Classic Movie Review: Cabaret

By Josh Spiegel

May 16, 2011

Wilkommen, bienvenue.

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What’s most interesting is that the movie version of Cabaret is very, very different from the stage version, which has seven more songs, several more characters and even more subplots that were axed for the silver screen. The film version is specifically about how Sally Bowles falls in love with one young man, and the rich German who comes in between them when they have relationship problems. Bowles is a dreamer, an upbeat singer and dancer who wants to become a star, so when she gets pregnant, complications arise. Suffice to say, Cabaret is not a musical with a happy ending, leaving us in the Kit Kat Klub with Sally and the Master of Ceremonies as they’re surrounded by an audience that is filled with more Nazis than anyone else. It’s still 1931 at the end of the film, so we all know that it’s not getting any better for them.

What’s left to marvel at in Cabaret are those aforementioned performances from Minnelli and Grey. While there are other actors in the film, not even Michael York as Sally’s lover, Brian, makes much of a dent. Even back in 1972, when she was still breaking out of the mold of being Judy Garland’s daughter, Minnelli was a bright, shining star. She’s had a long, fascinating roller coaster of a career (I can only imagine the look on her face had anyone told her after winning her Oscar that, roughly 30 years down the line, she’d be guest-starring as a vertigo-ridden old lady on a surreal TV comedy), but she’s as charming and winning as her mother was in her musicals, despite the grim subject matter and content. Sally Bowles, as portrayed by Minnelli, is flighty, bright, brash, and completely individualistic.




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Grey is equally stunning, reprising the role he originated on Broadway (which won him a Tony). The Master of Ceremonies, unlike Bowles, has a lot less to do, but it’s an incredibly flashy role that Grey sinks his teeth into. From the opening number, “Wilkommen,” to the final, purposely gaudy yet undeniably haunting final image, Grey is something of the glue that holds the movie together, as opposed to just falling apart completely. Cabaret is full of flaws, but I figure that without these two performances, it wouldn’t even be remembered these days. There’s something to be said for the full force of star power, on display here in these two diametrically different roles.

Another noteworthy moment that’s almost absolutely separate from the rest of the movie is the sole song that doesn’t get performed in the Kit Kat Klub, “Tomorrow Belongs to Me,” sung by a cheery young man with a clear, solid voice, all the more appropriate as it functions as a forceful call to arms for the patrons of a local beer garden, as Sally, Brian, and the third man in their relationship, Max, watch in growing fear. The song is, typical for Kander and Ebb, deliberately sneaky and sardonic while seeming uncynical on the surface. Cabaret wants to be equally so, but its twisted love story just never gels as well as it should; if Minnelli’s romantic partners were similarly fascinating characters (or were performed as well), the movie would be, for me, an instant classic. As it stands, I can kind of understand the lovefest surrounding the movie, but can only join in regarding Sally Bowles and the Master of Ceremonies.


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