Total Film

Into The Woods

Staying true to its roots…

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Debuting on Broadway in 1987 and revived many times since, Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine’s multi-award-winning musical Into The Woods has shuffled its feet in the Hollywood wings many times over without ever making it to screen. Now, a mere 27 years later, their deliciousl­y dark concoction gets the full Disney treatment. But not in the way cynics predicted, because Chicago director Rob Marshall and screenwrit­er Lapine have stayed true to the oft-eerie tone and adult themes.

In a far-off kingdom, a wicked witch (Meryl Streep) has cursed a baker ( James Corden) and his wife (Emily Blunt) to be without child, but offers to reverse the curse if they journey into the woods to fetch “the cow as white as milk, the cape as red as blood, the hair as yellow as corn, the slipper as pure as gold.” And so we’re treated to, paraphrasi­ng Marshall, the Avengers of fairytales, which features a beanstalk-scaling Jack (Daniel Huttleston­e), Red Riding Hood (Lilla Crawford), Rapunzel (Mackenzie Mauzy) and Cinderella (Anna Kendrick) squabbling in song as their fates cross.

While Marshall’s claim that darkness shot through with courage makes Into The Woods “a fairtytale for the post-9/11 generation” is rather grand, there’s plenty here to admire. Shot by Oscar-winning DoP Dion Beebe, the moonlit woods retain a theatrical quality while opening things out; the lyrical complexity of Sondheim’s songs is preserved; the use of CGI is judicious, especially when granting glimpses of giants far more effective than Bryan Singer’s in Jack The Giant Slayer; and a sombre third act journeys beyond the ‘happily ever after’ when it might easily have been axed to appease anxious parents.

Performanc­es, too, are largely on song, with Streep digging to find pain in the pantomime, Blunt licking her comic chops and Chris Pine attacking his puffed-up Prince with appropriat­e gusto (“I was raised to be charming, not sincere”). And Corden? His heart and humour hint at why he won a Tony for One Man, Two Guvnors – another couple of turns like this and we might forgive Lesbian Vampire Killers.

Streep’s rendition of ‘Stay With Me’ aside, however, Marshall’s film never quite hits the emotional notes it’s reaching for, and anyone praying for Johnny Depp to put away his make-up box will groan at his bushy-browed cameo as the Big Bad Wolf.

THE VERDICT Family entertainm­ent with death, limb-lopping and other horrors. If you go Into The Woods today, you’ll be surprised how faithful this is to the dark stage musical. › Certificat­e PG Director Rob Marshall Starring Meryl Streep, Emily Blunt, James Corden, Anna Kendrick, Chris Pine Screenplay James Lapine Distributo­r Disney Running time 125 mins

‘The woods retain atheatrica­lquality and the use of CGI is judicious’

 ??  ?? “You’re not supposed to pick wild flowers, you know.”
“You’re not supposed to pick wild flowers, you know.”

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