Across the Universe

A musical romance, set in the 1960s; right smack in the middle of anti-war protests, the struggle for free speech and civil rights, and all that sex, drugs and rock and roll. The story follows a young love from school in Massachusetts, Princeton and Ohio to the Lower East Side of Manhattan, the Detroit riots, the killing fields of Vietnam and the dockyards of Liverpool.

We recommend the gorgeous trailer. Looks like a theatrical combination of live action and animated hocus pocus - all set to a Beatles soundtrack.
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I apologise, we feel bad, but there's no trailer available. ~Ed.

Rating: 3 Flicks Review:

The notion that music can provide the soundtrack to your life is given a literal outing through the Beatle’s back catalogue in the Romance/Musical Across the Universe. Jude (Jim Sturges) is a dockworker eager to escape the monotony of his native Liverpool and his travels take him to America, where he first meets Lucy (Evan Rachel Wood) and falls into a love that reflects the tumultuous decade of the 1960s. This story and the events that unfold within it are in essence an excuse for the cast to restage Beatles classics in an extravaganza of song and dance numbers with a surreal touch.

Director Julie Taymor has earned fame and acclaim for her stage spectacles as well as her work on film, evident in the string of beguiling wide screen images she offers up to the viewer. The combination of camera work, production design and costume give the film a fantastical stage for the musical renditions to play out on when it hits its high notes. These instances are notable for the presence of star cameos from the likes of Bono, Joe Cocker and Eddie Izzard, who bring personality to what often veer into by-the-numbers performances. When the main cast are carrying the tune it can come across as sickly sweet and the emphasis put on certain lyrics to advance the plot gets grating when it becomes a narrative crutch over the two hour plus running time.

It is obvious that the songs have been selected first and a tenuous story has been shoehorned into place to fit them later. If you’re a fan of musicals you’ll probably find a lot to like in the Across the Universe soundtrack. Beatles fans on the other hand might see the cover versions as sacrilege. It’s one of the most visually interesting films to hit the screens in a long time, but it would have worked better as a greatest hits album, with only the cream of the musical numbers remaining and its clunky failures left on the cutting room floor. Still, I normally hate musicals, but I didn’t hate this.


By Andreas Heinemann, Flicks.co.nz

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Release date: June 19th 2008.

We haven't received times for this movie in this location yet. However these are updated as cinemas announce them, so check back soon. Hopefully the lovely cinemas in your location will choose to play it shortly. ~Ed.