by smudge on 18 Sep 2009 00:56
Anyone with spoiler allergies should stop reading now.
That was absolutely bonkers, and hugely entertaining. There were moments of genius set-wise: strange structures on wheels being hauled around, cranked up, rigged with sails, and set fire to by the cast, creating buildings, galleons, random orgy venue (complete with fountains), and a coliseum. For me, the staging was the star of the show.
In addition we had acrobats, fire-eaters, dancers, and horses. Lots of horses. Plus a small squadron of slightly bemused doves. And a couple of cameo appearances by the son of god. The chariot race was by turns impressive, dramatic and Wacky Races funny. The music was glorious. And loud! All fabulous stuff.
The downside? To my ears the music (pre-recorded), narration (a mix of live and pre-recorded I think) and dialogue were all getting on top of each other. I'm not sure what purpose the dialogue served when it couldn't be heard (I love the idea of aramaic and latin coming alive in the O2, but in practice it could have been Swahili, German, or English and the effect would have been the same. Which is a shame.) One point where I could sort of understand what they were trying to achieve, the owner of the horses which Ben Hur will drive was naming them - for four of the brightest stars in the heavens (I think - I only caught a couple of names). The actor was calling out the names, the narrator was sketching the character of each, the horses in question were licketty-splitting around the arena. It very nearly worked as a magnificent visual/aural experience - but it was hard to hear what either actor or narrator were saying.
It was somewhat strange watching a be-suited Mr Copeland striding/riding through the costumed mayhem, elucidating for the audience, but being drowned out at points by his own soundtrack.
The script for the narration is best described as 'to the point', which is as it should be. This is a simple tale - no need to get all verbose about it.
So - as a 'spectacle' it was rather marvelous, but this humble punter hopes that the sound can be tweaked a bit.
Pre and post-match festivities were lovely. So great to share the madness with an enthusiastic bunch of fellow loons, and exceedingly tolerant spouses. I just hope everyone managed to get off at the right tube stop on the way home, and that the DLR was still running when Conroy got to it.....
"You can't always do right, but you can always do what's left."