Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Lindsay Lohan to be charged with necklace theft

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Barbra Streisand to sing on Grammy stage

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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Critics take merciless swat at musical "Spider-Man"

NEW YORK | Tue Feb 8, 2011 12:54pm EST

NEW YORK (Reuters) - It's been delayed five times, suffered multiple cast injuries and been the butt of jokes. Now Broadway's most expensive show ever, "Spider-Man," has been reviewed by the critics, and universally panned.

Critics had respected tradition by holding back from reviewing the beleaguered $65 million musical, "Spider-Man: Turn off the Dark," because it was still in previews and not scheduled for a formal opening until March 15.

But with the true opening night uncertain and producers charging as much as $277 for a seat, critics decided to wait no longer and on Tuesday reviewed the show in an apparent contest to see who could denigrate it the most.

The unprecedented and spectacular aerial stunts that account for much of the costs failed to save an incomprehensible storyline, flat and cartoonish sets and songs that failed to please, critics said.

The New York Times concluded that the musical was "so grievously broken that it is beyond repair."

"The sheer ineptitude of this show, inspired by the Spider-Man comic books, loses its shock value early. After 15 or 20 minutes, the central question you keep asking is likely to change from 'How can $65 million look so cheap?' to 'How long before I'm out of here?'" Times critic Ben Brantley said.

Under the headline "It soars & bores," the New York Post said the flying was "impressive" but the musical was "erratic" with breathtaking scenes followed by laughable ones.

The Washington Post relegated the two-hour-and-50-minute show to the "dankest subbasement of the American musical theater."

"If you're going to spend $65 million and not end up with the best musical of all time, I suppose there's a perverse distinction in being one of the worst," Washington Post reviewer Peter Marks said.

The New York Daily News labeled the show "Dead on Arrival."

"What I saw is a big production going in too many directions and in need of a lot of work to make it entertaining, satisfying and understandable," wrote Joe Dziemianowicz of the Daily News.

Despite bad publicity surrounding the cost, delays and four injuries to its cast and crew, the show has still been performing well at the box office, even taking the top place in some weeks. Audience members who have seen the show have said they are fans of the franchise and don't care about the buzz.



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"Spider-Man" trapped in web of monumental folly

Tue Feb 8, 2011 9:15am EST

NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - As the dominant parent of the problem child "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark," Julie Taymor does herself no favors by including a program note about a mythological creature brought down by hubris.

In an ungainly mess of a show that smacks of out-of-control auteurial arrogance, the parallel speaks for itself.

Official opening is not until March 15, but following repeat postponements and what feels like 30 years of previews, The Hollywood Reporter is observing the previously scheduled opening of February 7 with this review. The capitalization hiccups, cast reshuffles, technical glitches and series of injuries have been too exhaustively chronicled to require a recap here. But the big shock when sitting down finally to assess this $65 million web-slinging folly, is what a monumental anticlimax it turns out to be.

Sure, there's still five pre-opening weeks to keep tinkering, but the point at which any savvy producer would have sent for script doctors is long past. While much has been said about the decision to begin performances without an ending in place, this "rock circus drama" has no beginning or middle either.

There's one thrillingly beautiful image about ten minutes in -- during a song appropriately titled "Behold and Wonder" -- as aerialists suspended from saffron-colored sashes weave an undulating fabric wall that fills the stage. And the impressive speed and agility of the flying sequences is a major leap forward in action terms from the slow glide of Mary Poppins.

But mostly, "Spider-Man" is chaotic, dull and a little silly. And there's nothing here half as catchy as the 1967 ABC cartoon theme tune.

The absence of the word "musical" from Taymor's definition of the show seems key. The songs by Bono and The Edge display minimal grasp of music's function in goosing narrative or illuminating character. And despite all the wailing-guitar attitude, they only squeak by as atmospheric enhancement. Aside from one or two stirring anthems in familiar messianic U2 mode, this is strictly album filler, with echoes of everyone from T. Rex to Alice Cooper, plus an occasional nod to The Who's Tommy. The lyrics -- when you can decipher them -- are either too vague or too literal.

But an underwhelming score is the least of the show's worries. What really sinks it is the borderline incoherence of its storytelling.

Diehard fans of the Marvel Comics classic or Sam Raimi's big-screen iterations are likely to be irked by the dismissive handling of the origin story in Taymor and co-writer Glen Berger's book.

Establishing scenes with Peter Parker (Reeve Carney) and Mary Jane (Jennifer Damiano), the death of Uncle Ben (Ken Marks), the entomological experimentation of mad scientist Norman Osborn (Patrick Page), Peter's radioactive spider bite and Osborn's transformation into the Green Goblin are all dealt with almost perfunctorily.

You sense Taymor's impatience with this nuts-and-bolts stuff as she keeps digressing to check in on a useless "Geek Chorus" of comic-strip fanatics. Their debates over the direction the action should take succeed only in bringing it to a halt.

The director's strength has always been creating stage pictures and visual coups, not developing characters or story, so it's perhaps no surprise that everything between Spidey's first flight and his overhead Green Goblin battle is a shapeless blur.

But it's in the second act that internal logic disintegrates. That's when Taymor's interpolation from Ovid steps out of the shadows. A mortal who took on the Goddess Athena in a weave-off and won, Arachne (T.V. Carpio) was transformed into a spider. Exiled to the astral plane, she eyes Peter as the man-candy to end her loneliness.

Arachne launches her initial attack via an illusory band of supervillains dubbed the Sinister Six, whose "Ugly Pageant" is among the show's more superfluous set-pieces. Their clashes with Spider-Man also expose the limited applications of stage ingenuity to this type of action, relying on filmed inserts that look like generic video-game samples.

The show really jumps the shark, however, in a number titled "Deeply Furious," in which Arachne and her Furies go shoe-shopping before entering the human world. Seriously. The much-ballyhooed climactic face-off between Spidey and Arachne is now in place, but the diminishing returns of the airborne sequences rob the ending of excitement.



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