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Nine (2009)

Director: Rob Marshall

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Synopsis

Daniel Day-Lewis sings and dances his way through this Broadway adaptation of Fellini’s ‘8 1/2’, with Judi Dench, Nicole Kidman and Sophia Loren among the many women in his life.

Movie review

From Time Out New York

Let’s not dance around it: Nine—the film adaptation of the stage musical based on Federico Fellini’s —is a dud. As creativity-deprived Italian filmmaker Guido Contini, an incredibly miscast Daniel Day-Lewis reprises his Daniel Plainview rasp and stumbles about like a nicotine-dependent Hunchback of Notre Dame. He calls upon various muses to grant him much-needed inspiration, all of them either mothers (Sophia Loren, Judi Dench) or whores (Stacy “Fergie” Ferguson, Penélope Cruz) with a poorly photographed number to perform. (Though anyone who’s ever wanted to see Dench in bosom-highlighting Folies Bergère finery should be fully gratified. Granny’s got perk.)

The same sub-Fosse cutting that undid director Rob Marshall’s Oscar-winning Chicago resurfaces here: Every musical number is edited so haphazardly that any and all expressiveness is lost in a discontinuous swirl of blinding spotlights, bright colors and perspective-obliterating whip-pans. It’s a migraine-inducing maelstrom (the nadir being Kate Hudson’s fashion-runway Beyoncé burlesque, “Cinema Italiano”), yet rising above it all is the superb Marion Cotillard, who plays Guido’s long-suffering wife, Luisa, with a gravitas that this overblown Broadway bauble hardly deserves.

Marshall likely knew what he had in Cotillard, since she gets the movie’s two most distinctive songs—the introspective lament “My Husband Makes Movies” and the kiss-off striptease “Take It All.” She’s incredible in both numbers, but even more so in the nonmusical scenes in which her character’s grief and rage at Guido’s constant manipulation cut painfully deep. She’s the only truly believable muse; the other performers simply come off as exaggerated waxworks or (in Loren and Nicole Kidman’s cases) embalmed corpses wheeled out for impotent symbolism.

Author: Keith Uhlich

Time Out New York Issue 742/743: December17-30, 2009


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Cast & crew

Director: Rob Marshall

Cast: Daniel Day-Lewis, Marion Cotillard, Nicole Kidman, Penélope Cruz, Judi Dench, Sophia Loren, Kate Hudson full cast

Genre(s): Musicals

Rated: PG-13

Duration: 118 mins

US Release: Dec 18 2009




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