Score: 5 / 5
We've waited twenty years for this. And it's perfect.
Perfectly cast, with special attention to appropriate diversity and character actors knowingly leaning into our expectations of them. Perfectly designed, bridging the gaps between the Technicolor fantasy of the original film and the steampunk postmodernity of the classic Broadway show. Perfectly translated musically, with a depth of sound and patience in letting melodies drift across scenes unusual for movie musicals. Perfectly realized sets and a shocking lack of CGI. Perfectly bypassing the specificities of its source book (one of my most hated novels) in favor of the pop culture phenomena that are The Wizard of Oz (1939) and the titular stage production. Perfectly directed by the up-and-coming premiere musical film director of the 2020s, Jon M. Chu, whose work here feels like the joyous consummation of his talents after Crazy Rich Asians and In the Heights.
Perfectly paced, perhaps even as an improvement on the stage musical (this point may be controversial, as a subtracted outro for "Something Bad" and a delayed climax for "Defying Gravity" may well disrupt longtime fans' immersion). Perfectly honoring the original, including cameos and even visuals ripped from our collective memory (Elphaba's extended cape as she levitates in the finale is exactly what we need to see at the end of Act 1, and it's gloriously realized here). Perfectly performed roles that could easily have been impressionistic or impersonated (Ariana Grande skews close to Chenoweth's iconic delivery while offering boons of her own, while Cynthia Erivo and Jonathan Bailey internalize their characters more to bring fresh dynamics, and Michelle Yeoh and Jeff Goldblum subtly play against type to suggest insidious design). Perfectly costumed, adding substance and character to already well-rounded people, making the visuals pop with tactile pleasures. Perfectly choreographed, honoring the original while injecting the large numbers with adrenaline, giving even unexpected moments some zazz.
Most important, it's perfectly suited to the present, perhaps even more so than it was twenty years ago in George W. Bush's America, in the days of our "War on Terror," with drones surveilling seditious activity and a con man in power demonizing people of color while attempting to harvest their resources for his own grandiosity and control. Minorities are being ousted, hunted, and caged, making the magical wonder of Oz a parallel thematic pleasure to the increasingly dark oppression embodied in metallic crystalline urbanity. Relevancy can be hard to come by, and often feels forced in situations like this; not so, here, where the material feels long overdue and yet disturbingly timely to an uncomfortable degree.
This is less a review that a laundry list of perfections the film realizes, so I won't belabor it. I hope that they add some music to the second film, as even the show doesn't have quite as much in the second act, and dark and action-heavy as it is, I'd prefer Schwartz to tinker therein. Except for the Wizomania bits of "One Short Day," nothing substantively new is added to the first act, which is totally fine for me, but does make me hopeful for some novelty to be taken with Part Two. Specifically, I'm eager to see more dynamism from Nessarose and the spectacle of magic, twisters, and action that largely occurs offstage in the stage musical. But in all, this film feels like the kind of culture-spanning blockbuster we got all too frequently pre-Covid and rarely get anymore in this age of direct-to-streaming small releases. I hope its success revives the form and our social integrity when it comes to collective cinematic experiences. We'll just have to wait until next November to see if they stick the landing.
Spoiler: they will.
(Side note: I'm learning that, apart from general ignorance about Jon Chu's previous films, many people are also unfamiliar with Cynthia Erivo's previous work in Bad Times at the El Royale, Widows, Harriet, The Outsider, Genius: Aretha, and of course her stage work in The Color Purple among other great credits. Y'all need to make sure you catch up, because she is not slowing down any time soon and is one of the best artists working right now.)