Evita Movie Review
Evita Review

"Evita" Overview

Rating: PG
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Alan ParkerProducer : Alan Parker,Robert Stigwood,Andrew G. Vajna
Screenwiter : Alan Parker,Oliver Stone
Starring : Madonna,Antonio Banderas,Jonathan Pryce,Jimmy Nail
Now I understand why Argentineans wanted Madonna to go home during the filming
of Evita!
What the fuss is all about, I have no idea, because Evita is just another bad
movie starring one of our worst actresses, Madonna. The catch is, this time
she gets to sing sing sing for 2 1/2 hours -- sing until she can sing no more
-- sing until your ears bleed.
Evita has had a long and sordid past as a motion picture project, and it's easy
to see why. The fact that Evita makes a mockery of Argentina's most beloved
personage and the filmmakers wanted to shoot there is almost beside the point.
There's the problem that movie musicals have tended to be huge flops over the
last 40 years; the problem of Madonna's inability to act; the problem that Eva
Peron was basically an egomaniac that died 40 years ago and that no one in
America really cares about anymore. And when co-screenwriter Oliver Stone gets
involved... yikes! They might as well have made a musical called Oswald!
But they didn't. Instead, Evita rumbles through the plot points in Eva Peron's
life like a freight train. From stargazing child to slutty gold-digger to
talentless actress to the wife of the President, it's no wonder why Madonna
fought so hard for this part -- it's straight out of her life (except for the
President part... so far)! No acting required! And she gets to sing the whole
time!
And what's with all this singing, anyway? Yes, I know it's from Andrew Lloyd
Webber (who, after seeing Cats, I believe is seriously disturbed), and as a
traditional musical, Evita might have had a prayer. But electric guitars and
synthesizers? Discordant, headache-inducing chants? A capella, sing-song
dialogue between characters? Sheesh, Evita is more like The Who's Tommy than
Singin' in the Rain. (It's no surprise that director Alan Parker also created
Pink Floyd The Wall.) I half-expected Madonna to start rolling around in baked
beans a la Ann-Margret.
No such luck. Instead we have to listen to the likes of Antonio Banderas's
singing narrator, which sounds a lot like he has his cajones in a vise. Or the
very British Jonathan Pryce as Juan Peron(!), singing about how he ran the
British out of Argentina. The hilarity of these two performing is almost as
much fun as the real treat of Evita: trying to see how many ways Madonna can
cover up her blossoming pregnancy. How many arms, hats, and flower bouquets
can she hold across her waist? A lot.
In all fairness, Banderas is a diamond in the rough here, in a part of comic
relief that is desperately needed among the Very Serious performances. Also, a
few of the songs are tolerable, even memorable, even if they rarely make
sense. But, in the end, I have to pan Evita, if for no other reason than it's
just plain goofy. And some parting words for Madonna, in a lyrical fashion she
may be able to finally understand:
I saw your movie/
Now keep your distance.
Don't cry for me, Madonna. Don't hit me, either.
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Review by Christopher Null
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