The Way We Were, Sort Of

W hat about a movie musical in which the words and melodies are as familiar as your own name, etched into your brain through years of repetition? What about a story of our shared culture, illustrated by the music representing another era and bringing you back to a time and place that, even if you didn’t live through it yourself, seems perfectly familiar? What about a love story which, despite your best efforts to keep your cynical attitude in place, makes you sigh and even shed a tear when the star-crossed lovers finally unite, accompanied by yet another eerily familiar song?  

   No, I’m not talking about “Mamma Mia!,â€� which attracted huge crowds, in which the characters burst into Abba songs to express their shallowest emotions.  

   No, another movie matching that description came and went from local screens with little notice last fall and is now out on DVD: “Across the Universe.â€�
   Directed by Julie Taymor, of Broadway’s “Lion King,â€� the film uses Beatles songs to tell the story of a privileged young girl’s romance with a working-class artist from Liverpool during the turbulent political upheavals of the late 1960s. The Vietnam War, student protests, the Detroit riots, the music scene, and the whole psychedelic, road-tripping, enlightenment-seeking youth culture, are all shown through the eyes and experiences of Lucy, Jude, and their friends and relations, all named after Beatles characters. Then there’s JoJo, a black guitarist from Detroit, something like Jimi Hendrix. There’s Max, Lucy’s brother, who drops out of Princeton, grows his hair and gets drafted. And Prudence is a depressive ex-cheerleader who, of course, needs to be lured “out to play.â€�

   The film works remarkably well, thanks to its troupe of appealing but mostly little-known actors. Evan Rachel Wood, playing Lucy, is blandly pretty.  I wasn’t quite convinced that Jude would fall as hard for her as he did. But her voice is lovely and her transformation from cossetted princess to passionate anti-war radical is convincing.  More convincing is Dana Fuchs, who belts out “Helter Skelterâ€� and some of the other tougher songs from the Beatles canon.

   The heart of the film belongs to Jim Sturgess as Jude, a passionate actor and fine singer whose voice is by turns raspy and sweet. Jude is apolitical — he loves Lucy and his art — and he is confused and jealous when Lucy draws closer to a fiery student organizer.

   Beatles fans will find much to enjoy including visual references to “A Hard Day’s Nightâ€� and the famous concert atop the Apple Records building. Taymor’s use of puppetry and psychedelic imagery create a vision of the ’60s that may or may not reflect what it was actually like, but are nonetheless interesting and rich. Taymor recreates a Greenwich Village that is unlike today’s — the funky, crowded clubs, graffiti-strewn storefronts and eccentric wanderers are all long gone, of course. Most of all, she creates a sense of young people experiencing a freedom and awakening that may yet resonate anew.

   Renting DVDs locally is ever more difficult, as several local shops have closed in the last year or two. But “Across the Universeâ€� is worth seeking out. Cook up some popcorn, call in the kids (don’t worry, the sex and drugs aspect of the ’60s is glossed over) and be sure there is nothing  to prevent older children from enjoying a very interesting history lesson. And, they might discover that all that old-fashioned music their parents like is pretty decent after all.

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