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Disney is developing a 'Greatest Showman' stage musical. So tell me, do you wanna go?

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Disney is developing a 'Greatest Showman' stage musical. So tell me, do you wanna go?

Ladies and gents, this is the moment you’ve waited for — “The Greatest Showman” is coming to the stage.

Disney Theatricals is developing a stage musical adaptation of the hit 2017 movie starring Hugh Jackman. The company announced the project on Friday at the D23 Expo, the company’s biennial fan convention in Anaheim. The debut production’s cast, creative team and venue will be announced at a later date.

“The Greatest Showman” is loosely based on the entrepreneurial endeavors of P.T. Barnum, who founded the Barnum & Bailey Circus. The cast of the movie, directed by Michael Gracey, also features Zendaya and Zac Efron — performing an aerial-centric duet, no less — plus Michelle Williams, Rebecca Ferguson, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II and Keala Settle.

Its chart-topping soundtrack featured 11 infectious original songs written by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, with the anthemic “This Is Me” earning the duo an Oscar nomination. A second album — featuring new renditions by Kelly Clarkson, Pink, Panic! At the Disco and Missy Elliott, among others — was released the following year.

Zac Efron and Zendaya in “The Greatest Showman.”

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(Niko Tavernise / 20th Century Fox)

Though the movie received mixed reviews from critics, its theatrical run spanned 219 days and grossed a worldwide total of $435 million, making it one of the highest-grossing live-action movie-musicals of all time. Jackman even performed the songs during his worldwide concert tour in 2019.

The stage project will be the first to result from the Disney-Fox merger completed in 2019. It will also be one of Disney’s few stage adaptations of a live-action title (“Mary Poppins,” “Newsies”); most of its stage musicals have been based on animated movies (“Tarzan,” “The Little Mermaid”).

“The Greatest Showman” joins a number of other stage musicals in development at Disney Theatricals, including adaptations of “Coco” and “Tangled.” Currently, “Aladdin” and “The Lion King” are running on Broadway, and “Frozen” is touring the U.S. and playing on the West End. A 30th anniversary production of “Beauty and the Beast” will kick off a North American tour next year, and a new staging of “Hercules” will debut in London in 2025.

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Movie Reviews

'Barzakh' Movie Review: Theatrical limboland worth a visit

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'Barzakh' Movie Review: Theatrical limboland worth a visit

Asim Abbasi’s ‘Barzakh’ is an ode to love, loss, and everything in between. It is haunting, yet mesmerising, and equally puzzling.

The six-episode series follows a dysfunctional family’s ‘spiritual’ journey as they vacillate between grief and hope. However, the journey is hampered by its own excesses and as the show progresses, it becomes arduous to appreciate Abbasi’s vision. Much like his characters, Abbasi leaves viewers in a state of limbo.

Barzakh’s story is set in the Land of Nowhere, a breathtaking valley, where Jafar Khanzada (Salman Shahid), a wealthy patriarch, invites his estranged sons — Shehryar (Fawad Khan) and Saifullah (Fawad M Khan) — to partake in his third wedding. The catch? Jafar has set out to marry his first love Mahtab, who is long dead. While his sons call him out on the absurdity of the situation, it is his caregiver Scheherezade (Sanam Saeed) who shows faith in him. She urges everyone, including the viewers, to have faith in the unknown.

Worth a special mention are the performances of Sanam and Salman — both eloquent and enthralling. The two possess the power to skilfully guide a nonbeliever towards the tumultuous world of faith.

‘Barzakh’, which loosely translates to being in a state of limbo between death and resurrection, evokes the feeling of being stuck in a purgatory. Almost every character in the show is a sinner of varying degrees, and yet incapable of self-reflection. The self-reflection only begins at the Land of Nowhere. The story, characters, cinematography, and every aspect of the show draw heavily from works of literary phenomena — from Gabriel García Márquez to Khalil Gibran. And of course, you’ll find some Shakespeare sprinkled along the way.

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The show does a good job of portraying several difficult topics such as toxic masculinity, repressed sexuality, postpartum depression, the burden of parenting and caregiving and the fragile nature of familial bonds. This, put together with the phenomenal acting by the entire cast, would have produced a splendid series, if only Abbasi had stopped and asked himself: How much is too much?

What also holds the series back from reaching its potential are the excessive supernatural elements — the trapped souls with stones on their backs, the red-draped fairies, the all-knowing painter, the girl with serpent skin… the list goes on. Plus, a plethora of metaphors and symbolism. Despite having a strong cast and an engaging plot and narrative, ‘Barzakh’ only hurles riddles at the audience. While this is exciting in the beginning, it gets tiresome as the show progresses.

However, none of this takes away from the fact that ‘Barzakh’ remains one of the most interesting shows to come out of Pakistan in recent times. It explores topics that the country has often stayed away from and brings us a mythical world where there remain no boundaries between love and life. Abbasi’s ambition only leaves one waiting for his next project.

Cut-off box – Barzakh
Hindi (Zee5 Youtube)
Director: Asim Abbasi
Cast: Fawad Khan Sanam Saeed Salman Shahid Khushhal Khan
Rating: 3.5/5

Published 10 August 2024, 03:48 IST

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Movie Reviews

Movie Review – It Ends with Us

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Movie Review – It Ends with Us

It Ends With Us was phenomenal. Blake Lively gave this character her all, you felt every little emotion she felt, her chemistry made the screen spark. I love her, I don’t think she’s ever done anything under exceptional. This role was no different, she owned it.

