USA music
1961
color 150 min.
Director: Robert Wise
CAV: out-of-print collectible
           3 discs, catalog # CC1178L
CLV: out-of-print collectible
           2 discs, catalog # CC1192L
Almost as long as they've
been able to talk, films have been able to sing and dance. Frequently high-style,
often rapturously romantic, most musicals have nonetheless been content to remain
light, sophisticated entertainment. Still, there has always been a minority
tradition of musicals with more serious intentions. Of these dramatic musicals,
West Side Story is among the most powerful.It was Jerome Robbins who
conceived the idea of a Broadway musical about New York street gangs, based on
Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. In West Side Story, Montagues and
Capulets are transformed into rival gangs, the Jets (local white youths) and
Sharks (Puerto Rican immigrants), thus broadening the territory of the musical to
include the tragic. But where the conflict of Romeo and Juliet is situated in a
fictional family feud, West Side Story derives its power from the blood
and dirt of the streets. As Sharks and Jets battle through dance, they're
enacting an all too real social tragedy.
Rightly or wrongly, it was assumed
that a musical inspired by Shakespeare and rooted in social conflict was more
"mature" than the frivolous entertainments of Broadway and Hollywood. But the
"realism" of the Broadway show was a matter of highly stylized evocation of an
urban environment made up of painted, sparse backdrops. When the play was being
adapted to the screen, such a sketchy suggestion of the surroundings was
immediately recognized as insufficient to the material demands of the film image.
To succeed as film it was necessary to sense the dance arising out of the
sidewalks, that the city itself was giving birth to the music. And yet, despite
the film's realistic texture, as a further contradiction, virtually all of the
film was shot on a soundstage -- a credit to the heightened, theatrical reality
created by Robbins, codirector Robert Wise and production designer Boris
Leven.
There is a subtle abstraction of decor that extends the emotions of the
characters into the surroundings. Stylization transforms an alley fire escape
into an oppressive set of details -- laundry hanging on a line, vivid, glistening
cobblestones and wan colors that press in on singing lovers by their sheer
physicality. Or, a fight between the gangs under a freeway is as red-hot as the
hatred of the gang members warring under it.
But it is in the film's opening
sequence that a nearly perfect integration of stylization and reality it
achieved. The camera, in a bird's eye view, moves ever closer to a city
playground, finds a group of youths and swoops down as a brawl transforms into a
dance. In the ensuing ballet, the film's drama is complemented by a conflict of
temporal, musical and visual rhythms. As the dancers move in sharp, occasionally
tortured diagonals, the relationship between their bodies and the surrounding
architecture visualizes the abrupt, jagged syncopations of Leonard Bernstein's
music.
The rhythms draw us relentlessly into the tragic love affair between
Tony (Richard Beymer), an ex-Jet, trying to make a go at the straight life, and
Maria (Natalie Wood), a girl fresh off the boat from Puerto Rico. Maria's brother
Bernardo (George Chakiris) is leader of the Sharks. While the dancing merges
architecture and body, the love story is the film's heart. Tony and Maria's love
is innocent, completely apart from the hatred swirling around them. But that very
innocence dooms them: as much as they desire to transcend their surroundings,
they are products of their environment -- part of it. The more they try to ignore
the violence around them, the more irrevocably they are drawn into it.
In this
context, it's hardly surprising that Tony and Maria are given virtually the only
lyrical songs in the score by Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim. But while the rest
of the cast is denied the poignancy of a song like "One Hand, One Heart," there
are compensations. The Jets get raucous humor in "Officer Krupke" and acrid
sensuality in "Cool." The Puerto Rican characters strut with sassy good-spirits
in the show-stopping "America." And both sides get to explode in the energetic
opening ballet and the dance at the gym.
The contrast between love songs and
dance numbers also results from the film having been directed by two men. Jerome
Robbins brought his dance expertise to the film. Robert Wise (a former editor,
whose editing credits include Citizen Kane) brought his knowledge of the
percussive form of film editing to enhance the musical experience. While most
memorable musical numbers prior to West Side Story are notable for the
fluidity of the dancing and camerawork, Wise and Robbins use editing as an
extension of the choreography and music. A dancer will throw back her hand and
kick out in medium shot, a trombone slides into a downbeat, and there's a cut to
a wider shot as the next verse begins. The cuts underline and punctuate, as much
a part of the musical expression as the score and the dancing.
If West Side
Story seems too idealistic in an age when gangs murder through the haze of
Cracklined nightmare, that's a perspective only thirty years of urban decline can
provide. But it's a testament to the film's power that despite our hardened
cynicism we can still be drawn into the conflict between Sharks and Jets and want
it to be resolved. West Side Story continues to move precisely because of
its faint insistence that hope remains possible.
-- CHARLES
TASHIRO
Credits
Directed by: Robert Wise, Jerome
Robbins
Produced by: Robert Wise
Screenplay by: Ernest Lehman
Based on
the stage play produced by: Robert E. Griffith, Harold S. Prince
Book by:
Arthur Laurents
Associate Producer: Saul Chaplin
Choreography by: Jerome
Robbins
Music by: Leonard Bernstein
Lyrics by: Stephen Sondheim
Music
Conducted by: Johnny Green
Production Designed by: Boris Leven
Director of
Photography: Daniel L. Fapp, A.S.C.
Film Editor: Thomas
Stanford
Transfer
This edition of West Side Story was
transferred from a new 35mm internegative, struck from a reconstructed 70mm
negative. The film-to-tape transfer was supervised by co-director Robert Wise.