real thing.

    • @theghostlyterror3578
      @theghostlyterror3578 Před 2 lety +246

      Damn that’s tragic

    • @KennyBye
      @KennyBye Před 2 lety +448

      see this is what broadway does to actors too though. making them work through colds and shit because it’s tony season, it shocks me how little vocal damage has happened…

    • @OkenWS
      @OkenWS Před 2 lety +147

      Brian Molko did this at Cardiff CIA a few years ago, tried to perform Placebo's greatest hits with essentially the middle aged man level of freshers flu. I was there. It was sad. He spent months with an ENT having surgeries afterwards... we're going back to see them again soon and hoping the battle to save his voice was worth it.

    • @deathbunny3048
      @deathbunny3048 Před 2 lety +243

      I've had my voice completely collapse during a stage performance... it turned me off of musical theatre forever honestly.... all because I was forced... FORCED into singing in a register that my voice wasn't made for at all, I'm a low tenor, higher end bass singer, they expected me to hit notes meant for a female vocalist and I did and it hurt so much that my voice died on stage, completely, in the middle of the show, couldn't make a sound, couldn't speak a word and somehow that was MY fault.

    • @nightlydrugs6927
      @nightlydrugs6927 Před 2 lety +29

      Right?! Wtf was MacIntosh thinking trusting THIS ONE to do this.

  • @jippy33
    @jippy33 Před 6 měsíci +115

    I had the great, great pleasure of seeing Alfie Boe (the guy potraying Valjean in the 25th anniversary edition you see clips from in this video) portray Valjean on Broadway in 2015 and I was devastated to hear he auditioned for the same part in the movie and didn't get it. I guess star power->vocal power in a MUSICAL.

    • @TheTrueTurtlegirl
      @TheTrueTurtlegirl Před 4 měsíci +12

      While I completely agree that it's criminal he didn't get the part, I'm at the very least relieved to know he dodged a bullet given the conditions all of the musicians in this movie endured pfpff

    • @jippy33
      @jippy33 Před 4 měsíci +8

      @@TheTrueTurtlegirl Heh. Somehow I doubt he would have needed more than one take. Or given up drinking WATER. Jeez, I can't over how stupid that is.

    • @TheTrueTurtlegirl
      @TheTrueTurtlegirl Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@jippy33 Honestly, the idea of intentionally depriving oneself of water for the sake of a performance is bad enough, worsened significantly by the idea of someone SINGING under those circumstances. The fact that they say that all so casually and with proud smiles on their faces is HORRIFYING.

  • @brotemca8020
    @brotemca8020 Před 11 měsíci +50

    not giving hugh jackman the prompts for ripping the paper is stupid enough... even dumber when you see he first tears it _as he starts singing the note_ - mate, if you have watched literally ANY OTHER VERSION of this scene you will know to wait before that. it doesn't start there. hugh, what are you - oh - hugh, no, you - he - he has his set deafened, he can't hear us!

  • @sarah-ui8ip
    @sarah-ui8ip Před 3 lety +2944

    tbh i don't even care about the music anymore, the abUSE THEY PUT THE ACTORS THROUGH OMYGOD

    • @thenonsenseguy2364
      @thenonsenseguy2364 Před 3 lety +329

      @@xx_izzyxx2250 every worker has their limits, no matter what profession they are in.

    • @thenonsenseguy2364
      @thenonsenseguy2364 Před 3 lety +201

      @@xx_izzyxx2250 yes but you check out the behind the scences of this movie , the actor were made to do some hard stuff

    • @2225ram
      @2225ram Před 3 lety +3

      They probably got paid for it too lol

    • @littlekong7685
      @littlekong7685 Před 3 lety +164

      I feel like the director wanted to be like Kubrick, but came to the conclusion that if Kubrick's actors were abused, then that is what makes a director good. The end result or overall quality of product seemed secondary to "being seen as a creative visionary"

    • @QuikVidGuy
      @QuikVidGuy Před 3 lety +12

      @@thenonsenseguy2364 watch the fucking video
      or just listen to it at least, jesus

  • @colleen6440
    @colleen6440 Před 3 lety +3651

    It needs to stop being considered okay, let alone admirable, for actors to abuse their bodies (or more likely, directors to push for actors to abuse their bodies) for the sake of a movie.

    • @Hesher93
      @Hesher93 Před 3 lety +48

      Its the Actors/Actress decision nobody forces them, if they dont want to do it, they shouldnt take the job.

    • @allywatchstation
      @allywatchstation Před 3 lety +294

      @@Hesher93 ah yes... and if an actor decides to jump off a building to recreate a character's physical ailments, its ok because its their decision, and noone forced them to. It shouldn't matter if it was their decision or not. someone needed to have told them that if they do this they have a chance of seriously harming themselves. Imagine a world where hugh jackman or anne hathaway did get serious vocal damage. (thank goodness they didnt) We would be shorted of these actors and the future performances they might give.

    • @contextTBD
      @contextTBD Před 3 lety +47

      Please, actors do it to serve their own interests. By showing that they can/will do/learn something for a specific project, they are showing everybody (from the Academy to the general audiences) how much committed they are to their art. That makes them more bankable, respectable, recognizable and award-worthy. It's the same with athletes who keep pushing their physical limits by repeatedly winning medals/trophies and breaking records.

    • @Hesher93
      @Hesher93 Před 3 lety +27

      @@allywatchstation As if they didnt know that, they are adults for gods sake, they know what they are doing. They know what eating an Apple a day would/could do to them, they are adults, its their decision, there is something like personal responsibility. At the end of the day, they do it because they love it or for the pay check, nobody forces them. Espacially actors like Hughe Jackman who can handpick their roles.

    • @annedavis3340
      @annedavis3340 Před 3 lety +242

      OP: "This bad thing needs to stop being the norm."
      Reply 1: "no one's FORCING them. If they don't want to be abused, someone else will be abused instead." Yes. That's the problem.
      Reply 3: "the actors do it because they benefit/profit from it." Yes. That's the problem.
      Reply 4: "well it's always been like this, so..." Yes, that's why OP said it needs to STOP.
      Shout out to reply 2 for understanding what OP's words meant in the order OP put them in. It was apparently a pretty monumental achievement.

  • @teazen_tea
    @teazen_tea Před 10 měsíci +41

    so, like, I know Sideways dosen't really do content anymore, which sucks but if that's what's healthy, I'm glad, but I wanted to say that I'm an engineering student who knows NOTHING about music to the point where I have trouble identifying a leitmotif because I don't always hear when music is simaler. I'm getting better at it but it's ONLY because Sideways helped show me the importance of music in storytelling. My mom worked in the opera and ballet but 30 years, and although my artistic talent went into design work and mechanics rather than hair and makeup, I still think theater is REALLY COOL! so I showed her this and it was the most fun I've had with her in ages. She convinced me to Le Mis and we ended up watching the concert version because I'd only ever seen the movie (my sister insisted on watching it during her musical phase). it was amazing, I know this is about to sound like "STEM major discovers musical theater is good actually" but I know, I've watched musicals before, and I understand that they're really good, I'd just never seen this specific show before lol. anyways, the music was beautiful, the emotional beats hit so much harder when they were reinforced by the musical backing and build up of the uhhh leitmoteifs also Ruthie Henshall's come to me was.... one of the most impressive things I've ever heard, she ends the song by like.... I don't know how to describe it, she like..... gets louder and higher pitched and like quieter at the same time?? like it geneuanly sounds like a trick of the audio or like she's stepping away from the microphone, but she's not, she's doing it with her VOICE and it's HAUNTING, I asked my mom and she kinda laughed at my awe, and said it was "talent" Look, from a pure acting standpoint Come to me might be better in the move, with the tears and emotion and weakness, but that haunting last note will stay with me for a lot longer.

