Empire (UK)

THE PROM

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★★★ OUT NOW (CINEMAS/NETFLIX) CERT 12 / 132 MINUTES

DIRECTOR Ryan Murphy

STARRING Meryl Streep, James Corden, Jo Ellen Pellman, Ariana Debose, Nicole Kidman, Andrew Rannells, Keegan-michael Key, Kerry Washington

PLOT Lesbian high-schooler Emma (Pellman) plans to attend her prom with a girl, so the head of the PTA shuts it down. Enter failing Broadway stars Dee Dee (Streep) and Barry (Corden) in search of positive publicity…

IN RECENT YEARS, there’s been a spate of musicals that you’ll enjoy ‘even if you don’t like musicals’, like Hamilton with its astonishin­g word-wizardry, or the retro-cool La La Land. The Prom is no such musical. It is intensely, unabashedl­y, razzlingly, dazzlingly Broadway, a musical for people who love musicals, in which many of the songs are about musicals. Anyone allergic to such things need not apply.

For everyone else, Ryan Murphy’s first feature as director since Eat Pray Love offers an eye-poppingly vibrant finale to a grim year. The Prom — with its ultra-stylish glossy aesthetic, penchant for high kitsch, legendary actresses chewing the scenery, and centring of LGBTQ+ narratives — ticks multiple boxes of the Murphy oeuvre. Every scene sparkles, each surface shimmers, and block-colours dominate the frame.

Leading the way is a starry showbiz cast gleefully playing a bunch of narcissist­ic luvvies. Meryl Streep and James Corden are Dee Dee Allen and Barry Glickman, whose new Eleanor Roosevelt musical lands dire reviews (“What did they not like? Was it the hip-hop?” asks Barry in a Hamilton dig). In response, they plot with fellow thespians Angie Dickinson (Nicole Kidman) and Trent Oliver (Andrew Rannells) to become celebrity activists and earn some positive press, travelling to Edgewater, Indiana, to help openly gay student Emma (Jo Ellen Pellman), whose desire to attend her prom as part of a same-sex couple has sparked uproar from the local community. “We’re gonna help that little lesbian, whether she likes it or not!” sings Glickman.

It’s clear all involved are having a blast. Streep in particular camps it up something royal as the deluded Dee Dee, while Kidman quite literally struts into frame in a bright-green sequinned gown for her grand entrance. Corden playing effeminate camp might wrinkle some noses, but Barry is a relentless­ly entertaini­ng character, firing out non-stop zingers.

This, though, is Emma’s story, and she gets lost in the mix. Newcomer Jo Ellen Pellman is charming, but the character feels thin, the script hinting at horrifying hardships she’s endured without creating space to explore them. In fact, a lack of depth is The Prom’s biggest issue — after a riotous Act One, the second half becomes baggy and unfocused, and the depiction of the town’s intolerant values feels overly simplistic. Ultimately, The Prom is better at satiricall­y skewering Broadway than it is at seriously skewering homophobia, which feels like a missed opportunit­y.

Still, you’ll root for Emma to end up with Alyssa (Ariana Debose) come the rousing finale, which visualises the more diverse and inclusive world we could all be living in if bigotry didn’t rear its ugly head. Ultimately, that’s Murphy’s entire raison d’être as a creator — and, as ever, he delivers it in one hell of a show. Not quite a standing ovation, but a big bravo.

VERDICT

The Prom is a loud, proud glitterbal­l of a film, and doesn’t pretend to be anything else. It stumbles in the second half and the relentless cheer is a little exhausting, but its energy and wit remain infectious.

 ??  ?? The cast hadn’t quite mastered the art of doing jazz-hands.
The cast hadn’t quite mastered the art of doing jazz-hands.

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