Sunday, September 29, 2019

Judy - Review

 Judy

Academy Award winner Renée Zellweger (Cold Mountain) takes on the role of a 20th century iconic in singer Judy Garland thirty years after her starring making role as “Dorothy” in "The Wizard of Oz,".

Both a beloved actress and singer the film’s story picks up in the winter of 1968 as Judy Garland arrives in London to perform five weeks of sold-out shows at the Talk of the Town nightclub. And while her voice has weakened, its dramatic intensity has only grown. The film shows as she prepares for the show her battles with management, her interaction and charms with musicians and her reminiscing with friends and adoring fans though the backdrop of her intelligent wit and personal warmth. London also was a time of a whirlwind romance with Mickey Deans, her soon-to-be fifth husband.

Featuring some of her best-known songs, the film “Judy” celebrates the voice, her capacity for love, and the sheer pizzazz of one of the world's greatest vocal entertainers ever.

REVIEW: “Judy” is based on Peter Quilter's play “End of the Rainbow,” which had a well-received Broadway run in 2012 and it feels like a theatrical play too. After watching the film I can only imagine how  the play was probably way more effective to portraying such a complicated person and equally complicated life as the film and the person Judy Garland is a rare blended examination of a person’s triumphs, her despairs, her loves and her agonizing sadness. So with so much to tell and to be able to tell it exactly right, it was a bit of a surprise for me and to see Renée Zellweger chosen for the role. And while she was nominated for an Oscar in the Best Picture Winner Chicago for her singing and acting there, in a rare TV interview she acknowledges her own surprise for being approached as a clear nonprofessional singer for this role.

Make no mistake about for me Zellweger is a highly accomplished actress, but it seemed to be more than just a passing challenge for anyone to seriously consider take on such a daunting and powerful singing voice that was filled with rare vibrancy, soaring range, depth and emotional color - color like a rainbow. So with that in mind Renee captures exceptionally well at being an effective interpreter of Garland songs. If you see the film and then Youtube Garland there is an uncanny resemblance to her............when she is speaking. Its the times she is singing her famous songs that you hear her struggle a bit, especially when it was the musical timing, the musical lyrics, the vocalizing of notes in trying to capture that rare unique sound which made Garland a unique and talented presence encapsulated in such a tiny  5’1” barely  100 pounds frame.

There is a lot of buzz talk about Zellweger getting a Best Actress nomination for her role here. On numerous occasions it was eerie to see what look like Garland reincarnated on the screen as Zellweger looked, sounded like Garland; even capturing her unusual personal ticks and stage performance gesticulations she was known for, but I would hardly say its top five Oscar worthy. Zellweger has all of the technical perfection of her character down pat, but it sometime falls a bit off in capturing the emotional truth of who Garland actually was. The real Judy Garland was a hot mess but even at her worse moment she was a mesmerizing authentically talented hot mess and that is hard to replicate no matter the level of the trained talent. When Judy sang she did not just sing the lyrics to a melody, she was  totally committed to the life of every single note in a song. She lived her songs. She was a phenomenal talent.

On a side note,  I researched to see how many non-singers have won Oscars for actually singing and or portraying singers. Sissy Spacek “Coal Miner’s Daughter” and Jeff Bridges “Crazy Heart”.  Jaime Foxx and Rami Malek played famous singers. And some pop singers have won Oscars for singing and or not ranging Barbra Streisand, Cher and Jennifer Hudson. In other words, it would not surprise me the film and Zellweger both getting nominated with Renee winning as Best Actress. It appears Hollywood loves singing stories no matter who is doing it..

Judy” is a full two hours fascinating story, especially the parts of her early years where you see Louis B Mayer the co-founder of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios who discovered Judy. His emotional abuse of Garland by today standards would be criminal and it was his actions that sowed the seeds of Judy's heavy use of barbiturates, sleeping pills, alcohol and other prescribed drugs that resulted in her death at the young age of 47.

I was a bit emotionally worn out after watching this film as you can see Garland was a decent woman and a loving mother who had the misfortune of an endless array of men in her life always taking advantage of her acting literately as leaches. Just wearing her down to an exhausted death. But in the end and on balance, I found “Judy” lovingly enough, nuanced enough, emotional enough and dark enough of a showcase for one of Hollywood’s most beloved stars whose life had too few joys and way too many lows.

3.25 Stars

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