Home  |  About Us  |  Contacts  |  Products    
 News Items:
 Headlines
 News Briefs
 Stories
 Movies
 Word To Life
 More News:
 Vatican
 Africa
 Archives:
 John Paul II
 Tsunami
 Election 2004
 Charter update
 John Jay study
 Other Items:
 Client Area
 Links
 Origins
  Movie Review

Rent

By Harry Forbes
Catholic News Service

NEW YORK (CNS) -- Many believed the late Jonathan Larson's long-running Broadway musical -- a "La Boheme" update which won the 1996 Pulitzer Prize and many other top theatrical awards -- would never make it to the big screen.

But "Rent" (Revolution), concerning the lives and loves of New York's East Village artists, is finally here after nearly 10 years. As if to emphasize its theatrical roots, the movie begins with the cast on a theater stage singing the tuneful "Seasons of Love" and then opens up to a stylized reality, and hones in on several artists who are living on the brink of eviction.

Filmmaker Mark (Anthony Rapp) -- who lives in a tenement with his friend Roger (Adam Pascal), an aspiring composer who is HIV-positive -- is making a documentary about life in the neighborhood. Their friend Collins (Jesse L. Martin -- yes, Detective Edward Green from "Law & Order" sings!), a philosophy professor, is mugged outside their building and drummer Angel (Wilson Jermaine Heredia), a sometime drag queen, comes to his aid. They bond, each revealing he is HIV-positive.

Mimi (Rosario Dawson), an exotic dancer who lives in the building, knocks on Mark and Roger's door to get a light for her candle -- echoing Puccini's heroine in the opera. There's an immediate attraction to Roger who answers the door, but he keeps his emotional distance, partly because he knows about her drug habit. (She, too, is HIV-positive.)

We learn that Mark had once been engaged to performance artist Maureen (Idina Menzel), who left him for another woman, the lawyer Joanne (Tracie Thoms). Maureen is currently planning a demonstration against the group's impending eviction.

Benny (Taye Diggs), their landlord who continues to badger them for the rent instead of following through on his promise of rent-free artist space, had once shared their aspirations, but he has since married the landlord's daughter and stepped over to the establishment side.

He agrees to forget about their past-due rent, if they will stop Maureen's demonstration.

That's the basic setup and along the way, the characters will deal with death and shifting relationships while striving to make their creative marks.

Director Chris Columbus has remained largely faithful to the original -- and has skillfully opened up the play much as Milos Forman did with his 1979 adaptation of the musical "Hair." In that case, Forman had to fashion a story around a plotless show, whereas "Rent" came with a plot, but Columbus has added variety by shooting in different locations and giving the film a gloss that brightens material that could have been relentlessly downbeat. The sung-through musical has been augmented with some short linking dialogue to clarify the story.

One additional improvement over Broadway is that the rock-concert decibel level of the stage version has been toned down to a more moderate level while still retaining its vibrancy.

The cast is superb. The original cast members wear the years lightly, while newcomers Dawson and Thoms fit in beautifully with the ensemble.

The film's subject matter may turn off many viewers, but as a snapshot of a piece of cultural history -- both the era depicted and the musical itself -- it's an impressive achievement.

Larson was a talent poised for a major career until he died unexpectedly of an aortic aneurysm (not AIDS, as is often assumed, given his show's subject matter), on the eve of the show's first preview.

The dissolute, countercultural lifestyles of some of the characters take second place to the overriding themes of love, connection, dealing with loss and appreciation of life.

The film contains implied drug use, same-sex relationships, suggestive dancing and movement, some rough and crude language and an anti-establishment outlook. The USCCB Office for Film & Broadcasting classification is L -- limited adult audience, films whose problematic content many adults would find troubling. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is PG-13 -- parents are strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.

- - -

Forbes is director of the Office for Film & Broadcasting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

END


Copyright (c) 2005 Catholic News Service/USCCB. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed.
CNS · 3211 Fourth St NE · Washington DC 20017 · 202.541.3250


 FIND A MOVIE

   Looking for a
   movie review?

Movie List


   Click "Movie List"
   button above
   
   OR
   
   Enter a keyword
   from the movie
   title in the box
   below and click
   the "Search"
   button.