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A Complete Curmudgeon's Guide To 'The Sound Of Music'
NPR ^ | 11/08/13 | Linda Holmes

Posted on 11/12/2013 4:35:52 PM PST by Borges

NBC has released the first trailer for its live version of The Sound Of Music, airing December 5.

Now, some have chosen to focus on the negative; on the nostalgic sense that to remake this show — or, more precisely, to remake the movie version, as they may well do, at least in part, owing to its ubiquity — is a mistake. No matter the talent involved, like Audra McDonald (as Mother Abbess) and Laura Benanti (as the Baroness), it will be an NBC remake.

But if we truly want to be fair to the new version, we must allow our inner curmudgeon to truly let loose upon the original. The bad news is that you may not have an inner curmudgeon. The good news is that I do. In fact, I have several. It's quite possible that several other people's inner curmudgeons have taken up residence in my soul, which is why they frequently throw parties.

Let us begin. We will not start at the very beginning, because that is not necessarily a very good place to start; it is actually a rather arbitrary place to start, Maria.

1. Out of "Do, Re, Mi, Fa, So, La, Ti, Do," the only one Maria apparently can spell is "la." This is no educator.

2. Rolfe is presented as a romantic hero despite the fact that he is clearly intimidated by Liesl's burgeoning sexuality to the point where he calls her "timid and shy and scared" at the very moment she is leaning in, if you know what I mean. "Innocent as a rose," Liesl sings while spinning around so her boyfriend can see her underpants. Soon after, she engages in one of cinema's more erotic instances of fully clothed head-rubbing. As Melinda Taub once rather brilliantly wrote at McSweeney's on behalf of the Baroness, Liesl is in fact rather "intent on losing her virginity to the mailman."

3. You only have 17 favorite things*, and one of them is "doorbells"?

4. Maria claims that the hills are alive with the sound of music, despite the fact that the opening of the movie clearly establishes that they are, in fact, alive with the sound of wind.

5. Maria is apparently sent off to the von Trapp household in the early summer, "until September." At the time she leaves, she wants to be a nun. Before the end of the summer, she has decided she wants a military husband and seven children. Maria needs a gap year, or she's going to enter into a series of unsatisfying short careers.

6. When Mother Abbess tells Maria, "Climb ev'ry mountain," she is setting a very unrealistic expectation of success, especially since they are in the Alps. It's one thing to use a metaphor about uninterrupted mountain climbing if you're in Nebraska, but when you look out of the window every day and see more mountains than you could ever climb in your entire life, that's just setting you up to feel like a failure. Even if it's only until you find your dream, getting up every day and saying, "Well, I haven't found my dream yet, so I guess it's mountain-climbing all day long" isn't necessarily helpful.

7. Mother Abbess also tells Maria that her dream will be "a dream that will need all the love you can give, every day of your life, for as long as you live." So basically, you are going to live the life of Sisyphus until you die of exhaustion because your insatiable dream forces you to throw all of your energy into its gaping, unsatisfiable maw.

8. Winning children over by ignoring the fact that they tried to injure your behind with a pinecone is no way to build character.

9. The "Lonely Goatherd" puppet show is all about coerced mountain marriages, including coerced goat marriages, which send a bad message to children and anthropomorphized goats.

10. Certainly, becoming a Nazi who turns the family in, thus exposing both the family and a large building full of nuns to grave danger, makes Rolfe much worse. But even before that, let us be honest: Rolfe is a smug punk, unless you think being called a baby is romantic. Not "baby." "A baby."

11. The problem isn't really that Maria makes clothes out of curtains. It's that she makes clothes out of ugly curtains. And Maria didn't pick the curtains.

12. You would start by teaching untrained children to sing in unison. There's nothing wrong with unison. Having them sing in seven-part harmony is overly ambitious and likely to create stress.

13. If Gretl is really dozing off in the middle of performances, she probably needs to focus less on her singing career and more on going to bed early.

14. See once again Melinda Taub: He should have married the Baroness. (Younger, more pure-hearted people often believe the best line in the movie is "You can't marry someone when you're ... in love with someone else." More mature people often conclude it is instead, "Why didn't you tell me to bring along my harmonica?")

15. It is possible that once upon a time, we lived in a world where a greedy but good-hearted opportunist might try to make big bucks by scouring Austria for roaming bands of folk singers, but at this point, it does seem rather quaint.

