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HomeReviewsFor Good' Is Wicked Good

For Good’ Is Wicked Good

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137 minutes/rated PG
Directed by Jon M.Chu
Produced by Marc Platt and David Stone
Written by Winnie Holzman and Dana Fox
Based on Wicked (by Stephen Schwartz and Winnie Holzman)
Based on Wicked (the book by Gregory Maguire)
Starring Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande, Jonathan Bailey, Ethan Slater, Bowen Yang, Marissa Bode, Peter Dinklage, Michelle Yeoh and Jeff Goldblum
Cinematography by Alice Brooks
Editing by Myron Kerstein
Music by John Powell and Stephen Schwartz
Opening theatrically the week of November 21, courtesy of Universal Pictures

Wicked: For Good cannot match its predecessor’s “Holy shit… they did it!” sense of surprise, both in terms of Wicked Part One’s overall quality and the extent to which splitting the play into two parts turned the first act into a heartbreaking anti-hero origin story. Good is not the enemy of perfect, and Jon M. Chu’s second “Passion of the Thropp” melodrama delivers a high-energy, big-scale recreation of the source material’s second half.

Whether or not it’s as “great” as Wicked Part One, Wicked For Good is still very good. Or, more specifically, if I jestfully referred to the last film as “a three-star movie with a ten-star ending,” this one is a three-star movie straight down the line. In terms of these various “part two of two” flicks, it’s much closer to Dune Part Two than It Chapter Two.

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Set months (or years?) after Elphaba Thropp defied the not-so-wonderful Wizard of Oz, Wicked For Good picks up with Emerald City’s disenfranchised animals suffering ever more. While Elphaba has publicly embraced her role as the “Wicked Witch of the West,” Glinda has been… not-so-reluctantly installed as a propaganda-spewing, or at least narrative-confirming, mouthpiece for the Wizard.

Her “The Girl in the Bubble,” an original song, is solid even as it’s more a triumph of production design and cinematic trickery than a likely karaoke favorite. “There’s No Place Like Home” poignantly acknowledges the push-pull between staying and fighting or seeking safety elsewhere. It’s good enough, and feels organic enough alongside the established tunes, that I didn’t initially realize it was the second of two newbies.

Ephaba does what she can to fight for an animal population and to expose the ruler as a non-magical fraud, even as many of those animals have already given up. Erivo’s Glinda struggles with the consequences of her public persona while Fiyero, now Captain of the Wizard’s Guard, still hopes to find the pariah for whom he has fallen in love. As this would-be heroic trio struggles to balance desire and duty, the grim political status quo continues to bring out the worst in many of those with a vested interest in the current inequity.

A “perfect storm” of tornadoes, tragedy and earthly trespassers will bring this conflict to a head. All of this unfolds as expected for those with even token awareness of The Wizard of Oz. Even noting the first film’s medias res prologue, which all but “spoils” the film’s finale, there is an aggressive sense of inevitable doom and, as Elphaba wages a righteous crusade that she doesn’t really think will succeed, “I burn my life to make a sunrise I’ll never see!” fatalism.

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