Film Review
MGM's colourful screen adaptation of Cole Porter's hit Broadway musical
Kiss Me Kate is a dazzling
song and dance spectacular, acknowledging its debt to Shakespeare by
skilfully appropriating the device of a play within a play.
Whilst not as inspired as some of the other great Hollywood musicals,
this one is still immense fun, buoyed up by its memorable collection of
Cole Porter numbers and some stunningly choreographed dance
routines. If the film looks occasionally weird it is
because it was shot in 3-D, although it was released in conventional
2-D format once the 3-D craze had passed.
Howard Keel is a delight in the rumbustious woman-taming Petruchio
role, exhibiting more prime cuts of ham than you can ever hope to find
in a well-stocked delicatessen. Regrettably, Keel's co-star,
Kathryn Grayson, gives a disappointingly muted performance, far too
tame as Katherine ever to appear as shrewish as the Bard had
intended. By contrast, Ann Miller is feistiness
personified, joyfully ripping the rug from under Grayson's dainty
little feet in the supporting role of Lois Lane. Early on, Miller
steals the show with the film's classiest song-and-dance number,
Too Darn Hot. Other musical
highlights include
Why Can't You
Behave?,
From This Moment On
and the catchy showstopper
Brush Up
Your Shakespeare (performed with great panache by Keenan Wynn
and James Whitmore). Whilst it may not be the greatest
musical you will ever see,
Kiss Me
Kate still manages to be superlative entertainment.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
Fred Graham and Cole Porter are discussing their new show, a musical
version of Shakespeare's
The Taming
of the Shrew, and agree that Fred's ex-wife Lilli Vanessi would
be perfect for the part of Katharine. Unfortunately, Lilli has
other ideas and is about to quit the entertainment business to start a
new life with her latest beau. She changes her mind when Fred
offers the part to his new paramour, the lusciously leggy Lois
Lane. With Fred playing Petruchio opposite Lilli's Katherine, it
isn't long before the couple's tempestuous off-stage relationship
begins to resemble the plot of Shakespeare's play...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.