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Film Review - Wicked
This image released by Universal Pictures shows Cynthia Erivo, left, and Ariana Grande, with director Jon M. Chu, right, on the set of the film "Wicked." (Universal Pictures via AP)

When others ran from the musical, Jon M. Chu and 'Wicked' embraced it

“Musical” has been a dirty word in marketing some recent song-and-dance studio films, but there’s no avoiding it in bringing “Wicked” to the big screen

By JAKE COYLE
Published - Nov 21, 2024, 04:57 PM ET
Last Updated - Dec 16, 2024, 05:15 PM EST

NEW YORK (AP) — “Musical” has been a dirty word lately in Hollywood marketing, but “Wicked” director Jon M. Chu isn’t having it.

Of course, there’s no running from the term when you’re bringing to the screen one of the most popular Broadway shows of the 21st century, or telling a story so connected to one of the most beloved movie musicals ever, “The Wizard of Oz.” But Chu, the 44-year-old filmmaker of 2021’s “In the Heights” who as a young man was transported by “Wicked” on the stage, is a true believer in form.

“When words aren’t enough, music is the extension of your expression. That’s what movies do, and that’s what musicals do,” says Chu. “When it’s tied into their communication of where characters are at in this moment and time, it’s the most beautiful thing.”

“Wicked,” which Universal Pictures opens Thursday in theaters, is one of the fall’s biggest gambles not just because it’s been split in two (the second “Wicked” film will arrive in fall 2025), but because it’s going all-out for a big-screen, song-and-dance spectacular at a time when other films (see “Wonka” and “Mean Girls”) have sought to shroud their musical underpinnings.

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