Delicious Mincemeat

Sick of holiday cheer? Tim Burton, Johnny Depp and Stephen Sondheim have a fine present for you!

Tim Burton delivers his best film yet with the powerful Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. While cinema has seen some decent musicals in the last few years, this one may be the best of the recent bunch.

Johnny Depp stars as Benjamin Barker, a banished barber seeking revenge, reborn as the bloodthirsty Sweeney Todd. Barker's daughter and wife were taken away from him by a deranged judge (Alan Rickman), and the villain sent him to prison in Australia. Upon his escape, Barker (looking a little worse for wear, with a white streak blasting through his jet-black hair, and a super-pale complexion) returns to London to reopen shop.

Dwelling beneath the shop is Mrs. Lovett (Helena Bonham Carter), maker of the worst meat pies in London and an admirer of Sweeney Todd. When Sweeney takes to slashing the necks of his patrons, Mrs. Lovett suggests that they put the corpses to good use. Soon, she's making the best meat pies in London, courtesy of Sweeney's death chair.

Mind you, this is an appropriately R-rated film. When Sweeney's blade meets jugular, the geysers of blood are quite remarkable, followed by bodies violently slipping through a hole in the floor and smashing onto the pavement below.

Don't let the previews fool you: This is a full-blown Stephen Sondheim musical. Much of the dialogue is delivered via song, often in the "talky-singing" mode. Highlights include Bonham Carter's delivery of the song "The Worst Pies in London," during which Burton finds morbid delight in Mrs. Lovett's roach-infested kitchen. "Johanna (Reprise)" amounts to the film's greatest moment, when Sweeney dispatches victims while singing a majestic ode to Johanna (played by Jayne Wisener, making an impressive debut), his long-lost daughter. The number, the score's best track, is shared by Anthony Hope (Jamie Campbell Bower), Johanna's clueless suitor.

Depp takes the role of Sweeney Todd and makes it his own. Boasting a strong singing voice, a classic scowl and searing eyes, Depp has never been better. He should be a lock for an Oscar nomination, and while the competition is strong this year, he's a serious contender. Depp and Burton are proving to be an actor/director combo right up there with the likes of Scorsese and De Niro.

Bonham Carter, Burton's real-life girlfriend, proves that nepotism can be a good thing. She is the perfect choice for Mrs. Lovett; her look and sound fit of the role. She should also get some Oscar consideration, and I'd love to see both Depp and Bonham Carter perform their numbers live onstage. Pay them millions to do a Broadway revival. I'd rather see that than Young Frankenstein. I heard that sucks.

Burton approaches the look of the film they way you'd expect him to, with lots of gray and blue, and plenty of moonlight. The movie's look is similar to past Burton efforts (especially Sleepy Hollow), and it's wholly appropriate. He stages an escape from the sinister darkness with a hilarious fantasy sequence set to "By the Sea" (sung by Bonham Carter), during which Burton sets the action in colorful daylight with a frowning, disenchanted Sweeney.

Rickman does nicely with his supporting role, playing a hateful character with small hints of humanity trying to bust out. Wisener has a sweet voice to go with her Christina Ricci-like looks. Sacha Baron Cohen scores big laughs in the small role of Signor Adolfo Pirelli, Sweeney's barber competitor and first victim. Timothy Spall remains hard to look at, which is appropriate for his role as the snaky Beadle Bamford, and young Ed Sanders (who looks like a miniature, brown-haired Sting) shines as Toby, the apprentice who makes a startling discovery in Mrs. Lovett's basement.

Yes, the holidays are usually a time for sunny, happy films and, if they're musicals, they are often quite joyous. Fine by me. Burton's macabre musical is now the high-water mark for modern excursions into the genre.

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street is not showing in any theaters in the area.

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