  • @Grandmas_Favorite
    @Grandmas_Favorite Před rokem +143

    33:56 the fact Amanda Seyfried was not cast for the “snow white” live action remake by Disney is as criminal as Disney doing these live action remakes in the first place….

    • @ad-sd-vids5332
      @ad-sd-vids5332 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Seyfried is 38, and Snow White is supposed to be 14

    • @TheSoulCalledZuzia
      @TheSoulCalledZuzia Před 3 měsíci +8

      @@ad-sd-vids5332 You talk as if actors can't play roles that aren't their age.

    • @lydiavalentino
      @lydiavalentino Před měsícem

      West Side Story '21 also did a lot of live singing on set, so whatever you think of the casting, Zegler's chops are not in question.

    • @lordfarquaad8601
      @lordfarquaad8601 Před měsícem

      ​​@@TheSoulCalledZuziaYou talk as if a 38 year old actress could ever believably play a 14 year old.

    • @TheSoulCalledZuzia
      @TheSoulCalledZuzia Před měsícem

      @@lordfarquaad8601 Good actress could believably play a 14 year old. She may not look at one, though.

  • @SP-cp3qu
    @SP-cp3qu Před 3 lety +1869

    Hugh Jackman depriving himself of water for 36 hours just should not be encouraged. So awful for you, let alone your voice

    • @chadkroeger6907
      @chadkroeger6907 Před 3 lety +39

      Literally every male buff male actor has done it. Its not good but it makes muscles pop and appear more toned

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB Před 3 lety +114

      Chad Kroeger Yeah and it’s not healthy. They should not do that. Nobody said they don’t they said they should not

    • @MeatisMagic256
      @MeatisMagic256 Před 3 lety +5

      @@DeathnoteBB *should not* Either do it, or someone else will. It's their job. You don't get to play Cpt. America by being average.

    • @gabrielleporter553
      @gabrielleporter553 Před 3 lety +59

      adam goessl bro dehydration isn’t healthy. don’t encourage unhealthy behavior because there are other means to get ahead

    • @MeatisMagic256
      @MeatisMagic256 Před 3 lety +3

      @@gabrielleporter553 It doesn't matter what I promote. We live in a capitalist society. Viewership will drop if Thor isn't as ripped. No one will be able to make a compelling argument that he's actually healthier, and should thus be seen more often. Dehydrating for a day is fine. 36 hours is a bit extreme.

  • @Jay-vj7hx
    @Jay-vj7hx Před 3 lety +3681

    In a graham norton interview Hugh Jackman admitted that when he played Gaston on broadway he literally peed his pants live on stage so he could hit his final note. Hearing he dehydrated himself for valjean is insane. This man once valued both hydration and vocal performance so much that he PISSED HIS PANTS IN FRONT OF A LIVE AUDIENCE.

    • @PutBoxOnMe
      @PutBoxOnMe Před 3 lety +149

      He had that much blatter control ?!?!

    • @tose917
      @tose917 Před 3 lety +36

      @@PutBoxOnMe “bladder” 🙄🙄

    • @bellamckinnon8655
      @bellamckinnon8655 Před 2 lety +183

      @@tose917 Who cares man? Seriously. Someone might criticize you for using emojis, and you’re out here critiquing incorrect spelling? Hypocrite; didn’t even spell “forever” right in your own name.

    • @CaptPhiI
      @CaptPhiI Před 2 lety +208

      To me it seems his dedication is still there, it just went into prioritizing the acting visuals (often at the expense of vocal performance, as the video shows).

    • @EternalShadow1667
      @EternalShadow1667 Před 2 lety +83

      @@CaptPhiI yeah true, I actually think that the movie had good acting, with good facial expressions that added depth to the story. Despite that, the singing is clearly not up to standard, as are a few…other things (cough cough-Javert’s suicide-cough cough).

  • @freet5930
    @freet5930 Před 7 měsíci +34

    I was in pit orchestra for a local production of the show, and the recurring motifs were so fun to play! They're weird rhythms, but they reoccur so many times that you can recognize them on sight and know how they'll fit with the rest of the ensemble.
    Also the teenagers playing Valjean and Javert absolutely crushed it, The Night was one of my favorite pieces to listen to during the performances- I had almost entirely rests during the song, but the way the lead actor sang it was so gorgeous. I HATED the belting when I finally watched the movie because I was so used to how delicate our actor made the vocals.

  • @emilyjanet455
    @emilyjanet455 Před 8 měsíci +44

    As a professional singer and voice teacher, I deeply appreciate the discussion of vocal function.

  • @auntsteve9148
    @auntsteve9148 Před 3 lety +3136

    can we also talk about the fact that for some reason Jackman is doing like 4 different accents in this movie?

    • @Asimov16
      @Asimov16 Před 3 lety +130

      Was one of them Wolverine?

    • @thatpitter
      @thatpitter Před 3 lety +73

      And then the greatest showman is good?!? H o w

    • @Mandyn8868
      @Mandyn8868 Před 3 lety +113

      @@thatpitter He is a good singer, for some reason everything went wrong with this, look up him in Oklahoma

    • @infinitusfinitus
      @infinitusfinitus Před 3 lety +127

      right?? why does he start off irish and end up english and occasionally wander into french?

    • @sanaddaoud6541
      @sanaddaoud6541 Před 3 lety +134

      I think it’s because he decided to not drink water for 36 hours.

  • @crstph
    @crstph Před 3 lety +3829

    i am SO over this narrative of the more you “suffer” for a performance, the “better” it is. like working through pain = working hard, or something. it reminds me of the narrative that u have to “suffer” through something awful-grief, mental illness, etc-in order for your art to be good, so people should lean in to pain or not seek help, when that is the opposite of productive. UGH

    • @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick
      @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick Před 2 lety +59

      Agreed. Stanislavsky is rolling in his grave.

    • @mattmorehouse9685
      @mattmorehouse9685 Před 2 lety +145

      I think it's a dangerous idea, that pain=greatness. Not to mention, kind of stupid. By this logic torture victims should be topping the bestsellers and awards lists. Oddly enough, no one has tried to test out my "Being tortured makes you a great artist theory." It reminds me of the make work fallacy, that people used to be better because they suffered more. Oddly enough not many people are volunteering to live medieval in the western world.

    • @niallreid7664
      @niallreid7664 Před 2 lety +4

      Y'all seen the Revenant? Lol.

    • @bicarbonat1
      @bicarbonat1 Před 2 lety +8

      @@niallreid7664 Leonardo put himself in hell and sat there like
      🔥🔥🐶☕🔥🔥

    • @alisonj7561
      @alisonj7561 Před 2 lety +4

      You might want to check out this great video essay on Method Acting by Broey Deschanel, it goes into a lot the problems with the suffering = art mentality
      czcams.com/video/AVWGyuBFgzw/video.html

  • @fionamorton3490
    @fionamorton3490 Před 8 měsíci +15

    Eddie Redmayne was a choral scholar at Trinity?! Why are you saying he had no experience? He probably had WAAAY more experience than Russel Crowe.

