Amongst the
performers at last September’s West End Live event in Trafalgar Square were the
cast of Dear Evan Hansen, led by (current Evan) Sam Tutty, who performed
`You Will Be Found`. Apart from the emotion of the event marking the widespread
re-opening of theatres, this song seemed to resonate on many levels, really
holding your attention. I knew little about the musical but that song was so
powerful I thought it’s parent show must be good. I couldn’t get to the cinema
to see it but now its available to buy or stream so finally I have been able to
find out all about it. Unfortunately I was to be disappointed…
I wanted to
like it, really I did, but there are just too many things that don’t stack up.
Not that it needs any more support. Penned by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul (La La Land, The Greatest Showman) from
an original novel by Steven Levenson, Dear Evan Hansen has been a huge
hit on both Broadway and in the West End in recent years so a big screen
adaptation is no surprise. It’s titular character is a withdrawn High Schooler with
mental health issues aplenty whose therapist has recommended he pen a positive
letter to himself at the start of each day. After a day that goes particularly wrong
Evan re-writes the latest letter in a less positive way. Only it falls into the
hands of school bully Connor Murphy on whose body it is subsequently found when
he commits suicide. So Connor’s family are led to believe that their son and
Evan were friends, a notion that a befuddled Evan does nothing to dissuade them
from. The fact that Connor 's signature is the only one on Even's seemingly everlasting plaster cast adds to the story.
The contents
of the note and Evan’s increasingly elaborate lies about his supposed
friendship draw Connor’s family closer to him and give him the attention he
craves. More than that he becomes close to Connor’s sister Zoe for whom he has
carried a flame for ages. Only Evan’s one friend Jared (“family friend” as he
points out) is in on the deception, his techie skills used to concoct some emails
to further enhance the tale. Actually this sequence has some of the bite and black
humour the rest of the movie could do with. Evan’s heartfelt speech at a school
memorial goes viral online and inspires others meaning he is now obliged to
continue the whole thing. Not the expected plot for a musical you’d think and
you’d be right. If there is such a thing as an Emo Musical then this is what it
would be like- rather grim, very unlikely
and with songs that never break out of medium tempo.
It is an
interesting idea for a story though which challenges the viewer as to whether or not
they want Evan to be found out- or is it better that his fiction creates so
much goodwill that the truth doesn’t matter? Certainly, the events bring Connor’s family closer
together and creates enough positive vibes to fund a campaign to restore an orchard that the two supposed friends hung out in. However I’m not sure the narrative is sure footed enough. For one
thing people don’t ask the obvious questions which they might in a situation
like this as no-one would ever have seen
Evan and Connor together. Characters have handily been either too busy or
pre-occupied to notice. The police don’t seem to investigate anything either,
had they done so, Evan’s lie would almost certainly have been exposed. The fake
emails and Even’s account paint a portrait of a sensitive boy more like himself
than Connor. While you can give some leeway to the fact that teenagers keep secrets,
nobody really questions the veracity of anything Evan tells them. I suppose this
guileless lack of enquiry that allows Evan to take the story as far as he does could
be read as a comment on our pre-occupied digital lives where we watch so much `content`
created by other people yet fail to notice what is happening around us.
Ben Platt originated
the role on stage but by the time the film was made looked too old to be
playing the character, not necessarily a problem in itself as many US shows cast
twentysomething actors as teens. However to disguise this fact the actor has
had some sort of prosthetic skin put on his face which, frankly, makes him look
like an alien pretending to be human. It draws far more attention to the
actor’s age than had he just carried on without it.
Platt is clearly
a talented stage actor but in carrying those attributes onto the screen without
dialling down he comes across as over acting. A succession of nervous tics and
movements look too studied to be true and undermine our sympathy for a
character who is already written as being somewhat whiny and over apologetic.
By the end I found it hard to believe anyone like this could exist. His neuroses
are so severe that his moments in the spotlight like making the speech at the
memorial just don’t ring true. In other movies this would be a fantasy moment;
here he really does it.
Which is a
shame because the central message of the story is a good one as it speaks to
the underdogs, the `anonymous` people who file through life without being
noticed. I feel that had Evan been presented as slightly less insufferable and
over indulged with problems the plot would work better. The show’s signature
song `You Will Be Found` is a barnstormer, a call out to the lonely, the
forgotten and the abandoned that is already being identified with a number of
causes and situations. To give him his due, Ben Platt sings it from the heart but
it’s the only time in the film the character seems authentic.
I’m surprised
to find director Stephen Chbosky at the helm as he made one of my
favourite films of the last decade The Perks of Being A Wallflower
(slyly referenced in one scene). The themes of mental health issues and the
difficulty of making friends are not dissimilar to Dear Evan Hansen but
the subtle touch Chbosky brought to Perks is missing here though perhaps
he doesn’t have material that is as
strong to work with. I expect the story works far better on stage and it would
help had this film been freed from the theatrical shackles it remains held by. There
are moments when the story flares into life but from the dull colour palette to
the crowd scenes or the songs, the staging is mostly uninspired. One song, `The
Anonymous Ones`, cries out for an ensemble from the extras but instead all they
get to do is walk around. A musical without a group dance number? What’s that
even about?
No comments:
Post a Comment