Wicked: For Good
The first part is a long time to tell you something in school, and it's almost the end of the story, and Galinda's final decision doesn't understand why she made that choice.
In this installment, everything is a different rush, a different pole, a wedding, a character relationship, a sister, a wizard, an Oz line that must overlap with the original movie, where there must be an iconic event, an iconic song, an iconic scene, but forget the center of the real Wicked is the relationship and ideology of the two characters.
Okay, well, the movie gave Galinda more dimensions, and there were several strokes that took the trough to a good solution, but she didn't choose.
It doesn't make much sense to have her as someone who yearns for acceptance but doesn't bring us into the "inside" of character, making many decisions seem more selfish than "hidden pain."
It should be the story of people who "want to do well, but choose the wrong way," which comes out as "what you want, even if your friend hurts."
Maybe because the first part focuses on school life until it takes time to develop a relationship, when the second part rushes until it doesn't fill emotional bonding, it becomes a relationship that has a lot of scenes together, but doesn't feel like a real deep bond.
And the point of the leather animals can't make us understand why they were evicted, but it should have been the big point of the story, the slate of the fight, but it's a little low-key, making Elphaba's rise to the fight look giddy.
Later, when it comes to musical movies, what is the thing to think of besides singing?
"choreograph," a musical scene that should be as spectacular as the first part, is hardly seen, from the expectation of watching a choreograph, a full show, and this part is just a character standing and singing, telling about feelings and relationships, which is not wrong, but secretly feeling that "music" is a little common compared to other movies.
All of them have been replaced by music, sound power and visual work, stunning, but I personally don't think it's enough to make us enjoy this movie.











