  • @MartynStanleyAuthor
    @MartynStanleyAuthor Před rokem +57

    Yeah, Eponine was amazing, she stood out a mile I thought. I thought Jackman was better in 'The Greatest Showman'. Part of me wonders whether the problem was the same conflict that afflicts all musical to film transistions. Do you want to make a musical that's a film or a film based on a musical? Do you want actors who can sing? Or singers who can act? Is the acting more important or the music? Maybe the issue with Les Miserables is that nobody really sat down and defined hard, 'We're going for X over Y, focus on the X'. Maybe as a film it would have been better translated from the book directly and done as a non-musical. But maybe as a musical it would have been better casting ALL experienced vocalists who were familiar with the material, then lower the emphasis on traditional aspects of film acting and simply have the performers perform their songs with the added magic of film quality sets and cinematic camera work? I think the most magical scene in the film is Eponine singing 'On my Own' and that's exactly what it is. She does a bit of acting, but never at the expense of the music. She seems to be completely comitted to keeping the musical performance at the top of the hierarchy of importance.

    • @shammyturtle9741
      @shammyturtle9741 Před 6 měsíci +8

      What’s wild is most of the cast had experience, they were just put in such awful conditions that their performances suffered.

  • @KatieBudd
    @KatieBudd Před 3 lety +8713

    I’m not even a vocalist, but hearing about Hugh Jackman not drinking water for 36 hours before shooting actually put me into shock! How did anyone on set let that happen? I can’t even imagine how that must have felt trying to sing with his throat being that dry!

    • @undead.rising
      @undead.rising Před 3 lety +357

      That's one and a half days - you can die from not drinking any water for a period of over 2 days!

    • @LuckyBadger
      @LuckyBadger Před 3 lety +456

      I keep thinking about the massive kidney pain in his lower back. Ouch!

    • @an0nym0us_slash35
      @an0nym0us_slash35 Před 3 lety +141

      I'm not surprised if his kidneys are broken

    • @averyeml
      @averyeml Před 3 lety +525

      Well the thing with specifically Jackman is that it isn’t new to him- actors playing superheroes are often asked to dehydrate for a stupid amount of time because it makes the muscles pop out better or something. Doesn’t excuse it and actually is emblematic of some bigger stuff, but for him specifically it wasn’t super new.

    • @veronicaproctor184
      @veronicaproctor184 Před 3 lety +138

      could've (& probably did) seriously damage his voice

  • @leohertzler8870
    @leohertzler8870 Před 3 lety +3597

    i'm back after the cats video. ROAST tomathy, mr. sideways, ROAST him

    • @lucydiamond1595
      @lucydiamond1595 Před 3 lety +55

      OMG SAME

    • @scaremang8000
      @scaremang8000 Před 3 lety +18

      @@lucydiamond1595 lmaoo SAME HERE

    • @walshling16
      @walshling16 Před 3 lety +19

      same here! they were both amazing

    • @erika6473
      @erika6473 Před 3 lety +114

      Hi "why the hell was a musical directed by someone who knows nothing about music" gang.

    • @neooblisk0084
      @neooblisk0084 Před 3 lety +15

      @@erika6473 hello fellow member

  • @blueturtle3623
    @blueturtle3623 Před 9 měsíci +21

    I was thoroughly baffled when you said Cameron Mackintosh approved this movie. I didn't know he held the film rights, and never would have thought he would want anyone unqualified in the cast. Also I was definitely disappointed with Hugh Jackman, given he's got actual musical theater experience. I'm also shocked anyone LET him not drink water.

  • @user-rp1jh7rh1t
    @user-rp1jh7rh1t Před rokem +62

    Crowe was in the original Australian cast of Blood Brothers. He has more musical theatre experience than you give him credit for.

    • @hamingnu6610
      @hamingnu6610 Před 8 měsíci +4

      I mean, either way he still mentions how Crowe's singing in the film isn't even representative of what his real capability is. I mean the whole point of giving Crowe credit for anything music-related at all is to show just how good he 'should've' been had the production not compromised him, and the rest of the cast's singing ability.
      But yeah it would be cooler to have further noted just how even more musically competent these people have been, because then it just makes it even sadder when they're not performing up to expectation (less to their own accord, and more because of the production).

  • @mychemicalromancewillpierc5241

    What’s sad is that if they were all actually hydrated and healthy, and properly vocally trained they all could’ve blown this thing out of the water. It’s incredible the difference you hear with Crowe, Hackman and Hathaway when they are in a proper state of health. Too bad it wasn’t filmed that way

    • @markusz4447
      @markusz4447 Před 3 lety +43

      To be fair i guess they ALSO took the received critics and tried to work on it after the movie was aired

    • @_timothy_tomato_9801
      @_timothy_tomato_9801 Před 3 lety +50

      “hugh jackman may be dead, but i’m his brother....kip..hackman.”

    • @tylerburney8576
      @tylerburney8576 Před 3 lety +139

      Hathaway especially! It’s not that her voice itself is bad during the movie, it’s that her singing voice barely makes an appearance. It’s honestly so sad that she has such a pretty voice but ended up doing the weird half-spoken sob-singing thing.

    • @hiendarinenkoray
      @hiendarinenkoray Před 3 lety +5

      Hehe mcrmy

    • @mychemicalromancewillpierc5241
      @mychemicalromancewillpierc5241 Před 3 lety +6

      Polly Sage i never said I hated it lmao. I like the movie lmao. I said the singing sucked in many parts. But the performances from the holy trinity is really what made it for me. Of course, I was only ten during the movie and was star struck regardless so I mean I didn’t really look deeper into this until seeing this video

  • @scremmy_draws
    @scremmy_draws Před 3 lety +6493

    The fact that Hugh Jackman went from THIS to his performance in The Greatest Showman is one of the best points to be made here! That jump in quality is what happens when your performers are actually HYDRATED AND HEALTHY!

    • @natasha8007
      @natasha8007 Před 3 lety +410

      Right? When I was so surprised by his performance in this film because I knew he started in musical theater.

    • @SquareViking
      @SquareViking Před 3 lety +519

      Hugh's passion gets the better of him when it comes to musicals. When they did the rehearsal for investors he wasn't supposed to sing due to surgery but he ended up doing it anyway because he got caught by the energy in the room. He needs a good director to nudge him on the right path.

    • @neckogecko5238
      @neckogecko5238 Před 3 lety +146

      and not singing full blast for 8 hours straight every day!

    • @skylarjohnson7779
      @skylarjohnson7779 Před 3 lety +184

      @@SquareViking I read about that. Apparently he ripped stitches. Like... calm down, Hugh?

    • @OwlBard
      @OwlBard Před 3 lety +199

      @@SquareViking I don't think he understands that there's a difference between sacrificing and putting your all into a role and just being void of logic.

  • @mrleereads
    @mrleereads Před rokem +81

    Thank you for pointing out Valjean and Javert switching power. I have always argued that they are co-protagonists.