16. "You look happy to meet me," sings a man to a plant.

17. "Heil Hitler" might be the worst way I've ever seen a young man get out of being caught tapping on his girlfriend's window.

18. Sure, the Captain perhaps overreacts to discovering the children playing, but ask yourself this: if you hired a nanny and later saw your children, under her supervision, hanging from trees over a road without so much as a safety rope, would you find that whimsical?

19. "My heart wants to beat like the wings of the birds that rise from the lake to the trees." Do you know how fast birds' wings beat? This would be tachycardia. It's dangerous.

20. That's a very short time for children under 15 to all become accomplished puppeteers.

21. Sending Liesl to bed at the same time as Gretl seems like bad practice.

22. It's pretty convenient that the musicians at the fancy party know an orchestration of the song about the goats who get married.

23. Not a single person at that fancy party sees that they're about to enjoy a musical number from the host's children and can be spied making an "Oh, goody" face? Does Captain von Trapp really seem like a guy who wouldn't know any cranks? Not even the guy who wants him to prepare for the arrival of the Nazis?

24. "Adieu, adieu, to yieu and yieu and yieu"?

25. Louisa's middle-child thing is not going to be helped by sharing a verse with her sister.

26. The lack of meaningful exploration of the Baroness's status insecurity is perhaps the film's greatest flaw.

27. The Baroness is hardly a monster for not enjoying a game in which children hurl a ball at her pelvis.

28. Maria's struggle between house and abbey, between Captain von Trapp and Mother Abbess, is framed entirely as following your heart and facing your problems and fording streams and ultimately love, but no one wishes to say entirely explicitly, "Celibacy is not for everyone. Just ask Liesl."

29. "There's isn't going to be any Baroness." That is cold. THERE WILL STILL BE A BARONESS.

30. As is closing an iron gate on a bunch of children whose mother died who want to visit their governess that it was your brilliant idea to send to their house.

31. Everybody sings a song about what a flake Maria is. At her wedding. Etiquette fail.

*Yes, there are 14 in the song. There are three she mentions before that. Don't come at me.


TOPICS: TV/Movies
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1 posted on 11/12/2013 4:35:52 PM PST by Borges
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To: Borges

I didn’t think the movie was all that great but the music was pretty darned good.

Our high school class (class of 65) chose “Climb Every Mountain” as our class song. I still think it was a pretty good choice.


2 posted on 11/12/2013 4:43:22 PM PST by yarddog (Romans 8: verses 38 and 39. "For I am persuaded".)
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To: Borges

I love the Sound of Music in all its corny glory and I’ll probably watch this. Having said that, I think Carrie Underwood sings well, but she’s nowhere near the level of Julie Andrews in her prime.


3 posted on 11/12/2013 4:43:41 PM PST by Huntress ("Politicians exploit economic illiteracy." --Walter Williams)
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To: yarddog

NBC? I figured “Climb ev’ry mountain” would be “Tax ev’ry producer”.


4 posted on 11/12/2013 4:44:12 PM PST by TurboZamboni (Marx smelled bad & lived with his parents most his life.)
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To: Borges

I am 46 years old. This movie has aired on network TV just about every year of my life, and I have yet to watch it in its entirety.

Reading this list almost makes me want to. :)


5 posted on 11/12/2013 4:46:23 PM PST by ZirconEncrustedTweezers (I'm not anti-government, government's anti-me.)
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To: Borges
Out of "Do, Re, Mi, Fa, So, La, Ti, Do," the only one Maria apparently can spell is "la." This is no educator.

I do not even understand what this is supposed to mean. I tried to read a few more but it became obvious that this person is not a curmudgeon but simply an idiot with a proclivity for rationalization. It is "The Sound of Music" and is therefore sacrosanct, period.

6 posted on 11/12/2013 4:53:24 PM PST by higgmeister ( In the Shadow of The Big Chicken!)
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To: Huntress

I guess I was around 18 when the movie came out. I thought Liesl was a real babe but I don’t recall ever seeing that actress in anything else.

The Baron had a pretty good voice too.


7 posted on 11/12/2013 4:54:34 PM PST by yarddog (Romans 8: verses 38 and 39. "For I am persuaded".)
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To: Borges

“Innocent as a rose,” Liesl sings while spinning around so her boyfriend can see her underpants.”

I take it this isn’t the Julie Andrews version.


