The Music Meister wasn't just out to fix Barry and Kara's "relationship problems"; the reason he stole their powers and robbed a bank was to help Wally get out of the emotional funk he was in by giving him somebody to fight.
What, Cisco got his line about "someone with...green skin and a sickass cape"...I got a good laugh out of that.it is interesting how nonchalant Team Flash was about meeting Martian Manhunter and Mon El.
Hanging tough.I decided to watch the episode.
The Music Meister wasn't just out to fix Barry and Kara's "relationship problems"; the reason he stole their powers and robbed a bank was to help Wally get out of the emotional funk he was in by giving him somebody to fight.
Hanging tough.
I'm fine with Barry staying with Iris as long as it doesn't fall into needless melodrama
Yeah, I actually would've appreciated more singing. They kept talking about how easy it was to convince people in musicals, but if you want to get a point across in a musical, you have to sing it. I guess they wanted to keep it plausible with Barry and Kara not being able to instantly know a new song, but it hampered things a bit.
I thought it was great. It made it more meaningful to have one of the songs occur in the real world. And the fact that we all have music players on our phones now made it easy to justify him having a soundtrack to sing to. And he's the Flash, so he could've written and rehearsed the song at superspeed, though I assume he had to record the accompaniment at normal speed.
The one problem was that his voice sounded too processed and studio-perfect.
What I want to know is, since the song from Guys and Dolls was being sung by the three gangster dads in two different locations, did Barry and Kara only hear half of it each? That would've been confusing. Or did they somehow hear both Malcolm's part and the other two's part at the same time?
If you're going to do it, then do it and accept that certain temporary alterations of the status quo come with it, like the fact that characters in a musical always know a new song, because they're in a musical, or the fact that they can't just stop themselves from bursting into song even if its embarassing. If you're not going to do it, then what's the point?
I was actually surprised by how much I didn't like Grant's singing in the episode, and I think this is a big part of the reason. It really sounded like it had been altered, like they somehow didn't trust his original performance.
Everyone else's part sounded great, though. I knew they had a lot of great singers, but I had no idea the guy playing Winn could sing like that. That was a great surprise.
Yeah, with MM's powers, it would've been easy enough to make people sing. Granted, this version wasn't as coercive as his namesake -- it was important to him to let his subjects figure things out for themselves and exercise free will -- but he could've at least imparted them with the knowledge of the lyrics and melodies.
Well, maybe they were trying to avoid comparisons to "Once More, With Feeling."
It just sounded like standard music-studio polish to me. The way singing in film and TV is almost always done is that the songs are recorded ahead of time in the studio to get the best sound quality, then lip-synched to by the performers on stage. It's almost unheard of to use the actual live singing recorded during the filming of the scene. That Anne Hathaway Les Miserables from 2012 did it that way, and its trailers made a big deal of what a novel approach it was to capture the raw sound of the actors singing on stage like in a theatrical musical, taking advantage of improvements in recording tech or the like. The idea was that it would make the singing sound more natural, more invested with the emotion the actors were channeling in the moment as they acted, rather than being more emotionally detached because it was recorded out of context weeks or months earlier in an acoustically sterile environment. Apparently, though, it was just perceived by audiences and critics as bad singing.
Anyway, it was pretty obvious from the sound of Barry's singing that it was of a piece with the music track recorded in the studio, rather than being "live" as it was presented in the scene. I would've been happier if they'd gone with a more authentic live sound, even if they'd faked it in the studio recording.
Apparently Jeremy Jordan is a well-known up-and-coming Broadway star. He's best known from the 2012 musical Newsies, for which he was nominated for the Tony and Drama Desk awards. He was also in the cast of Rock of Ages, was a replacement lead as Tony in the 2009-11 West Side Story revival, and played the male title character in a 2011 Bonnie and Clyde musical.
A bit late for that considering the past few episodes, but hopefully that was the end of it and maybe Iris can get back to being a reporter.
The writers remember she still works as a reporter, right?![]()
@kirk55555 Barry likely gave him the name Music Meister because of the fact that he A) trapped them in an alternate reality that relied on their inner thoughts and love of musicals to create itself and B) actually sang while in said reality, so it doesn't really matter that he wasn't like the Music Meister from Batman: The Brave and the Bold or the comics; that's the name they chose to give him, so that's who he is.
I'd like a sequel to take place in the REAL world, where people sing against their will, and of course dance perfectly. It would be fun.
This is a fair criticism
While we're on the subject, I want people, without invoking the "it's not like the source material" strawman, to explain to me exactly what is so bad about the show's Music Meister possibly being a 5th Dimensional imp or some other type of "god-like creature".
Is it me or does Barry/Kara have far more chemistry than Barry/Iris or Kara/Jimmy & Mon-El
While we're on the subject, I want people, without invoking the "it's not like the source material" strawman, to explain to me exactly what is so bad about the show's Music Meister possibly being a 5th Dimensional imp or some other type of "god-like creature".
I agree with you. It should have been one or the other. I liked the hesitation of Kara and Barry at first though, so I didn't want to lose that.Hah! I had the opposite reaction. I enjoyed the ep, but I thought that it arguably spent too much time trying to "justify" the conceit and easing into it, instead of just embracing it right away. I found myself getting impatient with the Star Lab scenes and with Barry and Kara for not getting with the program sooner. I mean, if you're going to do a musical, just cut to the chase and bring on the singing and dancing . . ...
To my mind, it took Barry and Kara a little too long to come around to the idea that "okay, we're in musical, so let's just go with it."
But that's a judgment call.
I dunno, the whole "against their will" part kinda bugs me. How about something where the heroes, for some reason, have to deliberately stage a musical of their own in order to outfox the Music Meister or trap some villain? Like, maybe Grodd comes back, and they discover that singing helps them resist his mind control, plus he hates musicals so it drives him to distraction. Maybe Meister drops in to help nudge them toward figuring that out.
It's nothing but whining about how these writers "disrespected the source material" and once again ignoring/willfully misunderstanding what the word ADAPTATION means.
While we're on the subject, I want people, without invoking the "it's not like the source material" strawman, to explain to me exactly what is so bad about the show's Music Meister possibly being a 5th Dimensional imp or some other type of "god-like creature".
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