The Rotti Horror Show | Repo! The Genetic Opera - Review
I wouldn’t go as far
as saying Repo! The Genetic Opera was
93 minutes amputated from my life that I wish I could have back, as it was at
least entertainingly bad, rather than awful enough to make me gouge out my own
eyes, like one character does before the end. I’m not one for abandoning a
film, especially if I’ve spent money on it – even if it’s only £2.99 - and
there is some entertainment factor. I guess the concept of a horror musical
starring such high calibre singers as Phantom
of the Opera’s Sarah Brightman and Anthony Stewart Head (The Rocky Horror Show, also Giles from Buffy The Vampire Slayer, which had its
own musical episode) and Paul Sorvino appealed, along with some cool design.
Less so Paris Hilton (erm, House of Wax?)
and some bloke calling himself ‘Ogre’.
After seven years of
it sitting on my shelf, I’ve finally watched Repo! in which Mr Head, Ms. Brightman and Paul Sorvino give their
all to a story that doesn’t deserve it. It concerns the efforts of dying tycoon,
the improbably yet aptly-named Rotti Largo (Sorvino) - apt as in, he's rotten, like rotting flesh…or something; to bequeath ‘GeneCo’, his
organ donation company, to Shilo (Alexa Vega), rather than any of his wayward,
corrupt children, including Amber (Hilton) and Pavi (‘Ogre’). Shilo is the
daughter of Rotti’s love rival Nathan (Head), who is also the Repo Man,
responsible for repossessing unpaid-for organs provided by GeneCo. Rotti blames
Nathan for the death of Marni (Sarah Power) the woman whom Nathan stole from
him and then accidentally murdered.
This is an intriguing
set-up and what I imagine to be a typical opera-style tale of love, loss and
betrayal, yet it’s anaesthetized by crap CGI – the cityscapes are heavily
inspired by Blade Runner, which
achieved vastly better results without using a computer over three decades ago
– as well as some lazy storytelling through crap-looking comic book panels that
fill in character’s backstories. The ridiculous makeup is also distracting; Brightman’s
Blind Mag character looks like she was made up by an actual blind person (no
disrespect) and resembles a Manga version of post-millennium Cher.
Meanwhile, Pavi’s’ Phantom Of The Opera-like death mask, stapled to his own torn features, is presumably meant to be creepy but, with the addition of 'Ogre's' wild facial mugging and bodily gesticulations, it’s reminiscent of a character from Bo’ Selecta!
Worst of all, the songs of Repo! are completely artless. Most of the lyrics are so repetitive and/or literal as to make them redundant. Before Shilo walks around the mausoleum to catch an insect, she pointlessly sings about it. A little later, she bluntly wails of inheriting her dead mother’s blood disease, ‘Why are my genetics such a bitch?’ Some of the lyrics are also spoken, as if to infuse greater emotion but probably just to cover up the limited abilities of certain cast members. This is understandable with Paris Hilton, but pointless when it’s Head, Brightman, or the rich opera Baritone of Paul Sorvino. In a possible case of art echoing life, Paris’ character, Amber, is so ‘addicted to the knife’, she’s had surgery done all over; just not her vocal chords, sadly.
I get that Repo! isn’t intended to be taken too
seriously but even that caveat cannot save it. Rocky Horror is campy and tongue in cheek, where the intentionally
bad effects and overacting are all part of the charm but at least the songs
were catchy and fun. Repo! Is a horror show of a different kind.
Moulin Rouge! seems to be another influence (not least by the title’s exclamation mark); an early tracking shot zooming out form Shilo’s bedroom prison to reveal the city outside echoes a similar shot from Ewan McGregor’s room in Baz Luhrmann’s film. There is also a stage-set climax, complete with a character cradling a dying loved one in their arms (Rocky Horror also does this, as I’m sure countless other shows do but RH and Moulin Rouge! are most likely more influential. The latter’s name-checked on the Repo! DVD cover, anyway).
Moulin Rouge! seems to be another influence (not least by the title’s exclamation mark); an early tracking shot zooming out form Shilo’s bedroom prison to reveal the city outside echoes a similar shot from Ewan McGregor’s room in Baz Luhrmann’s film. There is also a stage-set climax, complete with a character cradling a dying loved one in their arms (Rocky Horror also does this, as I’m sure countless other shows do but RH and Moulin Rouge! are most likely more influential. The latter’s name-checked on the Repo! DVD cover, anyway).
I don’t know much about
musical theatre or opera, much like the makers of Repo! I imagine but director Darren Lynn Bousman handles the Grand
Guignol horror aspects reasonably well (unsurprisingly, given his work on three
of the increasingly gore-over-story lead Saw
sequels), injecting them with some gallows humour. I hope he won’t be making any more
musicals soon.
(Images courtesy of:
http://www.repo-opera.com/flash_home.html
http://s185.photobucket.com/user/twilight_knight_713/media/Wallpaper/REPO%20THE%20GENETIC%20OPERA/vlcsnap-377142.jpg.html
http://i3.bebo.com/028/9/mediuml/2007/06/02/20/4174403883a4566965384b869672891ml.jpg
http://www.fanpop.com/clubs/repo-the-genetic-opera/images/3815539/title/nathan-photo
http://content.internetvideoarchive.com/content/photos/3342/14036641_.jpg)
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