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So we got cheap tickets and went to see Spiderman: Turn Off the Dark last night.

It was awful. Enormous spectacle, dripping with money, flat out awful. I was delighted. I'd been afraid it was just going to be mediocre and therefore boring, but no. They have managed to producea truly magnificent failure. We had such a good time.

I barely even know where to start.

Ok, so for those who haven't been following along, a month or two ago, they shut the entire show down for a couple weeks, fired Julie Taymor, and reworked the book. Originally, the Green Goblin gets killed off in the first act and the better part of the second act focuses on this original, director-insert character Arachne, involves a massive confusing dream sequence, and made little to no sense (while having nothing to do with canon).

I'll hand this to them--the plot does actually make sense now. They cut out all but two and a half Arachne songs, made Green Goblin the actual Big Bad for the entire show, and essentially cut and pasted all the songs into a different order.

Unfortunately, the new book kind of sucks. Actually, no, it really sucks. It's coherent, it's just utterly lacking in heart. They managed to cut out any reason for anyone to care. Uncle Ben doesn't get his "great power/great responsibility" line. The guy who kills Uncle Ben is a completely random carjacker who's never seen again. (In the movie, remember, it was the guy who Peter didn't bother to stop from robbing the asshole wrestling manager. Apparently in the original musical book, it was a carjacker who stole the school bully's care while Peter failed to help him. In this version, Peter beats his breast and blames himself--only he didn't actually see anything. There wasn't anything he could have actually done.) Most of the first act is a soulless progression of set pieces--Peter gets beaten up, Peter and Mary Jane whine, Peter gets bitten, etc. There's not much in the way of useful connecting dialogue and the music is mostly whiny indistiguishable rock songs, so you really don't care. We saw the understudy, who was regrettably not up to the task. He was obviously chosen for his ability to do the wire work, because his acting was incredibly wooden.

If the songs were awesome, it would have helped. Actually, it would have made most things forgivable. It's a musical. Song is how you further character and plot development. But just about every single one sounds like it's going to turn into "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For". (Bono and The Edge of U2 did the music. You can tell. You can really tell. You can tell they ran out of ideas ten years ago.) The lyrics are incredibly trite and the music is incredibly predictable.

Unfortunately, the two most musically interesting songs are Arachne's. And they make no sense. Other than the fact that the music, costumes, sets, and actress are already paid for, there is no reason left for them to be in this musical. (Oh, and the fact that "Turn Off the Dark" comes from the title of one of her songs. No, it doesn't make any more sense in context.) The musical begins with Peter giving a book report on Arachne, basically spending the very first ten minutes of the musical on mystical mumbo-jumbo that has no bearing on Spiderman or the plot and serves mostly to establish that Peter thinks spiders are neat. Later, she sings an angsty song about him taking responsibility. Which has absolutely no effect on his actions whatsoever. It's written as a big revelation, except that he doesn't actually take responsibility then and comes to an entirely different epiphany twenty minutes later.

One of the biggest problems is that the creative team all think they're working in entirely different genres. The music is a boring angsty rock opera. The book is an incredibly angsty, pseudo-mystical piece of hogwash. The choreography and the costumes, on the other hand, think we're in a comedy.

The choreo was a mess. There was never any particularly unifying style, and the dancers clearly hadn't had enough rehearsal time because all the big group numbers were incredibly ragged. A lot of it was really hammy, in a way that had little to do with the angst in the plotline. And every once in awhile, we were suddenly in a Lady Gaga video for no good reason.

Also not helpful? The choreo is too demanding for the amount of singing being done. You can hear that the chorus doesn't have enough breath. They take breaths in the middle of phrases-words even, and their support is non-existent. Spidey and the actress playing Green Goblin's wife both had pitch issues on their own, so a pitchy, unsupported chorus added in means every group number is unpleasantly sliding around in the key.

The costumes were...impressive. But totally, completely random. We start off at the school with bullies bullying Peter in a song that made no sense. Worse, everyone is wearing the most aggressively 80s style costumes outside of Awesome 80s Prom. Seriously, the black guy has a flat top haircut. All in yellow and black, for no good reason. MJ is wearing clothes out of this season's H&M, though. That's ok, because a few scenes later, J. Jonah Jamison is yelling about how the Daily Bugle is losing out to bloggers...to the secretary pool. That's right, we have half a dozen women in cats-eye glasses and knock-off How to Succeed 60s era costumes, daintily sitting in front of miniature typewriters. While the reporters (only one of whom is female) are all dressed like they stepped out of His Girl Friday. Did I mention that the evil corporation who doesn't really have much to do with the plot wears fedoras for no particular reason?

The Sinister Six (who aren't the Sinister Six at all--they have Carnage, Kraven, Swarm, The Lizard, Electro, and a new made-up villian called Swiss Miss) have cheesily fantastic costumes. They're awesome, as long as you don't want to take them seriously. The play isn't sure whether we're taking them seriously or not. Also not to be taken seriously is a series of bank robbers and victims in hilarious paper-mache heads.

The wire work is ok. Cirque du Soleil's more impressive. The fight choreography is so gun-shy that it has people taking punches in which the fist is nearly a foot away from their face. It's like watching martial artists running something at quarter speed and deliberately not connecting.

The one thing that is truly impressive is the set design, which is breathtaking. The climax arranges the stage so you're looking down from above the Chrysler building, which projects out into the audience. At the back of the stage, tiny little taxi cabs drive back and forth on the ground far below. It's one of the coolest sets I've ever seen. The entire show is comic-booky forced-perspective genius. If they ever officially open, I hope the designer gets a small heap of awards, because it's amazing work.

