‘The Last Five Years’: Off-Broadway Goes Big Screen

2/17/2015
Updated:
2/17/2015

The title of Jamie Wellerstein’s best-selling debut novel sounds nauseatingly pretentious, but “Light Out of Darkness” happens to be a hat tip to Sondheim’s “Merrily We Roll Along,” so all is forgiven. Regardless, his remarkable early success will put strain on his marriage to a would-be Broadway actress.

We know it will not last, because he walks out in the first scene. We will subsequently see how it all unraveled in Richard LaGravenese’s adaptation of Jason Robert Brown’s Off-Broadway musical “The Last Five Years.”

Wellerstein is leaving, and it looks like he is never coming back. Cathy Hiatt is obviously devastated, but it gives her the first opportunity to show her range with the nakedly revealing feature spot “Still Hurting.” There is more to this story than first appears.

Wellerstein was once reasonably in love with Hiatt. It was he who first suggested they live together, before he eventually proposed. Yet, Wellerstein’s immediate success caused friction. Yes, it brought him into close proximity of literary groupies and trampy editorial assistants, but it really caused more of a psychological disconnect between the brashly confident Wellerstein and the increasingly despondent Wellerstein née Hiatt.

Although the original stage production somewhat resembled “Love Letters” in its stripped down, dueling song-and-monologue structure, LaGravenese opens it up quite nicely. He brings it out onto the streets of New York and transforms the musical numbers into dramatic exchanges.

Frankly, the real issue with “Last Five Years” is common to many new-book musicals today. You might consider it the “Rent” effect. There simply is not enough emotional diversity to the score. Each number requires the cast to start at practically a crescendo level, maintaining the notes and the soul-baring wails.

Even the show’s “novelty song,” “Shiksa Goddess,” requires Wellerstein to belt out at the top of his lungs. It is more effective when a show goes up and down the scale. Give us some slow groovers and easy loopers, but with catchy melodies. Then hit us with the showstopper.

Jeremy Jordan and Anna Kendrick in a scene from "The Last Five Years." (Radius-TWC)
Jeremy Jordan and Anna Kendrick in a scene from "The Last Five Years." (Radius-TWC)

Be that as it may, Anna Kendrick and Jeremy Jordan do everything that is asked of them and then some.

As a veteran of Broadway and “Smash,” Jordan exhibits the chops you would expect, but the strength and clarity of Kendrick exceeds the expectations established by “Pitch Perfect” and her Tony nomination for “High Society” at the precocious age of 12. They also have appealing chemistry together in the early days and convincingly push each away during the later bad times. Together, they make the arc of the relationship feel true.

Much of the film’s narrative context and on-screen communication is delivered through song, often giving it a rock opera-ish vibe. Necessarily, one song often leads into another, reinforcing the sameness of the score. Nevertheless, Wellerstein’s climactic “If I Didn’t Believe in You” stands out as a dramatic equalizer, largely regaining the audience sympathy he lost in the opening scenes.

Cinematographer Steven Meizler makes it all sparkle in a way that subtly evokes the big colorful Golden Age musicals, but in a way the still feels contemporary. If you like the sound of most post-“Rent” Broadway musicals that are not period productions, LaGravenese’s adaptation should be like catnip. For the rest of us, the two leads manage to carry the day through sheer gumption.

Recommended for fans of movie musicals, “The Last Five Years” opens this Friday, Feb. 13, in New York at the Village East.

 

‘The Last Five Years’
Director: Richard LaGravenese
Starring: Anna Kendrick, Jeremy Jordan, Meg Hudson
Running time: 1 hour, 34 minutes
Release date: Feb. 13
Rated PG-13

3.5 stars out of 5

 

Joe Bendel writes about independent film and lives in New York. To read his most recent articles, please visit www.jbspins.blogspot.com

Joe Bendel writes about independent film and lives in New York. To read his most recent articles, visit JBSpins.blogspot.com
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