Film Review
Like a certain oddly textured yeast-derived product that you may
choose to spread on your toast, Robert Wise's 1965 film
The Sound of Music is a thing that
you either love or hate, and with the kind of passion that has been
known to cause wars. In the old dark days before VHS and DVD were
invented, those who loved the film would rather have had their
grandmother and children turned into mincemeat than miss the annual
television screening of the film. And those who hate it most and
ridicule it most fervently tend, by and large, never to have never
watched it, although they once heard someone in the pub rubbish it -
such is the wisdom of opinionated ignorance.
Certainly,
The Sound of Music
has come in for some pretty harsh criticism, on account of its
sugar-coated sentimentality, its über-idealised portrait of family
life and Christopher Plummer's inability to carry a guitar, let alone a
tune, but none of this has prevented it from becoming one of the
best-loved and most enduring musicals of all time. Despite some
very unfavourable reviews when it was first released, the film proved
to be one of the most successful film musicals ever. It was
nominated for ten Oscars and had wins in five categories: Best Picture,
Best Director, Best Music, Best Editing and Best Sound. Forty
years on, it continues to be a film with an enormous appeal.
As with many Hollywood musicals,
The
Sound of Music started out as a stage production of the same
name. Opening on Broadway in 1959, this stage version was the
last work to come out of the legendary partnership of composer Richard
Rodgers and lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II. The musical was
based on a book by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, which was inspired
by the memoirs of Maria von Trapp. Most of the musical numbers of
the original stage production found their way into the film and have
passed into popular culture, becoming familiar to just about everyone
in the English-speaking world. These include enduring
favourites such as
My Favorite
Things,
Do-Re-Mi,
Edelweiss,
Climb Ev'ry Mountain, as well as
the haunting title song. Julie Andrews stars in her most
memorable role, that of the sugar candy governess Maria, a part that
makes good use of her talent as both an actress and a singer but one
that that would blight her future career.
The Sound of Music is often
criticised for its sentimentality and, admittedly, it does get very
syrupy in its first half. It portrays a perfect world in which
children are transformed from little monsters into angels by the drop
of Julie Andrews's hat. It is a fairytale in which a lonely
middle-aged sea captain and a young governess fall in love, get married
and, so we are led to believe, live happily ever after. It is
quite a shock when, in the third act, the mood of the film suddenly
darkens and it looks as if the entire Von Trapp family are destined to
end up with a one-way ticket to Auschwitz. Of course it all ends
happily (this is, after all, family-friendly escapism, not a slasher
movie), but just for an agonising ten minutes or so you do wonder where
the film is heading and whether we might be in for a horrible surprise.
The jury is still out as to whether
The
Sound of Music deserves to be labelled a masterpiece, but no one
doubts that it is a classic, a film that you can watch again and again
and derive pleasure from. It is also a film with a very broad
appeal, catering for all age groups and most tastes - it is a comedy, a
musical, a romance, a war film and, if you like, an idiot's guide on
how to bring up children properly (use the guitar, not the
whistle). Yes, the plot is horribly contrived and there's enough
industrial strength saccharine to sweeten the daily cuppa of everyone
in England for at least three hundred years. But the charm of the
film is such that its failings are easily overlooked, if not entirely
forgiven. It offers you everything you could want in a Hollywood
musical. Sumptuous photography, stunning art design, infectious
music and Julie Andrews at her most radiant as every boy's dream
nanny. Is it really so shameful to admit that you enjoyed
watching
The Sound of Music?
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Robert Wise film:
The Andromeda Strain (1971)
Film Synopsis
Salzburg, Austria, in the late 1930s. Maria is an idealistic
young woman whose only goal in life is to become a nun.
Unfortunately, the sisters at the convent where she is preparing to
take her vows are unsure whether she is suited for this life and so she
is sent away for a period of reflection. She is employed as
governess to the seven children of Baron von Trapp, a widow and former
captain in the Austrian navy. Maria is appalled by the way in
which Von Trapp disciplines his children, treating them like
low-ranking sailors on his ship. Von Trapp, likewise, is
unimpressed when Maria encourages the children to sing and play.
In time, however, Maria and her employer grow to like one
another. When she learns that Von Trapp is going to marry a
wealthy baroness, Maria realises that she is in love with him and
hastily steals back to the convent. The mother abbess persuades
Maria that she must return to the Von Trapp household and face whatever
her destiny has in store for her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.