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Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007)
Release Date:
Tuesday, April 1, 2008

MPAA Rating:
R

Rating Reason:
For graphic bloody violence

Genre:
Musical Horror

Starring:
Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman, Timothy Spall, Jamie Campbell Bower, Jayne Wisener, Sacha Baron Cohen

Written By:
John Logan

Director:
Tim Burton

Official Site:
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007)

Synopsis:
Johnny Depp and Tim Burton join forces again in a big-screen adaptation of Stephen Sondheim’s award-winning musical thriller "Sweeney Todd." Depp stars in the title role as a man unjustly sent to prison who vows revenge, not only for that cruel punishment, but for the devastating consequences of what happened to his wife and daughter.

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) | Review

A Bloody Masterpiece
Elisabeth Leitch

Content Image

I have to say, when I hear the words horror musical, my first response is—never going to work. Tell me it’s a comedy—okay, a little more believable. Tell me it’s also a tragic moral drama, and my question is—do you realize you’re making one movie not four? But after seeing Sweeney Todd, I have to say that with the right story and in the right hands, horror, music, comedy, and tragedy can actually come together in a way so unique that the movie it creates moves beyond just a fun musical, a fine drama, or a cool horror flick to become a truly superb film.

From beginning to end, Sweeney Todd is a movie that grabs onto you in almost every way it can. Even before the movie begins, dark and ominous organ music previews the shadowy tale that is to follow. As its opening credits begin to creep onto the screen, an orchestral version of the Ballad of Sweeney Todd previews the haunting music that will tell its story. Dark monotone scenes of rainy London contrasted with the bright red blood that drips behind names and roles opens our eyes to the striking artistry and style that will bring to life every scene and character in the movie. And as the bright red blood continues to seep and flow, over and under and through the dark and eerie streets of London, the gruesome tale of envy, revenge, and the bloody mark it leaves on all it comes near is set to begin.

If you are not familiar with the tale of Sweeney Todd, it goes something like this. A talented barber named Benjamin Barker (Johnny Depp) has a wife (Laura Michelle Kelly), and she is beautiful. But then a greedy judge named Turpin (Alan Rickman) also sees that she is beautiful. He arranges to have Barker sent to Australia for a crime he did not commit. And then, fifteen years later, by the name of Sweeney Todd, Barker returns to London to enact his revenge.

As the story’s subtitle indicates, Todd soon becomes the Demon Barber of Fleet Street, giving men around London the “closest shaves” they have ever had and obsessing over his need to give Turpin his last. As his obsession grows, pie maker Mrs. Lovett (Helena Bonham Carter) helps Todd deal with some of the “problems” Todd’s murderous urges create and dreams of what a wonderful life she and Todd might someday have together. And as the story goes on, the blood just continues to spew and flow in more abundance with each passing minute.

In many ways, the movie is very much a portrait of how darkness takes over—how much it is present already and how much more damage it can still do when fed and left to grow. Artistically, Director Tim Burton fills the movie with shades of darkness everywhere. Most scenes are painted with muted colors, almost in the realm of black and white. Clothing is dark and grey and dirty. And almost every character is made up with a sickly white pallor and dark under eye circles.

Against this dark backdrop, color and brightness stand out in a way that is nothing less than startling. In the blue dress and golden hair of Barker’s daughter Johanna (Jayne Wisener), the color serves as a reminder of innocence, beauty, and good that might still be out there somewhere. Through every daydream of Mrs. Lovett, her colorful world and brightened countenance paint a picture of hope and belief in something better. But perhaps the most intriguing color in the movie is the bright red blood that spews from each of Todd’s victims. Through our eyes, each of Todd’s bloody slayings is gruesome and gory and the epitome of evil. But if we dare to look through Todd’s eyes, the scary truth is that he sees the blood as his salvation and his path to life just like every other color we see around him.

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