A failed Broadway singer who now works as a production manager must save opening night on his new production by wrangling his eccentric cast and crew.A failed Broadway singer who now works as a production manager must save opening night on his new production by wrangling his eccentric cast and crew.A failed Broadway singer who now works as a production manager must save opening night on his new production by wrangling his eccentric cast and crew.
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAt several points during the movie, Topher Grace's character stands in front of a fake play sign called "That 70's Play." It is a play adaptation of That '70s Show (1998), a sitcom that Grace starred in.
- GoofsAt about 1h 30 mins when Nick is singing on stage, his voice switches to microphone in sync with the music, although he doesn't take the mic from CJ for another 10 seconds. Then when he steps off the stage singing and walking towards Chloe, his voice continues to come from the speakers even though he's wearing no sound equipment.
- Quotes
Nick: [looking bored] Look it's five minutes to show; why do we always have to cut this so close?
JC: [putting his arm around Nick's shoulder] Come here, okay? The secret to success... is *relaxation*.
Nick: I'm relaxed.
JC: No. You know there was another guy in my band who couldn't relax either? To be honest with you, he was just as good a singer as me and the other guy.
Nick: [still looking bored] Justin... Timberlake?
JC: Whoever. Anyway, he should have been front and center more than he was, but he was *in* the closet, dealing with some personal issues. I'm not gonna say who it was.
Nick: [matter-of-factly] It was Lance Bass.
JC: So... You know what I'm talking about?
Nick: I don't think I do.
I believe the fault was in the way the story was told--there was simply too much of the "poor me" aspect, and not enough of the rallying, let alone the come back. It's like they emphasized the wrong part of the movie, or else rushed the ending to wrap it up before the story was fully told. It left an empty space where character development/growth should have gone. The uplifting ending was just too abrupt. If it was a song, it would be a three note lullaby.
If you like musicals you should like this. If you don't care about character development, especially in a musical--then you'll like this. It just didn't quite hit the mark for me. Could have been much better with a little more development. It wasn't terrible, or even bad, just- -forgive me, flat and a little "pitchy".
- ladybug2535
- Sep 11, 2017
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Details
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color