Johnny Depp Movie:

Sweeney Todd - The Demon Barber of Fleet Street Two-Disc Special Collectors Edition




Click here for more detailed information about the
Johnny Depp movie:

'Sweeney Todd - The Demon Barber of Fleet Street Two-Disc Special Collectors Edition
'




   Johnny Depp

   Pictures
   Posters
   Movies
   Books
   News
   Video News
   Bio
   Unofficial
   Latest Photos
   Desktop
   Screensavers
   Wallpapers

   Celebrity Movies


Johnny Depp Movie:
Sweeney Todd - The Demon Barber of Fleet Street Two-Disc Special Collectors Edition



Movie
Sweeney Todd - The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Two-Disc Special Collector's Edition)
Sweeney Todd - The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Two-Disc Special Collector
List Price: $34.99Label: Dreamworks Video

Salesrank: 1855

Released: April 1, 2008
Our Price: $14.42
Used Price: $12.66
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • AC-3
  • Collector's Edition
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • Dubbed
  • DVD-Video
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Helena Bonham Carter
  • Johnny Depp
  • Alan Rickman
  • Edward Sanders
  • Timothy Spall
  • Editorial Review:

    Genre: Musicals
    Rating: R
    Release Date: 1-APR-2008
    Media Type: DVD

    Description of Sweeney Todd - The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Two-Disc Special Collector's Edition):
    After years of rumors, it turns out that Tim Burton was the perfect visionary to film Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, Stephen Sondheim's Broadway masterpiece, and the result is a macabre and moving musical movie as enthralling as anything Burton has ever done. The show's mix of gothic horror, Grand Guignol, very dark humor, and witty and beautiful music never was the stuff of traditional musical comedy, but it's a powerful work, and perhaps the richest of the late 20th century. In the movie, Burton's frequent collaborator, Johnny Depp, plays Todd, a wronged man whose lust for revenge drives him to murder (an 19th-century legend who has been traced to a real-life barber). Helena Bonham Carter, another Burton mainstay, is Mrs. Lovett, the barber's partner-in-unspeakable-crime. It's no surprise that Depp is an excellent choice to convey Todd's brooding intensity and volcanic rage, but he can also sing a score that is so challenging it has often played in opera houses (though not with the same style as the Broadway original, Len Cariou, and he occasionally lapses into pop style). Bonham Carter is small of voice and lacks the humor of the original Broadway Lovett, Angela Lansbury, but she sings on pitch, in rhythm, and in character at the same time, which is no small feat for a Sondheim show. Aficionados will regret the loss of certain musical passages--"The Ballad of Sweeney Todd" is just an instrumental overture and the chorus is gone altogether, among others--but the reassuring presence of orchestrator Jonathan Tunick and conductor Paul Gemignani ensures that the music feels right and sounds great. And the film's depiction of a Victorian London hellhole--with cinematography by Dariusz Wolski and costumes by Colleen Atwood--also looks and feels right.

    The excellent cast is filled out by Alan Rickman as the villainous Judge Turpin, Timothy Spall as his seedy Beadle, Sacha Baron Cohen (Borat) as a rival barber, Jamie Campbell Bower as the young lover Anthony, Jayne Wisener as his object of affection, and Ed Sanders as the young Toby. For fans of Tim Burton and Johnny Depp who don't think they like musicals, Sweeney Todd should be a revelation (though not for the squeamish, as the gore is intense and completely appropriate). For fans of Broadway and Sondheim, it's hard to imagine getting a better adaptation than this. The fact that there's no newly composed Oscar-bait song sung by a Josh Groban-type over the end credits only makes it better. --David Horiuchi

    Sweeney Todd - The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Two-Disc Special Collector's Edition) Reviews:
    Surprisingly I liked it! 4 Star Review
    2008-10-06 - Okay, so I had no intention of ever seeing this one because of the gruesome theme. I've never even been interesting in seeing it in the theatre but thought I'd give this movie a chance. Hey for a dollar rental from the library, how could I lose right?

    I had been VERY apprehensive about watching the DVD and actually thought I'd just returned it without ever viewing it. Well I was quite surprised that I found the movie wickedly (although a bit gory)interesting!

    Although Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter are not singers I thought their singing was fine for the characters they portrayed. I wouldn't choose them for the "Phantom" or "Christine" but they did just fine in this movie.



    Enigmatic, Gruesome, Riveting,--but Miscast! 4 Star Review
    2008-10-04 - I am not much into musicals. Gigi, My Fair Lady, and that is about it. But the gothic, horror nature drew me to view this movie. I surprisingly enjoyed it.
    The one flaw: Tim Burton is tied to the apron strings of Bonham Carter. Johnny Depp seems to be Burton's illegitimate love child. It is the only way I can explain the innumberable amount of movies Depp inhabits in the Tim Burton world of film-making.
    Burton could have had a grade-A achievement on his hands. It is bloody, (though the blood looks like stage blood--still not for children). Burton worked closely with Sondheim and thus had a well-established plot to put his pretty pictures with. A rare one for Burton. Good on imagery; very poor on plot.
    Having all this too his advantage, he still managed to muck it up by casting Depp and Carter in the two key roles of the opera/musical. What a pity.
    Depp is no opera singer; and Carter is just no singer--plain and simple. If Burton had only cast Patti Lupone or a younger version of her (if he wanted younger, I'm sure Burton could have found one); and Michael Cerveris would have made an excellently menacingly Sweeney Todd. Cerveris did the chamber opera version and was exceptional as a singing Sweeney. He oozed evil.
    Sondheim could have insisted; but perhaps Sondheim simply wanted the money and gave the casting over to Burton. I would have said "No". sondheim doesn't need the money; and he could have at least put the damp on Depp and Carter.
    The rest of the cast are very good to excellent. The two best singers are Tobias and Anthony. Johanna and the beggar woman were suitably good.
    But Depp and Carter shall always make this one the big chance of putting Sonheim's gothic opera to film; but ultimately: the one that slipped through Burton's fingers. Even though it was staged and filmed quite well.
    Burton deserves half the blame for not being able to say no to Carter the whining singer who could shatter glass; and Sondheim the other half for not standing his ground for first rate singers down the line.
    One day ten years from now, this movie needs to be remade with real singers for the entire cast. That shall be a five star production. Include the "Ballad of Sweeney" and I'd give it 6!