I did not know anything about it when I found out that I was doing this movie. I also did not know that it was a book. Coincidentally, before me and my granddaughter went to go see it, we did some shopping at the mall first. (where my theater is) We had walked past a bookstore and Savannah spotted the book. We were both surprised, who knew? We joked around about it and went to go see the movie. As the movie ended, my granddaughter looked at me and begged to go get the book, so we did and she’s happily reading it now. We also discovered that there is a follow-up book and will be going to pick that up this weekend. (thanks Rebecca)

——Content continues below——


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The story was so heartfelt and powerful. I hope the movie does well at the box office, I was a bit surprised when I walked into my theater, it was packed. Since I moved to Tennessee, I have yet to see more than ten people at the early show. I live in a small town, but the ladies were out yesterday. At the end of the movie it received massive applause. It tickles me when that happens.

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I’m sure if you’ve read the book you plan on seeing it, I just want to let everyone else know, this is a must see movie. I’ll be reading the book this weekend and I’ll report back on how I felt they did then.

Grade: A

About The Peetimes: I’ve got 2 Peetimes in for you, I recommend the 2nd Peetime, but if you have an emergency the 1st Peetime is there for you too.

There are no extra scenes during, or after, the end credits of It Ends with Us.

Rated: (N/A) Some Strong Language | Sexual Content | Domestic Violence
Genres: Drama, Romance
Starring: Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni, Jenny Slate
Director: Justin Baldoni
Writer(s): Christy Hall, Colleen Hoover
Language: N/A
Country: United States

Plot
Adapted from the Colleen Hoover novel, Lily overcomes a traumatic childhood to embark on a new life. A chance meeting with a neurosurgeon sparks a connection but Lily begins to see sides of him that remind her of her parents’ rela…

Don’t miss your favorite movie moments because you have to pee or need a snack. Use the RunPee app (Androidor iPhone) when you go to the movies. We have Peetimes for all wide release films every week, including Borderlands, Deadpool & Wolverine, Twisters, Fly Me To The Moon,  Inside Out 2 and coming soon Alien: Romulus, The Crow, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, Transformers One, The Wild Robot  and many others. We have literally thousands of Peetimes—from classic movies through today’s blockbusters. You can also keep up with movie news and reviews on our blog, or by following us on Twitter @RunPee.
If there’s a new film out there, we’ve got your bladder covered.

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Review: Emotionally, 'Daughters' shows prisoners reuniting with their children, just for a night

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Review: Emotionally, 'Daughters' shows prisoners reuniting with their children, just for a night

When a parent goes to jail, everyone in the family does time. And in Black communities most severely affected by the impersonal whims of the prison industry, a unique program has been fostered, intended for girls seeking a deeper connection to their incarcerated fathers: a date with them at the jail.

The documentary “Daughters,” from directors Natalie Rae and Angela Patton, follows one such Daddy Daughter Dance in Washington, D.C., a carefully arranged night in which orange prison uniforms are swapped for jackets and ties, the jail’s decorated gym takes on a prom-like air, and dressed-up girls get a few celebratory hours in which their separation anxiety is briefly, movingly set aside.

The film, which focuses on a handful of girls and their dads as the dance looms, is as touching as it sounds — and invariably as sad. It’s to the great wisdom of the collaboration between Rae, whose background is directing, and Patton, an activist whose nonprofit prioritizes the futures of Black girls, that while the dance is clearly intended to be positive and inspiring (we’re told 95% of the fathers who participate never go back to jail), the movie isn’t afraid to show just how much fragility and uncertainty goes into the buildup and its aftermath.

That commitment to the emotional integrity of a process that might reveal heartache as much as hope keeps “Daughters” from seeming like a commercial, even as it wholeheartedly sells us on the worth of this program. Your buttons will be pushed immediately when you meet the charming, chatty 5-year-old Aubrey, a math whiz whose joy at numbers is offset by their representing the years her dad, Keith, will be away. Elsewhere, 10-year-old Santana, who helps her mother raise an infant sibling, is a serious kid with an outer shell hardened by the weakness of the adults in her life, while 11-year-old Ja’Ana — who doesn’t know her dad at all — carries her mother’s doubts about his commitment level. And struggling high schooler Raziah has, according to her mother, already expressed worrying thoughts of self-harm.

The dads, required to meet in fatherhood circles led by a supportive coach in an airy room marked by a big circular window, are a believably nervous bunch. They reflect honestly on their predicaments and are encouraged to view the upcoming dance in terms that prioritize how their daughters need to view them: as potential promise-keepers.

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We learn the men’s names, but the filmmakers never tell us what they’re in for, which feels right — who they are striving to become, as opposed to what they were, defines them for us. In a riskier but effective grace note, interspersed throughout are poetic, home-movie-fashioned interludes, scenes of the girls at play that suggest missed experiences.

Unsurprisingly, on the big day, when these spiffed-up fathers wait expectantly for their dates, your throat may not be able to handle the lumps. But while there are hugs, tears, laughs, more hugs, silly photos and adorable dances, there are also pockets of getting-to-know-you awkwardness and even full-on tension. Rae and Patton, who filmed their subjects across years, are attuned enough to the many feelings in play.

“Daughters” doesn’t have an obvious ending, and it’s in the realities of distance that we come to fully grasp the complexity of the dance, girls and fathers bonding without plexiglass barriers or pricey video calls separating them. To touch, and to be touched, makes “Daughters” an achingly beautiful case for second chances in an isolating, fractured world.

‘Daughters’

Rating: PG-13, for some thematic elements and language

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Running time: 1 hour, 47 minutes

Playing: Opens Friday, Aug. 9 at the Bay Theater, Pacific Palisades; streaming on Netflix Aug. 14

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