  • @nobodybutaghost
    @nobodybutaghost Před rokem +83

    The way he said "Les Miserables" in a completely American accent killed me so quickly

    • @dronesclubhighjinks
      @dronesclubhighjinks Před rokem +14

      I thought he was being ironic/witty because it sounds like it was very very miserable for the actors and the orchestra.
      I would be surprised if this CZcamsr doesn't know how to pronounce it properly given that he seems to be highly educated.

    • @dronesclubhighjinks
      @dronesclubhighjinks Před rokem +2

      PS. Your name is Internet Ghost and you said his pronunciation killed you. Were you already a ghost before you saw this video, or did this video actually cause your death?
      Please don't answer if that is too personal a question. Hope you're doing well wherever you might be! 👻

    • @aftokratory
      @aftokratory Před rokem +8

      He pronounces it properly every other time on the video, the inaccurate pronunciation was done as a joke.

  • @rebeccaw.301
    @rebeccaw.301 Před 3 lety +2923

    The problem with crying in film is: you can tell if there are no tears. If you cry on stage, not even the first row will be able to tell if there are actual tears streaming down your face. However, in film you can always tell, bc the camera is obviously much closer to the face than an actual audience would be. So while fake crying on stage might work, it will look really artificial and fake in film. The solution to this is easy. JUST PRERECORD THE DAMN SONGS!

    • @chitoryu12
      @chitoryu12 Před 3 lety +30

      @Louis Kirkwood I'm fine with a sequel or prequel if it at least has decent damn singing.

    • @rebeccaw.301
      @rebeccaw.301 Před 3 lety +252

      Louis Kirkwood the thing is, recording it live does not have am single advantage. I get that the idea of a musical is to be seen live, but this is not the stage adaption. As someone who is quite familiar with the theater world: Things that work on stage usually don’t work out in film, and singing live is just one of those things. If you’re approaching a movie adaption the same way you’d approach a stage adaption you will fail. It’s a shitty experience for the actors, bc singing 10-12 h a day can damage your vocal chords immensely, wich is something that was described in this video over and over again. The actors can’t show their full potential, bc they have to hold back so they can do the next 20 takes just as well (wich just doesn’t work). Also just bc another director/producer would do it just as badly as what was done here, doesn’t make it any better. Overall this is just overcomplicating things with out having any positiv effects on the movie, the crew or the cast

    • @zicyzacbonanza
      @zicyzacbonanza Před 3 lety +156

      @Louis Kirkwood It isn't just that the actors had discomfort (which is bad) but that it didn't produce a better product but actually dragged it down. In theatre they make concessions to the performance for the sake of music by getting them to just stand in front of a microphone so it sounds better. In the film they made the opposite concession, making the music worse to get a movie performance with full crying and facial expressions and so on. The thing is if they had studio recording they could have had both. That's what is disappointing for me, that when the goal was "a transcendence to the traditional forms" it instead felt like it was bogged down and stuck in the mud somewhere in between those forms.

    • @cannibalisticrequiem
      @cannibalisticrequiem Před 3 lety +24

      @Louis Kirkwood lol no, it genuinely sucked.

    • @cannibalisticrequiem
      @cannibalisticrequiem Před 3 lety +30

      +Rebecca W. If the "fake crying is too obvious" thing were true, why does Samantha Barks prove that false?

  • @Nejvyn
    @Nejvyn Před 3 lety +752

    *Tom Hooper:* I need you to look sick for this musical!
    *Hugh Jackman:* Okay, I gonna make myself actually sick in a way that'll definitely impact my singing ability!
    *The whole make-up department:* ... Are we a joke to you?

    • @Ociloc
      @Ociloc Před 3 lety +22

      Also, how is being super buff sick?

    • @sarahturner4148
      @sarahturner4148 Před 3 lety +57

      @@Ociloc exactly! I wouldn't think he's sick if I saw him, however, I would be concerned he's not eating/drinking enough. To make actors have that extreme muscle definition, it's not just Hugh depriving himself of water. Most male actors do that for movies to look leaner and it's SO BAD. Being buff doesn't mean you have to have 0% body fat. That's majorly unhealthy. An example of someone being absolutely ripped but also having a healthy amount of body fat would be Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson, although he is an extreme example because he's so tall. But yeah. The guys in the movies look as shredded as they do because they're starving and dehydrating themselves and it's SO NOT GOOD. It's unrealistic body standards for dudes and is causing people to hurt themselves.

    • @zxp3ct3r41
      @zxp3ct3r41 Před 3 lety +2

      Music nerd rages for 38 minutes and 36 seconds because actors get paid millions to do their jobs

    • @internetexplorer6304
      @internetexplorer6304 Před 3 lety +11

      @@sarahturner4148 like you know how you can tell it's not healthy? They never maintain that physique. As soon as the shoot is over it's back to hotdogs and dad bod city baby.

    • @emagalociova
      @emagalociova Před 3 lety +7

      @@sarahturner4148 I mean, if they wanted to make Hugh look realistic as a convict of 20 years- malnourished all the time, then... They did a good job. The main problem here is that they put the acting performance before singing and it really shows

  • @wishingonthemoon1
    @wishingonthemoon1 Před rokem +65

    Annie’s acting performance is fab. I was so angry when I heard her, because her voice (or her vocal choices) was soooo rough-and I know she can sing!

  • @freshtomatoes2455
    @freshtomatoes2455 Před rokem +88

    okay let me just say, while Eddie’s singing surely sounds a lot better than the older characters in the show, his jaw is not supposed to shake like that whatsoever. it means that there is a lot of tension in his face and his vocal teacher just let that happen I guess

    • @AnachroSoft
      @AnachroSoft Před 3 měsíci +5

      Agreed. The jaw thing is what lazy people do to achieve "vibrato." They should be able to oscillate between two notes without needing to move their jaw at all.

  • @turbonerdo6838
    @turbonerdo6838 Před 3 lety +1921

    "I didn't tell Hugh to do it, he wanted to do this for himself"
    "Hooper told me he wanted me to look unrecognisable. He said if someone does recognise you, I want them to think you're physically ill."
    Hmmm. Someone's lying here. I wonder who has greater motive to lie about risking his employees health for no reason?

    • @laurencummings9560
      @laurencummings9560 Před 3 lety +121

      I don't think anyone's lying, I think they were just approaching it from different angles. The director probably wanted him to look unrecognizable through makeup and costume and acting. Hugh probably decided to make himself more unrecognizable by changing his body.

    • @MrDrewwills
      @MrDrewwills Před 3 lety +160

      @@laurencummings9560 I'm inclined to think Hooper lied. Simply because he's shown as egotistical in trying to completely remodel two beloved highly successful musicals. Maybe i'm creating non existent threads here, but it does seem far off from something he'd do.

    • @kassemir
      @kassemir Před 3 lety +64

      @@laurencummings9560 Well. At the end of the day, it's the director's job to direct the actors.
      So, I still say it would've been his responsibility at the end of the day.

    • @kassemir
      @kassemir Před 3 lety +116

      So. If Hooper isn't lying. He could've still told him not to do it. He is the director, and Jackman would've had to listen.
      So, no matter how you look at it, Hooper looks incredibly bad and incompetent as a director for allowing this to happen.