    Braithwaite

    A bloody good musical 5 Star Review
    2008-10-03 - Right from the opening credits, a dark atmosphere permeates the scene and sets the mood for 'Sweeney Todd'. Arriving on the shores of London are Mr. Sweeney Todd (played by Johnny Depp), who once was a barber named Benjamin Barker, and his sailor friend Anthony. Anthony knows the tale of Barker, how he was put away in prison unjustly so that the evil Judge Turpin (Alan Rickman) could have his beautiful wife Lucy. Todd is free, and wants his revenge.

    From the ship he heads to Fleet Street, where his old barber shop used to be. Beneath the shop is Mrs. Lovett's (Helena Bonham Carter) pie shop, where she sells the worst meat pies in London. Mrs. Lovett finishes the tale of Barker by telling Todd that Turpin raped Lucy, after which Lucy took poison. Barker's daughter was now the young ward of Turpin. Mrs. Lovett recognizes Barker, and rents his old rooms to him. Todd scares up business by beating London's number one barber, Adolfo Bamford, in a "shave-off". Now business takes off, but Todd's most wanted customers have yet to arrive; Judge Turpin and his lackey, Beadle. Subplots unfold as Todd and Lovett sort of adopt Adolfo's young servant boy Toby, and Anthony walks by the Judge's house only to fall in love with young Joanna, Barker's daughter, through the window where she sits all day, imprisoned in her own house.

    Being a Tim Burton film, the dark atmosphere is rich and uncontrived. He brings a grimy gloominess to London, and the characters of the film. I've never seen Depp or Carter look darker or older than they do in 'Sweeney Todd'. While the filming is dim, the blood stands out bright red, making a remarkable play with color. There are some awfully nice throat-cutting scenes, very bloody, but I was hoping for a little more gore. The plot fit very well with being a musical, and I love the little song Todd and Lovett sing when they figure out how to dispose of the bodies. (Who would have known Depp could sing, or Rickman for that matter?)

    The fact that 'Sweeney Todd' is a horror movie AND a musical is interesting, to say the least. The plot is good and the acting superb. Burton did a wonderful job with this film. Watch out for a delicious surprise ending, too. This movie is definitely worth a purchase, as long as you don't mind musicals or a little blood. Enjoy!


    Excellent! 5 Star Review
    2008-10-03 - There are some pretty thorough reviews here, so I won't attempt to out-do them. What I love about this film is the fact that it so perfectly captures the original musical. That is due in large part to Tim Burton and Johnny Depp - these 2 are the reason the movie was a total success. Other good things: the costumes were stunning, the cinematography was just haunting, and the actors, were in large part, wonderful. I was incredibly suprised by Sacha Benton Cohen, who, I was convinced, would destroy the part, but I loved him in it. Alan Rickman is a god, as always. Whether playing Snape, the Judge, or the Colonel Brandon, he's incredible.

    The 2 weak links in this film were Helena Bodham Carter as Mrs. Lovett and the boy (I don't know his name) who played Anthony. Let's be real. She got the part because Tim Burton's her hubby/live-in lover. She LOOKS great in the part of Mrs. Lovett, but she can't sing worth two hoots. Seriously. Can't sing a note. As for the boy who played Anthony, he was a bit too wussy for my taste - especially a kid who was a sailor.

    Another observation: Although this should be fairly explanatory given teh subject matter, please, please do not let your children see this movie. It's very, very violent and while the blood is very fake, it can be frightening for young children - tweens.

    But, the film is wonderful. Whether you're a Sondheim fan, a Burton fan, both, or neither, this film is sure to please.

    Sweeney Todd is Terrific 5 Star Review
    2008-09-17 - The dvd of the musical Sweeney Todd is fabulous. One of the best and Johnny Depp does a wonderful job at not only acting but singing as well.
    Who knew?


      Don't forget to check out other celebrity movies:  
    Maggie Gyllenhaal Movies
    Meg Ryan Movies
    Forest Whitaker Movies
    Brooke Shields Movies
    Molly Sims Movies
    Amy Weber Movies
    Jackie Chan Movies
    Isla Fisher Movies
    Laurence Fishburne Movies
    Aidan Quinn Movies
    Neve Campbell Movies
    Alexis Arquette Movies
    Vanessa Hudgens Movies
    Marcia Cross Movies
    Shia LeBeouf Movies
    Drea de Matteo Movies
    Chris Tucker Movies
    Antonio Banderas Movies
    Dana Carvey Movies
    Topher Grace Movies
    Juliette Binoche Movies
    Nicolas Cage Movies
    Marc Anthony Movies
    Hilary Duff Movies
    Tom Berenger Movies
    Marlon Brando Movies
    Adrian Paul Movies
    Chris Kattan Movies
    Sarah Chalke Movies
    Spinal Tap Movies
    Tea Leoni Movies
    Heidi Klum Movies
    Jesse Metcalfe Movies
    Christina Milian Movies
    Karolina Kurkova Movies
    Brandon Lee Movies
    Caprice Bourret Movies
    Victoria Beckham Movies
    Kate Beckinsale Movies
    Paris Hilton Movies