Les Misèrables, the musical based on Victor Hugo’s epic novel, is not subtle. It’s all pomp and bombast, every song rising to an explosive crescendo, every performer spilling their soul all over the stage, every theme shouted out in swooping, cacophonous leitmotif. That earnestness has served it well, as the stage show has been consistently popular since its debut in 1985. Without the benefit of a live setting, it’s harder to give oneself over to this screen version, but director Tom Hooper tries his damndest to show the audience a good, thoroughly miserable time.
Unfortunately, the movie has a couple of those. As Valjean, Broadway-trained Jackman acquits himself well, providing the movie with the closest thing it has to an anchor. As penniless prostitute Fantine, co-star Anne Hathaway gets the movie’s biggest moment, a raggedly affecting rendition of self-pitying power balled ‘I Dreamed A Dream,’ filmed in an almost uncomfortably close close-up. In a musical made up of big damn moments, it doesn’t get bigger than that. Others don’t fare as well. Amanda Seyfried, who plays Valjean’s adopted daughter Cosette, has a tinny voice pitched below the intensity her songs require. Russell Crowe has already taken a lot of flack for his performance as the relentlessly principled police office Javert. The flack is justified. His voice is thin and soft without much texture, and whenever he sings it brings whatever emotional momentum the movie has managed to build up to a stop.
Les Misèrables, then, works or doesn’t depending on the song being sung that minute, without much in the way of connective tissue. It soars, it drops, and ultimately it becomes a that-was-good, that-wasn’t, that-was-fun-what-else-is-on kind of historical epic.
A review by Dan Selcke