Is "The Name of the Game" cut from the movie too? I dont remember seeing it last night, but the soundtrack has the song!
Edit: Per FoaNatic post- It was shot but was edited out for the final cut! Thanks.. I am all set!
J*
Updated On: 7/19/08 at 01:49 PM
A note to Universal:
You do not put Meryl Streep, Pierce Brosnin, Colin Firth, etc. in a movie, and then give me MAMMA MIA!
I left after forty minutes, right in the middle of "Dancing Queen."
Call me cynical, call me unromantic, call me whatever expletive you wish, but I tried. I really tried. And the movie was still the worst piece of **** I have ever seen in my life - and that's no exaggeration.
NOTE: This is not a review, it has no right being a review considering I didn't see the whole thing.
This is not a review, it is a warning. This film is practically a test of camp levels: if you can stand it, you have a high tolerance for camp, and good for you.
Fyi- The Encores (Mamma Mia,Dancin' Queen & Waterloo) are available only on Amazon (also for download) not on iTunes. Its actually on the 5 Year Anniversary album. Here is it. Special Thank to BrodyFosee for the tip!
I just downloaded it thru Amazon (.99 cents/per song)
Scroll at the bottom for MP3 downloads:
https://www.amazon.com/Mamma-Mia-5th-Anniversary-Combination/dp/B000MQ58V8/ref=pd_bbs_sr_3?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1216491387&sr=8-3
Now I have the Encore part of the show with live audience!
J*
Updated On: 7/19/08 at 02:19 PM
No it doesn't come to camp levels. It comes to (only for you to decide). Take it or leave it. Some people say it is a fun experience, not a fun movie. Other say its a piece of vocally impaired actors running around on an island.
This movie is only what you want it to be. Critics get paid. Reviews are published. People get money for their opinion. This movie is not for the critics to sabotage. It is a scale of your inner childhood or your inner self .
It is a scale of your inner childhood or your inner self.
Thanks, buddy: I hated the movie because I have an insufficient inner self. THAT'S comfort.
I LOVED the movie. Everyone was having so much fun.
This movie was campy, silly, ridiculous, and fluff...but I loved every single freaking minute of it!
Left the theater with a huge smile on my face; it's like one big sparkling Zoloft!!!
Did anyone else notice audience members start laughing whenever Pierce Brosnon sang?
Featured Actor Joined: 9/26/07
"Did anyone else notice audience members start laughing whenever Pierce Brosnon sang?"
Yes, people have to laugh otherwise it's just too painful to watch. I cringed and felt so embarrassed and sorry for Pierce Brosnan.
I didn't feel sorry for him at all--he knew exactly what he was doing and played it FULLY!
And then--to see him come out in that costume at the end!
My admiration for him grew in leaps and bounds.
I absolutely loved the finale at the end, especially with Meryl screaming to the audience "do you want another one?" and the men coming out in the spandex! Perfect way of sending you home with a smile and "Dancing Queen" stuck to your head for the rest of the day.
Broadway Legend Joined: 2/15/05
Ugh, the movie was awful. Really. I loved the staged show, but I just kept thinking "why, the story is horrible here." For someone reason I forgave it on stage - maybe the beautiful set pieces, the dancing, or the creative stage pictures, but the movie was just bad. The director could never settle the camera down and let us just watch a dance sequence. I mean, it's a musical, I wanted some dancing!
My audience laughed openly at Pierce "singing"
Broadway Star Joined: 12/9/06
I couldn't hear parts of the movie because my friend and her girlfriend were laughing SO HARD at Brosnan's singing, LOL.
My audience was laughing at Pierce too. I felt so bad for him. Why didn't they just dub his songs if that absolutely had to have him in the movie. They used to do that all the time in the old days.
Stand-by Joined: 6/5/08
To all the people who saw "Mamma Mia" the movie and consider it the worst thing they ever saw in their life. It's my guess you have either had very short lives or have been incredibly lucky.
