Film Review
Possibly the weirdest film musical you are ever likely to see,
Little Shop of Horrors delights as
much with its off-the-wall black comedy and garish comic book design as
with its irresistibly funny musical numbers. The film is a
stage-to-screen adaptation of a popular off-Broadway musical of the early 1980s, which was
itself inspired by Roger Corman's 1960 comedy
The Little Shop Of Horrors.
Whereas Corman reputedly shot his film in two or three days on a budget
of 30,000 dollars, the more extravagant musical version cost 30 million
dollars and is a lavish production, although it still manages to be
every bit as idiosyncratic and stylishly creepy as Corman's film.
A large chunk of the budget went on the man-eating plant Audrey II, the
star of the film. This was realised as a series of elaborate
puppets, the largest of which weighed one ton and required sixty people
to operate it. The biggest challenge was to lip sync the puppet
to the dialogue spoken and sung by Levi Stubbs (of The Four
Tops). So convincing is the Audrey II creation that it
out-stages the entire cast and steals the show when it gets to its
rendition of the film's best number,
Mean
Green Mother from Outer Space, which was nominated for an
Oscar.
The human protagonists are played with just as much vigour and fun by
talented performers such as Rick Moranis and Ellen Greene, with Steve
Martin turning in what is possibly the funniest performance of his
career as the psychopathic dentist who ends up as a substitute for Baby
Bio. Directed by Frank Oz with gusto, flair and a certain amount
of inspired insanity,
Little Shop of
Horrors is a frenzied musical comedy gem that will most probably
put you off gardening for life.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Mr Mushnik is the owner of a far from thriving florist shop in Skid
Row, a less than salubrious district of New York. He tyrannises
his two employees, Seymour Krelborn and Audrey Fulquard, but knows he
is heading for ruin. Seymour comes to his rescue when he suggests
putting in the window a strange plant that he has been cultivating in
the basement, a plant unlike any on Earth. No one who passes the
shop can resist going inside for a closer look at the strange plant and
soon Mushnik is raking in the cash. But, to keep his plant
(christened Audrey II) alive, Seymour has to feed it with his own
blood. Soon the plant is so big that it requires something
more nourishing than a few drops of blood - it needs to devour a whole
human body. Against his better nature, Seymour is persuaded
by his little green friend to make plant food of the man he hates most
in the world, Audrey's sadistic boyfriend. After this tasty
snack, the plant grows so large that it almost fills the entire
shop. It is at this point that Seymour discovers its true
intention - to spore and devour the entire human race...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.