    • @CatHasOpinions734
      @CatHasOpinions734 Před 3 lety +66

      @@laurencummings9560 That's entirely possible, but honestly, even if he's not lying I don't know how much it matters. The fact that Hooper found out his lead in a musical was deliberately dehydrating himself, and he DIDN'T respond "I appreciate your dedication but that's a massive risk to your health, and also your livelihood because you're an actor and if you ruin your voice that'll be bad for your career, and even if I'm just being completely selfish it will also do terrible things to your singing, so PLEASE make sure you're drinking plenty of water" is bad enough.

  • @dalecummings3
    @dalecummings3 Před 3 lety +655

    HE DIDNT DRINK WATER FOR THREE DAYS PRIOR???

    • @hopeweiss9549
      @hopeweiss9549 Před 3 lety +74

      I started drinking water as soon as I heard that I used to bring my water bottle on stage during choir, like there's no way in hell I could sing without water

    • @crocuslament9680
      @crocuslament9680 Před 3 lety +57

      @@hopeweiss9549 I never brought mine on stage but my reaction to hearing that was just "This man tortured himself for this stupid movie." The thought of singing and trying to put emotion and feeling into it while that freaking dehydrated made me just stop functioning for a few seconds.

    • @rheanasmith9011
      @rheanasmith9011 Před 3 lety +6

      @@crocuslament9680 im not even in the choir and i was horrified to hear that cause my music department works with the choir

    • @TheZenytram
      @TheZenytram Před 3 lety +3

      I'm creepling thirst just by reading it here

    • @beccag2758
      @beccag2758 Před 3 lety +2

      They heck!? That’s plain unsafe!!!!

  • @tianahorsey-daydreamer8962
    @tianahorsey-daydreamer8962 Před 10 měsíci +119

    You know... It's funny. I actually loved the fact that she's actually crying. I felt like it actually punched for me. I do have it on my Spotify list because I love that there is real emotion there. I feel like I'm actually sitting with her as she cries and it really helped me immerse. That's just me though. 🤷

  • @moleperson
    @moleperson Před 4 měsíci +13

    I know you’re on a long term hiatus, but if you end up coming back, it could be super interesting to analyse the recent Mean Girls movie vs the musical. They did a lot of weird stuff with the music.
    Anyways, great video, this is like my 5th rewatch!

  • @breezingby2611
    @breezingby2611 Před 3 lety +2486

    I feel bad for Russell Crowe getting so much criticism when everyone else’s singing was also shit

    • @calebg451
      @calebg451 Před 2 lety +118

      I disagree with you. Not every one was bad. I love this film, but can't say the singing is bad in here. Samantha Barks has a perfect voice in here, and doesn't get enough credit for doing this film.

    • @stefannydvorak7919
      @stefannydvorak7919 Před 2 lety +63

      I think it’s because a lot of the cast already had actual Broadway(or musical or just stage acting or singing) experience.
      Hugh Jackman, Anne Hathaway, girl who plays Éponine, Asron Tveit.....

    • @Pelicanhorrorshow69420
      @Pelicanhorrorshow69420 Před 2 lety +51

      Yeah, just from hearing these clips, Jackman sounds so much worse than Crow, which is bad when you know he can sing amazingly outside of this.
      Like at least he sounds worst to me 😅

    • @redcardinalist
      @redcardinalist Před 2 lety +8

      so shit that millions of people loved this movie and it made huge amounts of money because yuo and the video creator apparantly know better than them..

    • @breezingby2611
      @breezingby2611 Před 2 lety +36

      @@redcardinalist funny how you neglected the millions of people who hated the infamously divisive movie

  • @wiffleblat
    @wiffleblat Před 3 lety +6323

    Luckily I was ignorant of how the movie should have been so I enjoyed it.

    • @gianinamorales8597
      @gianinamorales8597 Před 3 lety +267

      Same. But I enjoyed it for the sole fact of it being Les Miserables - book, movie, musical, I cry every time.

    • @aniruddhmutnuru294
      @aniruddhmutnuru294 Před 3 lety +131

      I watched the movie first and thought it was pretty bad and didn’t understand what the hype was about. Then I saw this vid and was like ☹️. Figured out why lol

    • @roxyhart3247
      @roxyhart3247 Před 3 lety +111

      Saw stage first then film and didn't think the film was that bad yes Hugh and Russell didn't sound great but if u pull any film apart like this your bound to find issues

    • @cheesecakelasagna
      @cheesecakelasagna Před 3 lety +23

      Big mood.
      Although I believed I had watched the Liam Neeson non-musical version first but to hell if I ever retained any from it.

    • @bradyweed4124
      @bradyweed4124 Před 3 lety +9

      Same, but now I’m doing a production of Les Mis and they didn’t do very well.

  • @elizabethheyn5365
    @elizabethheyn5365 Před rokem +33

    This is the film that introduced me to Les Mis. At the theater, I was impressed. When I listened to the recording after, I was appalled. I stand by all the Act II singers and I actually kinda liked Crowe.have forgiven most of those in Act I, except Jackman, because every time he sang it ruined the moment. I know it's probably mostly due to Tom Hooper, but man, did those to get me not to root for Jean Valjean.

  • @mattbabineau197
    @mattbabineau197 Před 4 měsíci +10

    19:20 not only is the melody really warped, but you can also hear the orchestra (the harp especially) STRUGGLE to keep Hathaway’s tempo.

  • @marymccann3500
    @marymccann3500 Před 3 lety +1653

    Sweet God, the story behind what happened to the actors is legitimately horrifying. They're lucky no one got badly hurt.

    • @blueshell292
      @blueshell292 Před 3 lety +48

      They’re lucky no one dropped fucking dead

  • @pridemoth_
    @pridemoth_ Před rokem +5040

    I feel like one underrated problem with recording the movie like this is like... I don't care how good of an actor you are, you CANNOT escape the inherent, crushing awkwardness of singing at another person passionately on a silent set. Like. In the theatre there are people in the audience, the orchestra is with you etc etc. I cannot imagine just singing in a vaccuum, that sounds like a horrible experience.

    • @nini-zu8cd
      @nini-zu8cd Před rokem +145

      thats not really a problem tbh, there are more awkward acting scenerios than that which is why it isn't really acknowledged thats literally the norm

    • @md-vq8sp
      @md-vq8sp Před rokem +61

      Im learning to get better at it and it feels 100x harder to do it without a backing track, I cant imagine how hard it was for them at least give them an ear piece.

    • @Justice237
      @Justice237 Před rokem +39

      I can’t remember if this is shown in the video but the actors had earpieces where they could hear the piano backing being played, so it wouldn’t have been singing in a vacuum to them, it’s in another BTS video

    • @md-vq8sp
      @md-vq8sp Před rokem +23

      @@Justice237 Piano is just one instrument and depending on what other instruments are playing you might have have to project more (ik they have throat mics and it's mixed in post, but you still don't get the same effect from just editing it louder) and you can still miss cues like the jobert scene.

    • @cassidycasimirisme
      @cassidycasimirisme Před rokem +18

      Lmfaoooo that was not uncommon in early rehearsals in high school drama. Ahh painful memories 😂😂😂.

