Viva! West Side Story, CU Âé¶čÓ°Ôș cinephile says
Ernesto Acevedo-Muñoz, cinema studies chairâand man whoâs âmorally opposedâ to remakesâgives thumbs-up to Spielbergâs version
Ernesto Acevedo-Muñoz, professor and chair of cinema studies at the Âé¶čÓ°Ôș, had never been a fan of movie remakes.
âIâm generally morally opposed to the concept of the remake, because itâs based on what I believe to be a flawed premise that contemporary younger audiences are not interested in (film) classics,â says Acevedo-Muñoz, author of .
âI donât agree. My experience in the classroom every day is the opposite of that.â He notes the marketing tagline for the 1968 re-release of the original movie: âUnlike other classics, West Side Story gets younger.â
And, as he put it in 2020, âWho asked to see a remake of Dirty Dancing? Who asked to see a remake of Fame? Who asked to see a remake of West Side Story? Nobody.â
Even so, Acevedo-Muñoz agreed in 2019 to serve on the Community Advisory Board for âs recently released (and now Oscar-nominated) of the 1961 cinematic of West Side Story, which he credits for inspiring him to go into film study.
âThe Community Advisory Board brought artists, intellectuals, teachers and historians, many from Puerto Rico and the Latino community, and other groups misrepresented in 1961 movie and the (original) show to offer feedback and advice,â he says.
After several months of Community Advisory Board meetings and consultations, Acevedo-Muñoz declared himself âcautiously optimisticâ about the remake. Still, he was leery, warning that âthe recent box-office track record of musical and other remakes suggests it could be a risky enterprise.â
He attended a private screening in August, under obligation to keep his counsel until the filmâs premiere on Dec. 7. But now, after two and half years of consulting on the project, his time on the red carpet has arrived. His opinion?
âIâm very happy,â he says. Specifically, he gives a thumbs-up for:
- âThe movie is gorgeous to look at ⊠Itâs one of the most beautiful movies Iâve seen this year.â
- âIâm extremely satisfied with the cast, particularly (Maria), (Bernardo) and (ŽĄČÔŸ±łÙČč).â
- âThey went a long way into making these characters stand out as real people, as opposed to the caricatures theyâve been to some extent in the past.â
- Whereas the voices in the â61 version had âmostly been dubbed by ghost singers, these are the voices of the real actors, and they sound magnificent, with accurate inflections of things like accent.â
- âThey asked earnestly for advice and feedback (from the Community Advisory Board). ⊠They made an earnest effort to see what the new movie could do better and to correct some of the perceived and real injustices committed in the first movie and the original show.â
(Still, he recognizes that the plot is a bit silly, implausible, perhaps even histrionic: âTony and Maria know each other for all of 24 hours!â he notes. Meanwhile, , the teens whose tragic, impulsive romance inspired West Side Story, had a whole five days to cement the undying love that led to their deaths and those of many others in their respective clans. And he likes to open lectures about another implausibility with a classic joke: âTony runs through the Puerto Rican neighborhood yelling âMaria!â and only one girl comes to the window.â Ba-dum-tsss.)
Acevedo-Muñoz is especially impressed that the producers incorporated so many of the Community Advisory Boardâs recommendations and suggestions into the final cut, including advice about âthe musical landscape of 1950s New York Cityâ and the look of the barrio, right down to the graffiti. Especially important, he says, was the producersâ decision not to use English subtitles for spoken Spanish, as recommended by most of the Community Advisory Boardâs members.
âTo use subtitles would in a way be âotheringâ (Spanish-speaking characters) who are really centralâ to the film, he says.
Heâs also pleased that the new version works hard to portray the Puerto Rico-born immigrants who make up the Sharks gang as âfully rounded characters with histories and personalities, not flat and unidimensionalââand, some critics argue, stereotypically violentâas they were portrayed in the 1961 version.
The movie examines the anti-Puerto Rican prejudice of police more fully and give more weight to Anybodys (a rough analog of Romeoâs servant and informant Baltasar Romeo and Juliet played by ), portraying him as a complex transgender man, as opposed to caricature of a âtomboyâ in the original.
Though Acevedo-Muñoz remains morally opposed to remakes, he says that West Side Story is a rare exception to the rule.
Through his contribution to the film, he got to meet members of the cast, including Zegler, DeBose and Alvarez. And was honored to be invited to the premier at the famous âone of the elaborate, ornate âmovie palacesâ from Hollywoodâs early daysâwhere he hung out with , Spielbergâs long-time producer.
âGoing to a Hollywood premier wasnât on my bucket list, but when the bucket comes, thatâs it. I wasnât going to miss the opportunity,â he says. âBeing on the red carpet, beneath that marquee, was fun.â