There are those rare moments in life when one views a film or work for the stage that is so catastrophically conceived and executed, people remember everything about the experience like people recall where they were when they heard President Kennedy had been shot. One recalls the color of the hair the person they sat next to had or some otherwise trivial moment like a snippet of conversation entering the theater.
("Yes! We were talking about your cousin Bernie's gallstones... .")
"Mamma Mia" does not come close to such a moment.
For those who would dare, watch Warren Beatty and Dustin Hoffman in "Ishtar"--keeping in mind it was a
SERIOUS attempt to be classically comical in the tradition of the Hope/ Crosby movies.
"Mamma Mia" looks like "Citizen Kane" by comparison.
Clearly, however, no one who ever saw "The Moose Murders" would
declare "Mamma Mia", the worst thing they ever saw.
In a way I feel a bit sad for those for whom "Mamma Mia" has
established a lifetime cinematic low: there are going to be some
genuinely unforgettable moments down the road for you that will
make you sleep with the lights on.
I can only wish for you that you will in no way be connected to them
professionally.
Updated On: 7/21/08 at 06:56 PM
Featured Actor Joined: 9/26/07
Some girls in my audience pulled up and hugged their knees up on their seats, covered their eyes with their hands while laughing loudly. Usually, that's girls' reaction to a bad horror movie.
Updated On: 7/21/08 at 06:59 PM
Broadway Legend Joined: 5/19/03
Eagleman, who are you so defensive? Happens occasionally on the Xanadu board as well, as if saying a bad word about something bad someone else adores is going to bring on the Four Horsemen of the Apolocalypse.
I'm a big fan of the stage show--have seen it four times--but I thought the movie was kind of sloppy. It's hardly the worst movie I've seen--in fact they're were several individual scenes that either had me grinning like the village idiot or close to tears. I personally thought the comedy was strained and that the more dramatic scenes worked better....and onstage, I pretty much liked the whole thing, lightweight as the whole show has always been.
Everyone has the right to their opinion without getting verbally berated about it. It's happening a little too often on the board as a whole.
Yankee was across the aisle from me. Our audience was hysterical at Pierce and any time the ensemble appeared, especially out of the water. Since Friday, my mother and cousin with whom I went have been sending each other pcture texts of us in poses from hte movie or Photoshopping our heads onto pics. Great fun!!!!!!!
First off, I love the stage version, so I was really looking forward to seeing the movie.The first time I saw it I thought it was ok, but I was a little disappointed. But I went to see it again last night and I really liked it alot. One difference was the theater audience -the first time I saw it they were so quiet but last nights everybody was into it. I definitely want to see it again!
Broadway Legend Joined: 5/19/03
I'll probably see it again as well, mostly because the sound at the little six-theatre crackerbox I first saw the movie in was so horrible...any ideas on which movie theatres in NYC have the best sound systems?
It amazes me how some people can be so critical of this movie. If you are going to the theater to see Angels in America you better saty home. This is 100% fluff and each and every actor on that screen knows it. It is not supposed to be bind blowing, it is a movie musical based around ABBA music. Sure, Pierce Brosnan is not Raul Esparza but you don't have to be a rocket science to sing this music.
Take the show for what it is worth. I went and LOVED it but I also knew that it was ABBA and so I did not expect it to change my life... just two hours of sheer fun and laughter.
Broadway Legend Joined: 2/15/05
I still wonder how good the movie could have been had they cast people with the sufficient chops to play the roles: i.e. Broadway trained actors. The name alone is going to sell the movie, not the actors.
The name alone is going to sell the movie, not the actors.
That's what they said with "Rent."
Broadway Legend Joined: 11/23/05
I enjoyed the movie.
I really enjoyed the movie too, I'm glad the director stuck closely to the show. Meryl is fantastic. I thought Pierce was just fine, nobody was laughing when I saw it. I still think he's incredibly handsome too!!
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