  • @PragmaticProsecutor
    @PragmaticProsecutor Před rokem +15

    They apparently wanted to capture the energy of a live performance but doing take after take after take to get it perfect is so fundamentally against the philosophy of live musical theater? Like in a live performance either mistakes happen or they don't but you just have to keep rolling with the punches no matter what
    Like yeah you practice over and over again to get it as good as you possibly can but then at least everyone gets a full night's sleep before opening night, and then once the curtain rises there's no stopping or starting over

    • @uneasyanduncertain
      @uneasyanduncertain Před 4 měsíci

      a fellow edgeworth profile pic spotted in the wild, hello :D

  • @muggysubset3872
    @muggysubset3872 Před 5 měsíci +82

    Am I the only one who enjoys Anne Hathaways “I dreamed a dreamed”? The crying and gasping really sold it for me and the other performances just don’t have the same pain in the voice

    • @smileys462
      @smileys462 Před 4 měsíci +9

      That performance was the first time I ever cried during a movie (and the whole movie theater was crying with me). I will remember it forever and yes I *loved* her performance best. You're not alone, plenty of people do :) Now, I haven't seen this movie since it ...er...came out in 2012. Take with a grain of salt. But I remember not enjoying the rest of the movie as much and it took me a while to figure out why. I think it's because it was...too much? Too much gritty breathy sobbing back to back half-singing-half-talking with like, every single character? Personally, I don't think "acting over music" is always a bad thing but it also robs us of hearing how the actors actually CAN sing. Like, I remember wanting to see/hear at least *some* of that in the movie and being disappointed. Looking back it was ALL "acting over music". Course, given the insane conditions and circumstances of the film, I doubt it could have been anything else.

    • @BBodily
      @BBodily Před 4 měsíci +18

      It may not have served the music, but yes, it was an incredible performance. It's challenging for me to think of many/any performances that come close to what she did there.

    • @hannahhannah7002
      @hannahhannah7002 Před 4 měsíci +12

      I agree with you. What I think is a really big limitation of musicals is that sadness and dying and death has to be pretty. Like even in the examples shown here yes the music in the stage version sounds prettier but I think it loses the emotion and ugliness of pain

    • @ErikaCartet
      @ErikaCartet Před 4 měsíci +7

      yeah, i enjoyed it to and i think in that scenario it worked to put the acting before the vocal performance. a movie is a different medium than a stage production, and i think it would be harder to sell the scene if anne hathaway did prioritize signing it “pretty” rather than committing to the reality and context of the song. on a stage, that sense of reality is somewhat suspended, and i feel like that kind of emotional acting performance would seem too… grounded i guess? it wouldn’t serve the production in the same way a stellar (and still emotional in its own right) vocal performance would, and i think a stellar vocal performance at the expense of the powerful acting performance wouldn’t have necessarily served the film. of course, we’re talking about an incredibly raw scene, and i definitely don’t think EVERY performance should prioritize acting over vocals simply because it’s a film and not a stage production - i can understand how that approach applied throughout the entirety of the musical is going to hurt the adaptation rather than help it.
      the film was kind of my first exposure to the musical - maybe the fact that i had sung on my own in choir helped, but i had no trouble hearing that what fantine was singing in her dying moments returned at other points in the musical, and in seeing the clips he provided side-by-side, i do again think that the broken singing of a dying woman worked to sell the reality and emotion of the scene for film rather than the pretty vocal performance of stage. maybe there could have been a “better” balance of singing the melody versus selling the emotion and whole on-her-deathbed thing, but regardless i was able to hear the music enough to pick up on it. but again, i totally understand the other criticisms presented of adapting this musical to film, i just agree that i can give that particular decision a pass in those specific scenes. i don’t need it to be a vocal performance that i would listen to on spotify, as long as i can pick up on the music enough to recognize it later and i’m connecting with the weight of the character’s emotions being delivered in a particularly intense moment. if i were a bigger musical theater fan, i would probably have a different opinion, and if i were seeing that kind of performance on a stage versus in a film then i would also probably be of the opinion that it doesn’t work.

    • @muggysubset3872
      @muggysubset3872 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@ErikaCartet couldn’t have said it any better, like I had said in a previous comment I feel it’s unfair to compare the musical and the film seeing as they are 2 different forms of art and media. And yeah I agree at some spots the singing should’ve been more of the focus but all in all I saw it as a really good performance and it got me into musicals back in high school and I’ve never watched a better performance than Anne Hathaways, even in cinema it’s one of the hardest hitting scenes and it’s because she’s just absolutely broken but is singing such a beautiful and powerful song

  • @camdotcoms
    @camdotcoms Před 3 lety +2665

    it actually physically hurt me to hear him say les miserables in a full american accent

    • @1classikai
      @1classikai Před 3 lety +327

      Lezz Mizurabulls

    • @dharmabam
      @dharmabam Před 3 lety +135

      i assumed he was being funny. now i’m not so sure. hardly a great way to yknow. launch an authoritative statement. jesus h

    • @kirikakirikakirika
      @kirikakirikakirika Před 3 lety +62

      I think he was joking.

    • @liampatrick3110
      @liampatrick3110 Před 3 lety +3

      Boo hoo

    • @diegosalesfacundini4296
      @diegosalesfacundini4296 Před 3 lety +30

      To be fair even when English speaking people try saying it correctly it inevitably comes out with some accent

  • @delaneyheil9575
    @delaneyheil9575 Před 3 lety +1699

    Y'all be sleeping on one of Sideways' best lines:
    "There's this thing that vocalists do, that I absolutely hate, and it's when they're right."
    🤣🤣🤣

    • @infinitusfinitus
      @infinitusfinitus Před 3 lety +17

      What does that even mean?

    • @QuikVidGuy
      @QuikVidGuy Před 3 lety +138

      @@infinitusfinitus It means that they're good enough to pull off cry-singing, even though by crying they're risking a dozen moments of screwing over their own entire performance. It's like being able to race a VWBeetle. Yeah it takes a bunch of skill, props for doing it twice, but please don't make it your primary mode of performance

    • @jenniferchough
      @jenniferchough Před 3 lety +75

      @@QuikVidGuy - nah I think Sideways' comment is in reference to the not-so-subtle but friendly competitiveness between those who play instruments and those who sing. The orchestra conductor would always joke with us when we, the chorus, would join the orchestra for rehearsal and he'd say "Musicians!" but only in reference to the orchestra and he'd call the rest of us "singers" implying that singers were not actual musicians. It's a joke that continues with every generation.

    • @wholegrainbread3904
      @wholegrainbread3904 Před 3 lety +25

      Are we gonna ignore "and he's all like 'no, all lives matter! Nya!'"

    • @neckogecko5238
      @neckogecko5238 Před 3 lety +2

      as a vocalist, i agree. we suck.

  • @dummy_vicc2976
    @dummy_vicc2976 Před 8 měsíci +36

    the le mis 2012 perfection trio honestly wouldve made me realise i was bisexual if i had just a tiny bit more self-awareness

  • @PigeonGB
    @PigeonGB Před 10 měsíci +11

    Your stay away from CZcams is so tragic, I would literally auction parts of my soul off to hear your thoughts on the oppenheimer soundtrack

  • @patrickramseyart
    @patrickramseyart Před 3 lety +3162

    Eddie Redmayne is a wonderful singer. But it's clear that he's in no way a natural Tenor. More like a Baritone, maybe Bass-Baritone. But the key wasn't changed, and now everyone's made fun of him so much that, despite his music background, he's scared to do another musical. Poor guy.