So. Basically a completely schizophrenic, underrehearsed disaster from beginning to end. With oh so much shiny to distract you. It's sad when the line that got the biggest laugh of the night was when a minor character tells MJ of Peter "He's not that cute" and an audience member (clearly a teenage girl) piped up unexpectedly "Oh, yes he is!"

Maybe they should hire her as a plant.

Date: 2011-05-20 05:53 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] chuckro.livejournal.com
Set designer is to forced perspective as Michael Bay is to lens flare and explosions.

Also, as far as I can tell, Electro, Kraven, the Lizard and the Green Goblin have all been members of the Sinister Six...just not at the same time.

Date: 2011-05-20 06:16 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
Yet another objection, then, to including Carnage. (My original objection being that Carnage is the only one with a truly interesting backstory that makes no sense in this context.)

Date: 2011-05-20 05:57 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] ivy03.livejournal.com
Swiss Miss???

Date: 2011-05-20 06:15 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
So according to Wikipedia, there was a plot point in which one of the Geek Chorus creates this character. Thing is, the Geek Chorus was cut entirely from the play, so there's no longer any explanation.

She's a human turned into a Swiss Army knife. All blades and whirry things sticking out. Nevermind that the process that turned them all into monsters was entirely biological, and all the others seem to have been combined with animals...

Date: 2011-05-20 06:20 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] chuckro.livejournal.com
They gave her DNA from a swiss army knife!

Date: 2011-05-20 06:38 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
Yes, yes! That makes perfect sense!

...what?

Date: 2011-05-20 08:06 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] maydove.livejournal.com
She's kind of a cyborg? First thing I thought of was Swiss Miss hot cocoa, which is an inappropriately pleasant identity for a villain.

I had to suppress my laughter when reading this so as not to disturb my officemates...

Date: 2011-05-20 08:52 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
She is entirely, head-to-toe, encased in shiny, shiny chrome armor. Also, on massive chrome platform shoes. With a giant spoke skirt of pointy chrome like the veins of an umbrella missing its fabric. And giant chrome weapons of dubious usefulness. Metal Madonna-style cone bra, metal spikes coming out of her head, full metallic make up.

Do a Google image search for something like "Spiderman Swiss Miss".

It was nowhere near as ridiculous as the costumes for the guy with a lizard busting out of his chest or the guy made entirely of bees.

Date: 2011-05-20 10:48 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] maydove.livejournal.com
Whoaaaa, that costume is insane.
Guy made entirely of bees?? That's just crazy. Who would ever want to control a swarm of bees or bee-like vehicles to produce some kind of collective, hive-mind behavior?
Wait...

Date: 2011-05-20 11:06 pm (UTC)From: (Anonymous)
I haven't read a Spidey comic in twenty years. Is Swarm an actual Spider-Man villain? A man made out of bees? Holey Buzz! That's even campy by the Batman TV show standards!

Date: 2011-05-21 12:03 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
Apparently he's an evil Nazi scientist who moved to South America and discovered giant mutated bees who totally ate him down to his bones and they like mentally merged and became a supervillain and and and ummm....SCIENCE!

Date: 2013-01-19 12:08 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] ivy03.livejournal.com
The one little teeny tiny moment I liked in this, that seemed novel to Spider-Man, at least vis a vis the movies, was Osborne reacting to Spider-Man as a scientist to someone who stole his research. I thought that was a cool take for the five seconds it lasted.

Also, why, when Mrs. Osborne dies, does she haunt him as a sexy sexy ghost? In a halter, backless labcoat and sequined skirt split up to her hip? When she'd dressed conservatively in life? I didn't think it was possible to compound the problematic nature of fridging the wife, but there you go.

Date: 2013-01-19 12:10 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
The one little teeny tiny moment I liked in this, that seemed novel to Spider-Man, at least vis a vis the movies, was Osborne reacting to Spider-Man as a scientist to someone who stole his research. I thought that was a cool take for the five seconds it lasted.

But they didn't actually know what to do with it, so they just dropped it on the floor and walked away.

Also, why, when Mrs. Osborne dies, does she haunt him as a sexy sexy ghost? In a halter, backless labcoat and sequined skirt split up to her hip? When she'd dressed conservatively in life? I didn't think it was possible to compound the problematic nature of fridging the wife, but there you go.

I...do not remember this part. Although it's entirely possible this part wasn't there when we saw it.

Date: 2013-01-19 12:17 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] ivy03.livejournal.com
Possibly. It's part of the act 2 opener, "Freaks Like Us." As Goblin is transforming the people, two avatars of his wife come out to haunt him--nothing screams the complete irrelevance of the character like being able to have two separate people as her ghost at the same time. She's not a person--she's a haircut! Those two are joined by the chorus as...I have no idea. Their presence had no explanation. And they did high kicks while the chorus pretended they were in "Thriller" until the sinister six came out.

Also, the sinister six? Yes, those costumes are amazing, but from the balcony, on that big, blank stage, they look like LEGOs or something. They look insignificant. Especially when you get the whole them terrorizing the city on the hanging screens, and then they run out and it's like...oh. Right. You are tiny.

Date: 2013-01-19 12:05 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] ivy03.livejournal.com
So by this time, they're rehearsed plenty. Rehearsed into soullessness, which is generally my problem with Broadway. I noticed MJ being pitchy. But we were seated literally right next to the speakers, which means we couldn't actually hear the words...at all. We could see the monitor with the conductor on it. And the lighting guy in a box in front of us pulling back his curtain whenever Spidey was at the back of the house.

I do think much was lost being so far off to the side for this show, but truly and genuinely, I would not have wanted to pay any more for it than I did.

Date: 2013-01-19 12:08 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
Well, I guess now you can say you've seen it. It's a triumph of breathtaking mediocrity and poor planning.

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