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“Moulin Rouge” is a Love Letter to Style and Song

by Mario Muscar

I have previously written about movies showing at Towngate. I would classify myself as a movie lover. And I was incredibly excited when I heard that Towngate was showing the musical Moulin Rouge on its big screen.

Moulin Rouge is one of those movies that hit me at the right time in my life. When it was released, I was fresh out of college and hanging out with my friends, with little care in the world. And along came this film which summed up what was most important to me in my life at the time: art, music, celebration, beauty and love.

Moulin Rouge spoke to me.

The plot is simple. Taking place in Paris at the turn of the 20th Century, we are shown the tale of a young Englishman writer who falls into the bohemian lifestyle and falls in love with a singer at the burlesque night club, the Moulin Rouge. However, she has been promised by the manager to a Duke in return for funding his next production. As the young lovers meet in secret, Satine’s wedding day draws closer but she hides a fatal secret from both Christian and the Duke. The characters in the film are romantics who focus their lives on glitz, glamour, art and love.

A Feverish, Stylized Story Leaves You Breathless

Directed by Australian director Baz Luhrmann, Moulin Rouge tells a feverish, stylized story. This is the typical style of Luhrmann as can be seen in his updated take on Williams Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet or his ballroom dancing romantic comedy, Strictly Ballroom. He has such a strong, vibrant style.

The movie is like a fever dream and jumps from moment to moment. The color alone is a brash and in-your-face Technicolor dream, with red (or rouge), of course, being the primary color. A color or love, but also of blood (and therefore death). Luhrmann definitely has the eye of an artist and the color of the film shows this.

The sheer energy of Moulin Rouge can at times be exhausting…but in that “I danced all night and had the time of my life” kind of exhaustion. Every moment in the movie is that moment of anticipation and excitement before the big musical number hits. The constant build-up can leave you breathless. And it’s that excitement and energy that always brings me back to this movie.

Well-Known Songs We All Love

The music in the film is also amazing and owes a lot to the post-MTV world in which the film was created. Moulin Rouge already has an anachronistic quality to it and the music hammers that feeling home even more. All throughout, the actors perform contemporary, well-known songs that we all know and love (“Like a Virgin,” “Your Song,” “Smells Like Teen Spirit” and “Lady Marmalade” to name a few.)

I highly recommend you get out and see this film on the big screen this weekend, especially with the added bonus of seeing it in a classic theatre like Towngate. I think the dancers at the Moulin Rouge would approve of that choice. And maybe take away a little love when you see it. As the film says, “The greatest thing you’ll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return.”

Moulin Rouge at Towngate

You can see Moulin Rouge at Towngate at 7pm Friday, January 25; 4 and 7pm Saturday, January 26 and 2 and 4pm Sunday, January 27.

Tickets are $7. Purchase tickets at the door. Box office opens one hour prior to each screening. You can purchase beer, wine, soda, water, popcorn and candy at all Towngate movies.

Towngate: A Unique Movie Theater in Wheeling.

A church-turned-theater, Towngate is located in Wheeling’s historic Centre Market District.

At Towngate, not only can you watch live theater productions, spoken word performances, improv and concerts, you can see movies, too! Towngate is also a single screen cinema. On select weekends throughout the year, we show classic and independent films, thought-provoking documentaries and film shorts by local and regional filmmakers. Our movie selections encourage thought and conversation.

Whether you consider yourself a film buff or you only like movies for the popcorn, our films will entertain and inspire. See you at Towngate!

The Prosers Return to Towngate with “Lighthouse”

On Saturday, January 19, The Prosers return to the Towngate Theatre stage, bringing their unique style of spoken word poetry. The group performs original, intensely emotional works. They share powerful stories of personal struggle and authentic experiences while examining social justice issues.

Lighthouse

This performance is The Prosers main show of this season at Towngate. Prosers leader Samantha Pearl said the theme for this show is Lighthouse.

“This show explores what each individual’s own ‘light in the dark’ consists of—what brings them hope,” Samantha said. “The lighthouse symbolizes that hope, as sailors use its light to return home.”

Samantha said the show will give audience members a “feel-good refuge.”

“We are a rag-tag group of artists that aren’t afraid to speak (or curse) our truths,” she said. “This show will focus on positivity and hope, with themes of personal struggle tied in.”

In addition to Samantha, Prosers for this performance include: Ryan Norman, Rosaline Clark, Claudell Whetstone, Sarah Clark, Sandra Baker, Matthew Nickolas, Ben Casteel and Vince Caruso.

Samantha added that she thinks spoken word poetry is a unique method of storytelling.

“Spoken Word enables the artist to tell a story in a way a book cannot,” she said. “It allows us to examine social, personal, and moral issues through an expression of rhyme, rhythm or free verse. It doesn’t require a set pattern or definition, only the ability to make someone else feel something.”

Open Mic to Follow

In addition to The Prosers who are performing at this show, the event will also feature an open mic session. Poets, new and experienced, shy and bold, are welcome to bring their poems and read aloud to the audience.

If you have something to say, the microphones and the ears are open at Towngate Theatre. Come share your story. Come share your perspective.

Tickets are on sale now. Purchase tickets online, at the door or call 304-242-7700. Admission is only $5.

Towngate Theatre is more than theater…

Towngate’s Second Season enhances Wheeling’s arts landscape with literary programming, spoken word performances, improvisation and more. Programs often feature works by emerging and/or local authors, playwrights and poets.