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    | "...once 
    you slip into its manic, kitschy groove, you won't be able to get enough" |  |  | 
        MOULIN ROUGE Rated PG-13
 
 Director: Baz Luhrmann
 Screenwriters: Baz Luhrmann, Craig Pearce
 Cast: Nicole Kidman (Satine), Ewan McGregor (Christian), John 
        Leguizamo (Toulouse Lautrec), Jim Broadbent (Zidler), Richard Roxburgh 
        (Duke of Worcester)
 Running Time: 126 minutes
 Released: June 16, 2001
 
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                  | ALTERNATE REALITY Review 
                  by 
                  
                  Jim Rutkowski HIS 
                  RATING: 
                  
                  HIGHLY 
                  RECOMMENDED (**** stars)
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                  | From the very beginning, you know 
                it's going to be something unique. The Fox logo appears a screen 
                within a screen, surrounded by a lavish curtain, in the thin as 
                a rail conductor waves his arms wildly. "The Sound Of Music" 
                begins to play. Christian (Ewan McGregor) has come to Paris to 
                gain "experience" for his writing. After singing a few bars, he 
                charms a lisping Toulouse-Lautrec(John Leguizamo)and his 
                friends. They drink absinthe, receive the blessing of a green 
                fairy (played by former pop star Kylie Minogue) and head 
                straight away to the famed Moulin Rouge nightclub, where the 
                proprietor Zidler (Jim Broadbent) greets everyone with a chorus 
                of Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit." 
 Whew! All this in the first ten minutes. Part 1940's musical, 
                part Monkee's episode and part MTV video, director Baz 
                Luhrmann's new film is grandiose and whimsical. So energetic and 
                inventive, in fact, it's hard to believe it comes from a major 
                studio.
 
 The film's plot as written by Luhrmann and Craig Pearce, has 
                Christiane a penniless writer from London, encountering Satine 
                (Nicole Kidman)at the infamous Paris nightspot. He falls for 
                her, but she has been promised to the Duke of Worcester (Richard 
                Roxburgh), a fop who has agreed to pay for a new theatrical 
                stage at the Moulin Rouge.Of course Christian and Satinedo 
                become the object of each other's affections. However, neither 
                the Duke nor Christian realizes that the woman of their desires 
                is living on borrowed time. Satine has contracted that most 
                obscure malady known as consumption. This may seem like one big 
                sugary cliché after another, but in Luhrmann's hands it is 
                genuinely moving. The choice of songs and somewhat mad visual 
                style maybe his conceit, but it is a glorious conceit. His 
                previous films; the enjoyable Strictly Ballroom and the somewhat 
                ill-conceived Leonardo DiCaprio vehicle Romeo and Juliet, only 
                begin to point the way to this dazzlingly preposterous bit of 
                operatic froth. Visually the film is sumptuous. The digitally 
                created landscapes of Paris are layered like a Lautrec inspired, 
                nocturnal layer cake (perhaps Lautrec on hallucinogens.)The 
                club's set design is a dizzy, whirling and twirling wheel of 
                decadence. Within the club, the musical numbers are staged with 
                a frenzied flare. Frenzied being the operative word. The editing 
                is so fast and furious that the cuts seem to be made after every 
                syllable as opposed to every line or scene.
 
 The performances are uniformly excellent. McGregor as the 
                idealistic writer in search "truth, beauty and love" is very 
                charismatic here. When he lapses into Elton John's "Your Song" 
                it is a truly warm and romantic moment. His singing abilities 
                are so strong that perhaps he has a second career ahead of him. 
                The usually emotionally distant Nicole Kidman whose acting 
                talent is very strong (To Die For, Eyes Wide Shut; both Oscar 
                worthy performances)has never been more amiable than here. Not 
                to mention sexier. Her vocal abilities are more than a match for 
                McGregor's.
 
 Moulin Rouge may take some adjustment on the audience's part. 
                But once you slip into its manic, kitschy groove, you won't be 
                able to get enough. The songs include: "Lady Marmalade", "Like a 
                Virgin", "Roxanne", "Diamonds Are a Girls' Best Friend", 
                "Material Girl" and others. The psychedelic visuals, the imagery 
                inspired by everyone from George Melies to Marilyn Monroe to 
                Madonna and god knows what else add up to one of the most daring 
                and original films of the year.
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              MOULIN ROUGE  ©  2001 20TH 
                  Century Fox.All Rights Reserved.
 
 Review © 2003 Alternate Reality, Inc.
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