    • @Mousy677
      @Mousy677 Před 3 lety +347

      marius... isn't even a tenor. he's a high baritone (i think his range is like... a2 to g or a4 which is entirely doable for a sufficiently high baritone - i'm a baritone and that's doable for me), but he's definitely a baritone. if eddie IS a baritone then he's definitely one who's scared of high notes but you see that A Lot with not hugely trained baritones.

    • @lee_1292
      @lee_1292 Před 3 lety +128

      Michael Ball is one of the most beloved Mariuses and he is a high baritone

    • @definitelyhooman7939
      @definitelyhooman7939 Před 3 lety +11

      Thank you! I was going to comment it, but you beat me to it.

    • @sungod1384
      @sungod1384 Před 3 lety +144

      yes truth. Its the same as Russel Crowe. Javert is a bass to seem menacing. Look at phillip quast performance. Those low notes cant be hit by a tired Crowe

    • @Mousy677
      @Mousy677 Před 3 lety +50

      @@sungod1384 yeah, crowe certainly kind of gets the low f in the confrontation but not with any sense of like. confidence or gravity. i get that javert isn't usually cast on the strength of his low range but at least make sure he CAN do it

  • @seaofbloodredroses9940
    @seaofbloodredroses9940 Před 3 lety +1479

    It's literally called "Les Misérables" and people don't know it's a FRENCH MUSICAL?!

    • @GuiSmith
      @GuiSmith Před 2 lety +55

      I wouldn’t be surprised if they think it’s set dressing or thematic, somehow

    • @sallys.2707
      @sallys.2707 Před 2 lety +12

      To be fair a certain amount of play from the XIX have a french title when they are not french at all X) especially American play.

    • @starsun6363
      @starsun6363 Před 2 lety +88

      I mean, I knew that it was in France. And based on the french novel. But I didn't know the musical itself was originally french. I just figured they pulled the title off the novel.

    • @mstie3252
      @mstie3252 Před 2 lety +6

      I have a recording of a Paris 1991 performance. It's wonderful! Eponine is great! czcams.com/video/t6NdYp8e920/video.html

    • @jgpenate
      @jgpenate Před 2 lety +26

      It’s a French book. Could have been an English language musical.

  • @narrowbeatle1176
    @narrowbeatle1176 Před 4 měsíci +8

    I’m not kidding when I say that that clip from “Stars” physically hurt me. I’m so used to hearing Philip Quast absolutely crushing the role of Javert that anything different is just… wrong. But that? Holy shit

  • @ishouldgetacoolname
    @ishouldgetacoolname Před 5 měsíci +12

    Samantha Barks absolutely blows this whole movie out of the waters. Absolutely amazing performance from a consummate professional.

  • @SoulSpectar
    @SoulSpectar Před 2 lety +5949

    "After 10 hours, they found their reserves. And they got it."
    Me, a former glockenspiel player:
    No, they hate-played and hit every note with exact, exhausted force.
    Those players likely entered a realm of discomfort we mere mortals can never understand.

    • @Goblinoiddoof
      @Goblinoiddoof Před 2 lety +353

      I salute to them and am also terrified of their wrath

    • @artemisfowldragon
      @artemisfowldragon Před 2 lety +348

      @@Goblinoiddoof string players have the anger to fight god and will win because they have the final reserves stamina to keep going when God's exhausted

    • @sephikong8323
      @sephikong8323 Před 2 lety +257

      @@artemisfowldragon The only people who can fight them off are the Organ players
      You simply cannot fight people insane enough to play the organ

    • @Ballin4Vengeance
      @Ballin4Vengeance Před 2 lety +103

      One example I could think of: Bob Bryar on This Is How I Disappear from MCR´s The Black Parade. After God-knows-how-many-takes you could hear on the final recording how he just wants to murder the drumkit.

    • @dragonfire72
      @dragonfire72 Před 2 lety +67

      Man, the corners of my lips would’ve been sore after *one* hour (I used to play trumpet) playing around the Middle C (ie *not as strenuous on your muscles*)

  • @BREADSWORD
    @BREADSWORD Před 3 lety +5576

    bro the water fasting part made my throat hurt so bad jesus chriiiiiiiiiiiiist

    • @davincent98
      @davincent98 Před 3 lety +110

      Shoot, I got a drink just hearing that part

    • @malikshakur1306
      @malikshakur1306 Před 3 lety +17

      Ay when’s your next vid dropping the last one was incredible

    • @QuikVidGuy
      @QuikVidGuy Před 3 lety +62

      if I don't drink a half gallon a day, my voice will just spontaneously go into sleep mode. Even my face just starts not sounding right and trying to find the scale is like trying to open a can of soda when my hand's asleep. I'm pretty sure I can no longer hit 6th octave notes because I was drinking too much vodka for a little while

    • @pamelamiller5341
      @pamelamiller5341 Před 3 lety +84

      Water fasting is so dangerous too! Not an acceptable weight loss method or a good way to make you "look sick" on camera. They have skilled make-up artists for that, and they can always CGI you skinnier.

    • @zachblair3794
      @zachblair3794 Před 3 lety +7

      Whoa didn’t expect breadsword here. Sick.

  • @user-hermesiscool
    @user-hermesiscool Před 3 měsíci +7

    My only issue with this video is how he says that Jackman didn’t drink water for 3 days, but 36 hours is a day and a half.

  • @wishingonthemoon1
    @wishingonthemoon1 Před rokem +17

    Yes to everything, and thank you for telling everyone that Russel Crowe IS A GOOD SINGER. You can hate his performance in Les Mis, but I enjoy his voice.

  • @notbrandoon
    @notbrandoon Před 3 lety +523

    “Be honest, this isn’t something you’re gonna put on your Spotify playlist.” *stares awkwardly at my Spotify playlist with a ton of songs from the soundtrack*

    • @OrabitsMadness
      @OrabitsMadness Před 3 lety +17

      Go get a modern cast recording now that you know the story. You want a good Hugh Jackman musical go look up Oklahoma.

    • @mayahoover9522
      @mayahoover9522 Před 3 lety +1

      me👁👄👁

    • @Doctor42
      @Doctor42 Před 3 lety +50

      i was thinking the same, i listened to the entire soundtrack while on the bus, or riding a bike 100 times. i like the film and the performances mainly because they are not perfect, they are not in tune, they are there on the set singing the reality. it's diferent from the normal way of doing film musicals.

    • @bluemage6495
      @bluemage6495 Před 3 lety +36

      @@Doctor42 Yeah, that's also the reason why I loved the movie/soundtrack. I love movie musicals but listening to this movie's songs hit me harder than most other musicals due to their "imperfections".
      I guess the reason I love this adaptation is exactly why people hate it which is kinda funny.

    • @JorenMathews
      @JorenMathews Před 3 lety +17

      Yeah I really love the movie version. Sure, it's not technically as well sung as the stage performance, but it's incredibly well acted and feels more real.

  • @awkwardboy
    @awkwardboy Před 3 lety +587

    Jackman's dehydration and Hathaway's weight loss reminds of what Laurence Olivier said to Dustin Hoffman when Hoffman told Olivier that he (Hoffman) was depriving himself of sleep for the filming of "Marathon Man" (1976) -- "Why not try acting? It's much easier."

