So Into The Woods came out last Friday here and we saw it last night...
I liked it, but then I'm a Sondheim fan. I'm not sure I liked all the changes (like pretty much everyone, I grew up with the Bernadette Peters version) but I really did like having the Baker be the "narrator" by the end, a great idea that I don't see why it wasn't ever implemented in the past!
The casting was pretty good, and everyone was just this side of right in being theatrical enough while also making it feel it was all happening for real. I still feel there's a much better screen version to be told of this, though, and possibly only in animation. In a big way, this is the first "cinematic universe" type event (even though it first played out on stage!), combining all the characters and situations from various fairytales, mostly Grimm I believe.
So you (or, well, Disney) could really go to town with their animated versions of Cinderella, Rapunzel, etc, all turning up in this and really do the material justice. I thought Rob Marshall (as played by Jamie Kennedy as The Mask) did a great job with his meagre $50m budget, but that this didn't always allow for him to show some real spectacle and make this a real "film" as opposed to a stage translation (like he did so brilliantly with Chicago in opening up the action).
So we don't see Jack's interaction with the Giants (for real, even for just a couple of shots) other than their feet (mainly) and a few shots of the Giant's wife at the end, which didn't really feel big enough to lift the film from its bogged down second half (even on the stage, act two can be a bit of a slog to get through as there's not a lot of variety). I did like how they took the lighting effects, though, and carried that into the dark and gloomy second half as opposed to the bright and sunlit first.
I didn't really mind the Rapunzel changes...for me that all got a bit random and odd in the stage play anyway, so this wraps things up (a bit) better, even though it didn't really happen with any significance. Maybe this does give the Witch more reason towards the end, but I never really understood how her power was gone one moment, back the next. Overall, the streamlining (removing the Baker's father, the princes' subplot) worked, although afterward I kind of wished they'd left the princes' second act subplot (with Snow White and Sleeping Beauty) in since it just emphasises how silly they are and also squeezes in two more fairytale icons into the mix.
I also didn't think the Baker's wife's fate was too clearly done, in an attempt to keep it light, and I wonder if Disney had just put this out under Touchstone we could have had something more true to the original, even if at its original length and tone it could have been box-office poison, which Disney is obviously more than aware of, hence the changes. Ultimately it doesn't affect the story or what happens to most of the characters, and I did enjoy Marshall's direction and handling of the material for the studio he was making it for.
I don't think this will win over any new fans, or those that can't get a hook on Sondheim, but I dont think it alienates those that like the original. It may not satisfy them completely, but it's well done, pretty well cast, looks great and is just about as big a screen version as one would hope for the budget (even if I do think there's an even bigger, more faithful and potentially awesome "cinematic universe" version to be had).
