A film review - Pitch Perfect
Starring: Anna Kendrick, Brittany Snow, Skylar Astin,
Ben Platt, Anna Camp, Rebel Wilson, Ester Dean, Hana Mae Lee, Jinhee Joung and Adam
DeVine
Director(s): Jason Moore
Writer(s): Kay Cannon (screenplay), Mickey Rapkin (book)
Perfect pitch is the ability of a musician to reproduce or
identify a musical note, precisely without the benefit of any external
reference. “Pitch Perfect” is the story
of singers with perfect pitch banding together at college to form a capella
singing groups to compete in regional and national competitions. Barden University is the home of two very
successful groups. The “Treble Makers”
is an all-boy, mostly bad-boy wannabes who won last year’s national
championships, after the all-girl Barden Belles had a major mishap during their
final performance. The woman who was so
embarrassed there at Lincoln Center, “Chloe” (Brittany Snow) now holds the
pitch pipe and she’ll be running the Belles in the upcoming school year, with
assistance from the other returning member of last year’s team. “Aubrey” (Anna Camp) is a great singer, but
we find out later she has nodes on her vocal codes.
The girl that Aubrey most wants to get to join the Belles is
“Beca” (Anna Kendrick). Beca lives,
breathes and sleeps music, remixing songs in the hope she can get them played
on the college’s radio station. She
doesn’t want to be there getting an education, her plans call for her to go to
L.A. to become a music producer. But her
father, a professor at Barden is insisting she attend college. Considering that she’s stuck in a room with a
Korean student, “Kimmy Jin” (Jinhee Joung) who actively dislikes her, there isn’t
much to recommend her college experience.
But when Aubrey hears Beca singing in the showers, she
insists that she audition. The auditions
are a hoot, with the four a capella groups on campus listening to all the
candidates singing the same song, and then choosing who they want to
recruit. The Treble Makers want “Jesse”
(Skylar Astin) who wants to do it, but also wants to hook up with Beca.
The major conflict within the Belles, once their eclectic
line-up is set, is that they sing only songs from women, and nothing modern or
particularly upbeat. That makes it hard
to compete against the Treble Makers, who have hot, upbeat modern music with
strongly choreographed routines. Beca
wants to change the musical selections of the Belles, but Chloe is firmly in
charge and firmly opposed.
This is a very funny story that manages to include conflict,
relationship issues on both the boyfriend/girlfriend level as well as the
parent/young adult level. The humor is
constantly present but so are the story arcs of Beca, Jessie, “Fat Amy” (Rebel
Wilson, who steals every scene she’s in) as well as Aubrey and Chloe. In fact, all of the singers in the Belles are
on journeys that they can only complete if they get to the finals in Lincoln
Center and prevail.
The music is well-chosen.
Pitch Perfect makes fun of the
entire a capella scene, much like Best in
Show did the same for the kennel club competitions featuring purebred
dogs. The announcers here are right up
there in terms of being hysterically funny ala Fred Willard in that great
mockumentary.
Kendrick delivers the stand-out performance among everyone
other than Rebel Wilson who has the potential to become a serious star.
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