    • @LittleLostMindBlower
      @LittleLostMindBlower Před 3 lety +76

      Yeah, actors shouldn't have to sacrifice their health for a performance. If anything they should make sure to be well rested, fed and hydtrated so that they can do their job to the best of their ability.

    • @henrikibsen6258
      @henrikibsen6258 Před 3 lety +14

      Anne is a good actress though, and not usually a method gal.

    • @LittleLostMindBlower
      @LittleLostMindBlower Před 3 lety +29

      @@henrikibsen6258 She is, but losing a lot of weight in a short amount of time is just incredibly dangerous. It's affects not only your physical health but also your mental health. This upsets me personally because I had an ED in the past and I know what it's like to be severely underweight. I can't condone anyone putting themselves in that kind of state on purpose, no matter how professional they are.

  • @AleeraKnight
    @AleeraKnight Před 8 měsíci +10

    Back again because this video IS comfort. See you soon Sideways!

  • @Justsegarra
    @Justsegarra Před měsícem +6

    Damn, it's almost as if theater and film are two different things. Who would've thought?

  • @eswan8900
    @eswan8900 Před 3 lety +1621

    I remember when I saw the Greatest Showman, I thought to myself: "Huh. Hugh Jackman sounds way better than in Les Mis." I guess now I know why. ;-;

    • @jbvader721
      @jbvader721 Před 3 lety +122

      I don't even like The Greatest Showman for a bunch of reasons. However, I will wholeheartedly agree.

    • @cijmo
      @cijmo Před 3 lety +97

      He totally redeemed himself in Greatest Showman. (Mostly "From Now On") I mean, autotune and such but my friend saw The Man, The Show live and she said he was great. So he was obviously just not meant for Les Mis.

    • @northernlights9814
      @northernlights9814 Před 3 lety +11

      He was meant to be 'rawer', grittier here than in The Greatest Showman and this music was recorded directly as performed which I don't think The Greatest Showman was so you can't really compare the two.

    • @fairyflight8436
      @fairyflight8436 Před 3 lety +53

      @@northernlights9814 but as Sidways pionts out in the video (35:55 is when the part starts), all of the actors were able to do better performances hydrated. Jackman did a better performance outside in the cold rather than what got put in the film.

    • @northernlights9814
      @northernlights9814 Před 3 lety +5

      @@fairyflight8436 I saw that in the video, but I always presume the end product is the choice of the Director of the movie, be it 'artistic' choice or his preferred 'take'. This Director had so much experience from making movies and tv-series that he would not overlook a better 'take'. He made his choice, his preferrance, and we can like it or not.

  • @ravelqueen
    @ravelqueen Před 3 lety +1618

    The fact that Hooper - through his approach - is basically insulting every musical stage performer (musical OR opera) by implying that because they rehearse their singing and then perform the music as it's supposed to be that their performances are less authentic

    • @lokiawriter8077
      @lokiawriter8077 Před 3 lety +157

      What drives me insane is that people have literally said that to me; that stage performances are not as “real” because it sounds too good. I hate hearing it so much and so many of my friends have said it to me.

    • @richardbourton4523
      @richardbourton4523 Před 3 lety +121

      It's such a weird take, because by the nature of a musical, if you're sacrificing the music for the acting, then that's not a good performance, it's an inherently bad one? That IS the performance. Why did they even want to make a musical? They could have just adapted the book with their all star cast, and nothing would have to suffer? I get that they made Cats afterwards ppbecause this film did well, but as a first step, why make a musical if you're not comfortable with how the singing somehow 'compromises the acting performance'?

    • @ravelqueen
      @ravelqueen Před 3 lety +67

      @@lokiawriter8077 omg that's the *worst* wth?? Of Course stage performers endeavour to sound as perfect as possible - that's what makes them *professionals* that are performing their *job*?? I think the fact that so many people consider 'singing as a hobby' and 'singing as a profession' as pretty much the same really makes this sort of attitude worse and worse. Especially with the amount of TV singing competitions they really don't understand that musical/opera work from a very different technical standpoint
      (flashback to every time I told people I'm doing professional singing lessons and getting a shrug, but then receiving an 'ohh so impressive' for me also doing Cello - despite my cello skills being like... actual literal miles worse than my singing)..

    • @ravelqueen
      @ravelqueen Před 3 lety +12

      @@richardbourton4523 I assume it's because nobody really knows the book, so the "money" was considered to be in the musical, but yeah they probably could have come out with a better product considering

    • @Anon-qp3kt
      @Anon-qp3kt Před 3 lety +35

      People worked hard to hone their craft for years upon years only for some two-bit hack say a performance shouldn't be perfect. Wtf?

  • @AllardRT
    @AllardRT Před rokem +11

    "Let's record all the singing live on set" is the kind of idea that sounds bold and interesting for about... three seconds before you actually start thinking about it. And then you realize that at best you'll get the same results as the studio recording, but way more expensive, and at worst you'll jeopardize the entire production. And all for what, for being able to brag about recording it live in the commentary track? Bleh.

    • @ChillDfect
      @ChillDfect Před 17 dny

      Fitzcarraldo comes to mind. "Let's actually drag a real ship over a real mountain, in the heart of a real rainforest!" 😂

  • @musicbyreign
    @musicbyreign Před rokem +9

    The way I gasped when he said he didn’t drink water for 36 hours

  • @suckit1335
    @suckit1335 Před 3 lety +2721

    👏Stop👏giving👏Tom👏Hooper👏musicals👏
    *(Unless it’s Cat’s 2: The Search for More Money)*

  • @loopsinty7758
    @loopsinty7758 Před 2 lety +1708

    “No one forced him to do it it was amazing”
    3 seconds later
    “Hooper made me do it”

    • @PeriwinklePangolin24
      @PeriwinklePangolin24 Před rokem +190

      YEAH. I was kind of thinking he would speculate on that a little bit, maybe he didn't think it right to. But I'm going to. I find it really suspicious that he kept acting like all these actors just really wanted to put themselves through absolute agony, but it still slips out that he told them to be "Unrecognizable". Like, to me that implies that Hooper is legit just lying.

    • @MrsBlack88
      @MrsBlack88 Před rokem +48

      The deranged laugh that came out of me 😭😭 poor Mr Jackman

    • @aurora5481
      @aurora5481 Před rokem +79

      ​@@PeriwinklePangolin24 Hooper does 100% give off the vibe of a director who just tells an actor to lose a fourth of their body weight by next week and presumes they just go home and press a button and it's done, and the starving and self-harm needed to fulfill a request like that is just ✨inspirational method acting✨

    • @benszekely4336
      @benszekely4336 Před rokem +4

      hooper made me "DO IT"

    • @Dancestar1981
      @Dancestar1981 Před rokem

      @@aurora5481 that’s just abuse

  • @sammco6704
    @sammco6704 Před 3 měsíci +6

    We miss you Sideways

  • @finasol1019
    @finasol1019 Před rokem +11

    For all the "emotional" performances in the movie, it's the 25th anniversary version that made me cry. I think the movie is fine as a movie, I appreciate that it makes a theater show more accessible to the general public, but it's just like an alright movie. The 25th anniversary version truly moved me. Lea Salonga made me cry when Anne Hathaway didn't, and I think it's because Lea Salonga mixes a beautiful voice with tragedy.