The movie was beautifully shot by Jon M. Chu. It really is a visual feast (even though I could have done without the characters drawing literal pictures in the air and the dancing wig heads). My main issue is with the pacing. For example: After the first fifteen minutes, nothing has happened. You can get away with that on stage, but film is a different beast. Also, the scenes between the musical numbers are long – and I mean looooong. Even the scenes that are placed inside musical numbers are long. The drawn-out interaction between Usnavi and Vanessa during It Won’t Be Long Now kills the momentum of the song.
The director knows how to film a musical number, but he doesn’t know how to keep the rhythm of a musical. In other words, he knows how to capture individual moments, but his vision for the whole movie doesn’t cohere. The storytelling is all over the place. The movie has tremendous visual flair, but lacks focus.
Actually, I take that back. Chu doesn’t really know how to film a musical number either. He knows how to capture beautiful frames and exciting choreography, but what’s the reasoning behind cutting away from his main character the very first moment he starts to sing? And that’s not the only time he cuts away from the character who’s singing. When Vanessa sings in the bodega, he shows Usnavi and Sonny instead of her for a huge chunk of her song.
Chu was so preoccupied with creating extravagant musical numbers that he forgot to tell the story. No Me Diga, for example, became a huge ensemble number (to be fair, almost every song in the movie became a huge ensemble number). We don’t really get to know Daniela, Carla and Cuca (by the way, why is Cuca in the movie?) because Chu never really focuses on them. It’s all about the visuals and the ensemble.
And then there’s the When the Sun Goes Down problem. It’s a quiet song. A beautiful moment between two characters in love. But he chose to film it as a surreal dance sequence. It looks terrific, but my question is: Why? I got the feeling that Chu didn’t trust the songs, so he decided to make each and every one of them a spectacle. Sometimes less is more.
I have already stated before why I think Abuela Claudia is the major casualty of this movie, but someone mentioned that Alabanza was very emotional for them. I don’t think Alabanza truly works because Abuela Claudia is a non-entity in the movie. The sequence is well shot, but only those who know the stage version will be moved by it – because of their emotional connection to the song in its original context. I doubt people seeing the movie for the first time will be emotional during the sequence.
I didn’t mind the additions to the plot, but I wonder why so much was cut. I think Nina’s storyline has also suffered a lot from the cuts. Priscilla Lopez’s character became, well… nothing, and because of her absence, there’s no conflict between Benny and Kevin. Or even Benny and Nina, for that matter. They are already in love from the first scene. They end up in love. Nothing changes. Their whole journey has been simplified to an inch of its life. Oh, and Benny has no storyline whatsoever. None.
But someone may argue: These cuts were important to make the story work as a movie. Then why oh why did they include Piragua? Lin-Manuel has said that he wrote that song to be used for a scene change in the original show. It has no place in this movie. Its only raison d'être is to give Lin-Manuel a showstopper. But why does he need one? It just serves as fan service and, honestly, feels like the composer putting his ego before the story. There, I said it. He should have either played Usnavi (I still think he looks young enough to have pulled it off) or stepped away altogether. By playing the piragua guy, he not only became a distraction, but also managed to take precious screen time away from the more important characters.