The spirit of Motown runs through the long-awaited film adaption
of the Broadway musical Dreamgirls, which centers around a young
female singing trio who burst upon the music scene in the '60s,
complete with bouffant hairdos, glitzy gowns, and a soul sound
new to the white-bread American music charts. Sound familiar? You
aren't the first one to draw comparisons to the meteoric rise of
the Supremes, and despite any protests to the contrary, this is
most definitely a thinly veiled reinterpretation of that success
story. The Dreamettes--statuesque Deena (Beyonce Knowles), daffy
Lorell (Anika Noni Rose) and brassy Effie (Jennifer Hudson)--are
a girl group making the talent-show rounds when they're
discovered by car salesman and aspiring music manager Curtis
Taylor Jr. (Jamie Foxx). Sensing greatness (as well as a new
marketing rtunity) Curtis signs the Dreamettes as backup
singers for R&B star James "Thunder" Early (Eddie Murphy). But
when Early's mercurial ways and singing style don't mesh with
primarily white audiences, Curtis moves the newly-renamed Dreams
to center stage--with Deena as lead singer in place of Effie. And
that's not the only arena in which Effie is replaced, as Curtis
abandons their love affair for a relationship with
star-in-the-making Deena.
Besides the Supremes comparison, one can't talk about Dreamgirls
now without revisiting its notorious O snub; though it
received eight nominations, the most for any film from 2006, it
was shut out of the Best Picture and Director races entirely. Was
the over justified? While Dreamgirls is certainly a
handsomely ed, lovingly executed and often vibrant film
adaptation, it inspires more respect than passion, only getting
under your skin during the musical numbers, which become more
sporadic as the film goes on. Writer-director Bill Condon is
definitely focused on recreating the Motown milieu (down to
uncanny photographs of Knowles in full Diana Ross mode), he often
forgets to out his characters, who even on the Broadway
stage were underwritten and relied on powerhouse performances to
sell them to audiences. (Stage fans will also note that numerous
songs are either truncated or dropped entirely from the film.)
Condon has assembled a game cast, as Knowles does a canny riff on
the essence of Diana Ross' glamour (as sed to an all-out
impersonation) and Rose makes a peripheral character surprisingly
vibrant; only Foxx, who never gets to pour on the charisma, is
miscast. Still, there are two things even the most cranky viewers
will warm to in Dreamgirls: the performances of veteran Eddie
Murphy and newcomer Jennifer Hudson. Murphy is all sly charm and
dazzling energy as the devilish Early, who's part James Brown,
part Little Richard, and all showman. And Hudson, an American
Idol contestant who didn't even make the top three, makes an
impressive debut as the larger-than-life Effie, whose voice
matches her passions and stubbornness. Though she sometimes may
seem too young for the role, Hudson nails the movie's signature
song, "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going," with a breathtaking
power that must be seen and heard to believe. And for those five
minutes, if not more, you will be in Dreamgirls' thrall. --Mark
Englehart
- Condition: New.
- Format: DVD.
- AC-3; Color; Dolby; Dubbed; DVD; Subtitled; Widescreen; NTSC.