West Side Story Review
By Christopher Null
I kid, of course. Among movie musicals, West Side Story ranks in the top five in greatness, and it's arguably the most popular musical ever released. It may be awfully frou-frou -- and let's face it, the dance numbers are awfully similar -- but West Side Story has a tale as timeless as its source material (Romeo and Juliet) and countless songs that have become musical classics. "Maria," "America," "I Feel Pretty," "Tonight" -- you can probably hum these without even thinking about it.
Maria (Natalie Wood) and Tony (Richard Beymer) are the star-crossed lovers in this tale -- she the sister of a Puerto Rican Shark, he a grudging member of the Jets. They don't come from wealthy, feuding families, but from racial groups deeply resentful of one another. Their big love scene plays out on a fire escape instead of a villa balcony.
Tapping into its era of unrest, West Side Story really touched a nerve at the time at was released (1961) and continues to be reasonably socially relevant 40 years later.
Even better are the aforementioned musical numbers, which have become showtune standards, meriting appearances in Monty Python spoofs and Gap commercials alike. The dance is unfortunately fairly forgettable, the kind of ballet-inspired twirling and toe-pointy leaping that's hard to get jazzed about. The studio-set orange skies make the otherwise gritty reality of the story feel silly; it would have been more successful to film the entire movie on location in real NYC streets.
The nitpicks are minor though, as West Side Story is carried completely on the strength of its music. The film won 10 Oscars, including a number of acting awards that don't make a lot of sense (George Chakiris over Jackie Gleason in The Hustler???), but it's one of those runaway sensation films that just don't come along that often. One prays that the tepid Chicago doesn't merit the same treatment come 2040.
The new West Side Story DVD is a boxed set with some unprecedented extras. A new hour-long retrospective interviews the surviving cast members and filmmakers, and the various trailers over the years (including reissues, etc.) are worth a peek. The real keeper, though, is the full screenplay (complete with blue and pink revision pages) and other promotional material, which come in a printed book that's as thick as the DVD case. The only thing lacking is direct access to the songs in the film, but I guess even in "America" you can't get everything.
She feels pretty.
Facts and Figures
Year: 1961
Genre: Musical
Run time: 152 mins
In Theaters: Saturday 23rd December 1961
Box Office Worldwide: $43.7M
Budget: $6M
Distributed by: United Artists Films
Production compaines: United Artists, 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
Fresh: 58 Rotten: 4
IMDB: 7.6 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Jerome Robbins, Robert Wise
Producer: Robert Wise
Screenwriter: Ernest Lehman
Starring: Natalie Wood as Maria, Richard Beymer as Tony, Russ Tamblyn as Riff, Rita Moreno as Anita, George Chakiris as Bernardo, Simon Oakland as Lieutenant Schrank, Ned Glass as Doc, William Bramley as Officer Krupke, Tucker Smith as Ice, Susan Oakes as Anybodys, Jose De Vega as Chino, Gina Trikonis as Graziella, Carole D'Andrea as Velma, Eliot Feld as Baby John, Tony Mordente as Action, David Winters as A-Rab, Scooter Teague as Big Deal, Yvonne Othon as Consuelo, John Astin as Glad Hand, the dance organizer, Penny Santon as Madam Lucia, Suzie Kaye as Rosalia, Anne Miya as Francisca, Bert Michaels as Snowboy
Also starring: Robert Wise, Ernest Lehman