The Signal

‘Showman’s greatest oddity is its lack of story

- Brian Truitt

The soundtrack for the P.T Barnum biopic musical The Greatest Showman is chock-full of amazing and catchy tunes you’ll be humming after the credits roll. The movie? Send in the clowns. Michael Gracey’s directoria­l debut

rated PG; in theaters Wednesday) is a disappoint­ing circus of thinly developed characters, overly earnest melodrama and song-anddance sequences that are more like unrelated music videos sewn together for a threadbare narrative. Hugh Jackman’s the ringmaster of this disjointed affair, though it’s not entirely his fault Barnum’s the least interestin­g part of his own movie.

What should have been an empowering film about outsiders and oddities finding their way in the world — and it’s there in frustratin­g bits and pieces — instead is a messy, misbegotte­n venture of a working-class man struggling to become a show-business icon.

But, hey, at least it sounds really good — the array of original tunes comes courtesy of Oscar-winning La

La Land songwriter­s Benj Pasek and Justin Paul. And when casting a dude to play the infamous 19th-century purveyor of show business, you could do worse than Jackman.

His Barnum is a goodhearte­d sort who’s tried hard to improve his lot throughout life. His understand­ing spouse, Charity (Michelle Williams), tries to lend perspectiv­e to her husband: “You don’t need everyone to love you. Just a few good people.”

It takes a while for P.T. to get the message. He uses some cagey shenanigan­s to get the money needed to create his museum of oddities, which becomes a needed home for bearded lady Lettie Lutz (Keala Settle), trapeze artist Anne Wheeler (Zendaya) and other outcasts. Barnum becomes a hit among the New York upper class, and he loses focus on both of his families thanks to a tempting chanteuse (Rebecca Ferguson) and a bigger brass ring.

However, all that important character-building stuff is simply filler to get to the next musical set piece.

What works in a three-hour Broadway show, where sung feelings and interactio­ns do wonders for character developmen­t, doesn’t quite do the trick in this 105-minute movie: A growing affection between Anne and Barnum’s partner, Phillip Carlyle (Zac Efron), takes off in the high-flying acrobatic sequence set to the electrifyi­ng duet Rewrite the Stars, though we’re left to wonder, outside of a few flirtatiou­s glances, why these two lovebirds actually dig one another so much.

Phillip tells off his rich parents for talking down to Anne, either because she’s low-class circus folk or the fact she’s black (or both), and it’s a frustratin­g example of what this movie could have been: an inspiratio­nal project about the likes of the Tattooed Man, Dog Boy and others coming together despite societal rejection. Lettie leads them in the crashing of a posh party (and Settle also tears the house down in the powerhouse anthem This

Is Me), but Barnum shuts down their quasi-social revolution — symbolic of the musical’s issues overall.

No doubt those will be forgotten in favor of the film’s family-friendly nature and hooky songs, though dazzling show tunes like these deserve better than a failed Showman.

 ?? NIKO TAVERNISE ?? P.T. Barnum (Hugh Jackman) leads a circus of characters.
NIKO TAVERNISE P.T. Barnum (Hugh Jackman) leads a circus of characters.
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