8 posted on 11/12/2013 4:55:38 PM PST by elcid1970 ("In the modern world, Muslims are living fossils.")
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To: Borges

ROFL!


9 posted on 11/12/2013 4:56:25 PM PST by TEXOKIE (We must surrender only to our Holy God and never to the evil that has befallen us.)
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To: Borges
Will "NBC" let them use the "N" words?

(Nazi & Nuns)

10 posted on 11/12/2013 4:58:45 PM PST by jaz.357 (Contrary To Ordinary)
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To: Borges

While they are on their daytrip singing in the mountains and hanging from trees they mysteriously change clothes and then change back again. Too much of an effort for them to fix that, I guess.


11 posted on 11/12/2013 4:59:01 PM PST by Uncle Chip
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To: Borges

“The Von Trapp Family Singers”


12 posted on 11/12/2013 5:01:36 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: yarddog

The whole von Trapp family stayed at my school [Marymount Girls School] when they had to leave Austria, Yes, it was before my time [1940s?] but I always remembered it when I took classes in the part where they stayed.


13 posted on 11/12/2013 5:03:54 PM PST by BunnySlippers (I LOVE BULL MARKETS . . .)
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To: Borges

We enjoyed a “Sound of Music” tour in Salzburg, where most, if not all, of the movie was filmed. We saw the house exterior with the lake, the gazebo, the church where they were married, the graveyard scene, and more.


14 posted on 11/12/2013 5:05:58 PM PST by The Truth Will Make You Free
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To: Borges
1. Out of "Do, Re, Mi, Fa, So, La, Ti, Do," the only one Maria apparently can spell is "la." This is no educator.

Despite her British accent, Maria's primary language is German. Those Italian notes needed correcting anyway.

2. Rolfe is presented as a romantic hero despite the fact that he is clearly intimidated by Liesl's burgeoning sexuality to the point where he calls her "timid and shy and scared" at the very moment she is leaning in

That is called irony. The same thing happens later when Christopher Plummer tells him he's not a man, and Rolfe calls for "Daddy" ("Guard!")

3. You only have 17 favorite things*, and one of them is "doorbells"?

Maria clearly states that these are a FEW of my favorite things. The kids didn't get out much , so she was appealing to things they experience.

4. Maria claims that the hills are alive with the sound of music,[ . . . ] they are, in fact, alive with the sound of wind.

and birds, and things that rustle in the wind. I suppose that when Homer tells his muse to sing, that there is no evidence an actual tune comes out should put the Iliad into the realm of kitsch as well?

5. Maria needs a gap year, or she's going to enter into a series of unsatisfying short careers.

I have known several women who entered the convent and decided against the religious life, going on into stable and loving marriages. Also, when you are in the shadow of the Thrid Reich, a gap year seems more like a luxury.

6. When Mother Abbess tells Maria, "Climb ev'ry mountain," she is setting a very unrealistic expectation of success, especially since they are in the Alps.

Well, maybe, but beats the heck out of that journey is the reward business we hear these days.

I could go on. Interestingly, the curmudgeon omits the crowd singing "Goodbye" to the retiring children after their performance at the party. Fact is, the movie holds up quite well 50 years later.
15 posted on 11/12/2013 5:06:46 PM PST by Dr. Sivana (There's no salvation in politics.)
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To: Borges

I have seen this movie 20 times and my father metbthe REAL Maria long ago.

She has a brief unspoken cameo in the movie.


16 posted on 11/12/2013 5:17:04 PM PST by gaijin
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To: higgmeister

The person who wrote this takes everything literally. Must be completely joyless, lacking in humor and whimsy, and totally obnoxious to boot. But then she works for NPR, so that says it all.


17 posted on 11/12/2013 5:27:25 PM PST by Kirkwood (Zombie Hunter)
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To: Borges

Then don’t watch it. I won’t, it’s fluff.


18 posted on 11/12/2013 5:29:09 PM PST by Revolting cat! (Bad things are wrong! Ice cream is delicious!)
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To: Revolting cat!

It’s good fluff.


19 posted on 11/12/2013 5:30:26 PM PST by Borges
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To: Borges

“Follow your heart” is the WORST advice you can give to anyone.


20 posted on 11/12/2013 5:30:55 PM PST by BenLurkin (This is not a statement o"Bustid"f fact. It is either opinion or satire; or both.)
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