Raetsonwe
Redundant and unnecessary.
ChanBot
i must have seen a different film!!
ThedevilChoose
When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.
StyleSk8r
At first rather annoying in its heavy emphasis on reenactments, this movie ultimately proves fascinating, simply because the complicated, highly dramatic tale it tells still almost defies belief.
TheLittleSongbird
If you love Stephen Sondheim you'll love Company. Maybe not his absolute best as a whole, Sweeney Todd from a personal opinion is his masterpiece, but has everything that is to love about his musicals and quite possibly his most accessible too. Smartly written, funny and poignant with clever, poetic lyrics and beautiful music as well as characters you can identify with, even when not Sondheim's very best it is one of his best. The story is somewhat unconventional in that there isn't hugely much of one, but it is still so entertaining while taking on a very emotional journey that you don't care. It also develops its characters strongly, and relationships are handled in a deft and sometimes cynical way.This is an excellent production. For me the Neil Patrick Harris production from 2011 was marginally better, the omission of Tick-Tock in this production was disappointing(though it's not the first time it's been cut from the show) and Angel Desai has a few moments of strain in Another Hundred People. The 2011 production has Tick-Tock and has Another Hundred People sung perfectly. The orchestra don't sound as powerful either, those who love the big band Sondheim will want to look elsewhere as how it's performed here is part of John Doyle's concept, with some of the actors also taking on the roles of instrumentalists. To be said though, it did work very well for the production and was very well performed.Doyle's stage direction is fine, it is minimalist and done like a cabaret act- Company is essentially a concept musical in the first place so doing something different is not a problem- but the smart, funny moments still make you laugh and the poignant moments genuinely moving. The piano is like a character itself in this production and it's very effectively done, with people singing on top of it and also bringing out Bobby's "boyish voyeur". The production is also remarkably intimate, that works because some of the themes in Company require that touch, and it was good that it was clear that Bobby was the focal point while not wholly neglecting the supporting cast.Production values-wise, the production is striking in how simple it is. Some may find it stark in colour, and it is understandable with the performers in black and the stage being bare a lot of the time, but personally it fitted perfectly with the intimacy of the staging. The video directing is clear, while not cinematic it's never stage bound either as well as not too close or too distant, there's a good deal of professionalism here. With the close ups of Bobby's face you can feel and see the emotion. The sound is excellent and the picture quality is generally good.Raul Esparza does a wonderful job as Bobby, he has a lovely voice and has a great sensitivity, charisma and boyish charm. Barbara Walsh attacks her role with fierce abandon and a good sense of worldliness(especially in Ladies at Lunch), true she's not Elaine Stritch nor did she try or need to be. Her voice is great, it's not as volcanic as Patti Lupone's but quality-wise it is a much more appealing sound. Angel Desai does sound a little strained at times in her big number Another Hundred People but is appropriately saucy and charming. Heather Laws is wonderfully intense, Elizabeth Stanley is affecting and warm personality-wise and the male ensemble while simplified in number sing beautifully.All in all, excellent and hugely enjoyable. 8.5/10 Bethany Cox
info-12388
I had a hard time deciding whether to give this mess one star or two, then decided, thanks for the holiday season, to bump it up... but no higher.Poor Stephen Sondheim. This much ballyhooed revival consists of the cast, each playing an instrument (except, of course, for Robert! -- think Concept, people!), as they also sing and dance through one of Sondheim's most brilliant scores. The original production had the added benefit of Jonathan Tunick's orchestrations, while this has the thinness of sound that suggests a dress rehearsal with a proxy orchestra cobbled together while we wait for the real thing to get changed and appear in the pit.It is, in a word, dreadful. The opening number is staged not unlike a marching band encircling the woefully miscast actor playing Bobby. While they stumble (in some cases, literally) through the music, he does his level best to sing. Were this a UFC battle, he would have bludgeoned the score to a pulpy mass; as it is, he just sings, and we all cringe in response.Were that not bad enough, we have to suffer through John Doyle's remarkably inept staging, in which everyone circles and circles and circles around the centre column that makes up most of the "set", if one can call it that. The design is remarkably unimaginative, especially when seen in comparison to Boris Aaronson's original design, and the pitch black backdrop (or at least it looked that way under the highly focused lighting) simply swallows up the nearly all-black costumes, reducing everyone to disembodied hands and heads holding their instruments as they march ever more in circles around and around and around.The actor (and I use the term loosely here) playing Bobby does so on a single emotional note... until, as one might expect, the Big Emotional Outburst at the End, in which he *finally* sits at the damn piano and starts to play. I suppose this is the Moment Doyle had planned for all evening, but it comes off flat and anti-climactic, with Bobby coming close to a 40s femme fatale crying jag as he "breaks through the emotional wall separating him from the rest of the company" (Get it now?). It's thoroughly unbelievable.That this won Best Revival simply suggests that it was a lousy year for revivals. That this got any kind of critical acclaim suggests that it was a lousy year for critics in desperate need of *something* they could enjoy, no matter how awful it might be. That this is available on DVD is an insult and a sop to the many Sondheim fans who can never see Harold Prince's original production. This, by comparison, is an embarrassment.
Tom DeFelice
Second rate cast. Third rate production. Fourth rate concept.I have the highest praise for "Company" as a musical. Smart dialog. Witty songs. The idea of creating a musical based not on a story (it doesn't have one), but on the concept of interpersonal relationships was ground breaking. This is one of Stephen Sondheim's best! In this production the cast plays all the musical instruments. I guess that saved on paying for an orchestra. What we end up with is a group of performers who must be actor/singer/musician. That is asking a lot. And not one person in the cast is good at all three. We end up with the actors delivering lines while holding on to their musical instruments. To be true to the musical they would also have to dance. The director has saved them from that be removing all the dancing. "Tic-Toc" is gone and "Side-by-side-by-side" looses its punch.The star/director also includes a solo for himself at the end of act one that did not make it to Broadway and for good reason. It's a nice song, but it diminishes the impact of Robert's singing "Being Alive" at the end of act two."Company" deserves better treatment than this production. Just watch the DVD of the making of the Original Broadway Cast album and you will see the potential. It is great that "Company" is finally out on DVD. It is sad that this is the production they give us.
tavm
Since PBS's "Great Performances" was the first time I ever watched any version of Stephen Sondheim's late '60s/early '70s musical "Company", I didn't really have any idea what to expect. Actually, to go back, I've read some reviews and looked at the back of a DVD of a documentary of the original run of the show and I knew it had something to do with marriages and relationships and many of these couples being the friends of this one single guy. Bobby is his name, I believe. Anyway, it takes place at his apartment where everyone is waiting for him to show up for his surprise birthday. And then it goes back and forth in his conversations with these friends and with some of his former dates. Since it's Sondheim, you definitely don't expect anything conventional to be going on. In fact, this version is even more unusual since the entire cast are also playing instruments while enacting their parts. Most of the women are fine here especially the ones playing Marta and Joanne. And I was impressed throughout with Raul Esparza as the leading character especially when he sang "Being Alive". Nice humorous touches throughout and still a timely observation of what it's like trying to connect with love in the big city. For that reason, not to mention Sondheim himself discussing his contributions in a separate segment afterward, I highly recommend this version of "Company".