I agree with the Roger Ebert website that "KPop Demon Hunters" has a script problem; the dialogue just isn't on par with the songs. The movie starts to lose steam in the second half. Oddly, I'm familiar with this problem. It's the problem in almost every Sondheim show (and particularly in "Follies") -- you have amazing musical interludes and then you have banal chit chat. But the music! "KPop" borrows from the world of Howard Ashman. (This connection is underlined through the casting of Lea Salonga, a living legend who once worked with Ashman.) An opening number needs to inform you about the plot -- but, really, it needs to introduce you to the *style* you're going to be "wearing" for the next two hours. Ashman uses an opening number to tell you about his own special cheekiness: Little shop! Little shop of horrors... Watch 'em drop! Never stop the terror... Call a cop... Little shop of horrors.... No! No, no! Nuh-oh! "KP...
One of my guilty pleasures when traveling is a trip to any near-my-hotel movie theater. Often, I can finesse this as an effort to identify "local color" -- the quirky indie palace that Judy Blume built in Key West, the terrific museum-slash-screening-room in Miami. It's a different story in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The Caribbean Cinema is just like AMC -- by another name. What I can say is that it's really nice to see a movie without the Nicole Kidman speech. Without the guy who drives a race-car. Without the booming voice and its nonsense declaration: "LIGHT is OUR HERO...." I felt a little more virtuous when I visited the bookstore. There in San Juan, I picked up "Dear Dolly," a series of "agony aunt" letters that Dolly Alderton wrote for publication in her early thirties. Immediately afterward, I met a waitress with an abiding passion for Alderton's work. "I read her memoir last year....and I plan to read it again one decade ...