Burlesque: Movie Review
Burlesque
Rating: 4/10
Cast: Christina Aguilera, Cher, Stanley Tucci, Kristen Bell,
Cam Gigandet, Alan Cumming, Eric Dane
Director: Steve Antin
Nominated for a Golden Globe for best Musical/ comedy seems entirely apt for
Burlesque.
Aguilera (and her warbling pipes) stars as Ali, a small town American girl
with a great voice who dreams of making it big in LA. (There's the first cliché
for you.)
So, after quitting her crummy job in a bar, she heads to the city of lights
and stumbles across the Burlesque Lounge, a failing but stomping club run by
Cher's Tess with a little help from Stanley Tucci's stage manager Sean.
Talking her way into a bartending job there, she strikes up a friendship with
the bar manager Jake (Twilight's Cam Gigandet) and manages to find her way onto
the stage - but not without making an enemy out of Kristen Bell's Nikki.
However, unless Tess can find a way to keep the club afloat, Ali's time in
the spotlight may be brief.
Burlesque is essentially a series of extended music videos - broken up by
some clichéd plot and some, at times, frankly awful (and unintentionally funny)
dialogue.
Aguilera acquits herself brilliantly in the singing portion of the film but
brings little extra in terms of acting to the role of Ali; Cher is lacking any
real emotional depth (and facial movement) as Tess - so the two leads are a
mixed bag.
Thankfully, the wonderfully classy Stanley Tucci lights up every scene he's
in and is blessed with some wonderfully witty moments (and revels in them); Mc
Steamy aka Eric Dane is just lacking a handlebar moustache to twirl as the evil
property magnate - and Alan Cumming is woefully underused as the club's doorman
who has great lines like "I should wash your mouth out with Jagermeister" as
well as a great risque song and dance moment.
I guess at the end of the day, Burlesque is about the spectacle more than
anything else - while the club scenes and songs rock the joint, they certainly
do little (with one exception) to capture the sexiness and seductive tease of
Burlesque. However, they do showcase some stunning choreography and singing from
Aguilera. Cher gets to do a couple of numbers but they're a lot more downbeat
than you would expect.
While it's fair to say Aguilera essentially brings her music video presence
to the big screen (and therefore nothing new in terms of acting or performance)
she certainly lends a much needed musical credence to Burlesque.
The love story between Jake and her is naïve at best and corny at worst; but
it certainly provides something for all - overall, Burlesque is an okay
spectacle (a tad overlong) but is instantly forgettable the minute you walk
out.
At Darren's World of Entertainment - a movie, DVD and game review blog. The latest movie and DVD reviews - plus game reviews as well. And cool stuff thrown in when I see it.
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