West Side Story

West Side Story

By Steven Spielberg

  • Genre: Musicals
  • Release Date: 2021-12-10
  • Advisory Rating: PG-13
  • Runtime: 2h 36min
  • Director: Steven Spielberg
  • Production Company: 20th Century Studios
  • Production Country: United States of America
  • iTunes Price: USD 4.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
7/10
7
From 1,554 Ratings

Description

Produced and directed by legendary filmmaker Steven Spielberg, from a screenplay by screenwriter and playwright Tony Kushner, WEST SIDE STORY tells the classic tale of fierce rivalries and young love, set in 1957 New York City. A whole new generation can experience this reimagining of the beloved musical originally choreographed by Jerome Robbins, with music by Leonard Bernstein, lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and original book by Arthur Laurents. Ansel Elgort stars as Tony, a former member of the Jets street gang, and Rachel Zegler stars as María, a young woman whose brother is the head of the Jets’ rival gang, the Sharks. When Tony and María meet, they fall in love, but those close to them discourage their union. As racial and territorial tensions mount between the competing gangs, events unfold that threaten the young lovers’ happiness. Along with its iconic songs, the film features breathtaking new choreography from Justin Peck, with the score helmed by renowned Los Angeles Philharmonic conductor Gustavo Dudamel and arranged by composer and conductor David Newman. WEST SIDE STORY also stars Ariana DeBose, David Alvarez, Mike Faist, Josh Andrés Rivera, Ana Isabelle, Corey Stoll, Brian d’Arcy James, and Rita Moreno, who was featured in the 1961 film version, and who serves as an executive producer. The film’s creative team additionally includes Kushner as an executive producer, along with Daniel Lupi and Adam Somner, with Kevin McCollum and Kristie Macosko Krieger also producing. A timeless story of love and social unrest, the film also features stunning cinematography by Janusz Kaminski.

Trailer

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Reviews

  • Not worth watching.

    1
    By Patapsco Ray
    This movie ends with Tony, the leading male character, being shot to death -- not an appropriate ending for a Broadway musical.
  • Incredible

    5
    By Aleksander_G
    Great Watch! Great direction!
  • Surprisingly great.

    5
    By Infonickman
    The original is a classic and it is always dangerous to remake a classic. This one pulls is off and probably surpasses the original.
  • Great

    5
    By RobJ0987
    Hands down best version of this story. Far better than the older version.
  • Wretched

    1
    By ALLTHE KINGS MEN
    It was depressing. I’ll never get that time back. About as cheerful as Schindler’s List.
  • Very impressive

    5
    By JM💰💵
    I was skeptical before watching this because the original is such a classic, but Spielberg has kept all the charm of the original while bringing out deeper storylines for each of the characters and more reality to their situations. The story is very heartbreaking obviously, and this interpretation doesn’t shy away from the edge and the tension. Gustavo Dudamel, the NY Philharmonic, and LA Philharmonic are flawless as usual, and I was pleasantly surprised by the vocal performances from all the lead actors, especially Rachel Ziegler as Maria. Everything about the I Feel Pretty scene was perfect. The A Boy Like That/I Have A Love scene also was very beautiful and emotional. 10/10 would recommend
  • 👎🏾👎🏾👎🏾 boo

    1
    By 3339409
    the original was one of the most racist movies in american history. there was no reason for this reboot.
  • BEST MOVIE EVERRR

    5
    By carurmom
    i love this movie best musical
  • Did we need a West Side reboot?

    5
    By Stella Pearl
    No, but if you did, you couldn’t ask for more than this rendering. Enjoy.
  • Messed Slide ‘Story’ 🤦‍♀️

    2
    By BreeInGilbertAZ
    Oh, Steven… what have you done - or rather UNdone? I’m bitterly disappointed after finally seeing this in a theater last night. The FIRST THIRD of this movie was fantastic. “Tonight” was really good, however, none of the musical numbers match the original. It rapidly devolved into a clustercopulation of EDITED musical performances and a TON of revisionist ADDED rambling pointless irrelevant nonsensical dialogue with ZERO coherence to the iconic Stage & Screen musical numbers and your interest begins to wane fast. That devolution begins with “Dear Officer Krupke” inside a temporarily ABANDONED (for the length of the soulless performance) police station. Huh!? I forgave that, but it got WORSE. To add insult to injury, the UNforgivable rewriting of the setting and timeline of one of the most intense numbers, “Cool” with Tony and Riff fighting EACH OTHER over a damned .22 Colt REVOLVER!! WTF⁉️Seriously? The touching “One Hand, One Heart” is thrown into a NYC museum darkened room. Oh vey! Then, they utterly DESTROYED the ‘brotherly’ chemistry between Tony and Riff and did it so badly that the convoluted rumble scene in SALT PILES (huh!?) and resulting tragedies seem ANTICLIMACTIC. Not only that, you LOSE empathy for Tony! ¡Díos mio! The cleaning factory-set “I Feel Pretty” seems so out of place and mind-numbing. Poor Maria now gets thrown under a bus. The ‘reimagined’ legendary ‘Romeo & Juliet’ (THEME/point of the movie) song “Somewhere” with Rita Moreno as Valentina (Doc’s Puerto Rican ‘widow’ or wife running his drugstore - never explained) ‘singing’ it rather than Tony & Maria as a soul-stirring duet, make both Tony AND Maria almost completely irrelevant. Btw, slight spoiler… instead of “Somewhere” at the end… the ENTIRE REASON for the play/film and point of their misfit forbidden love, “Tonight” is sung. Say it ain’t so, Leonard Bernstein. The walkoff without cops on scene is beyond unbelievable and impotently lame. Sure, Spielberg highlighted current and past societal injustices, but they seemed completely pedantic, heavy-handed and dare I say ‘woke’ (I hate that term) as being forced into professorial lectures. Honestly, this is probably one of Steven Spielberg’s WORST films, possibly topping “1941” if that’s possible. If you’ve already seen the original, I highly suggest you AVOID viewing this version. I can’t even imagine owning it or its edited soulless soundtrack as it leaves such a stench and distaste in your senses that by midway through the film, you’re slinking and sliding in your seat to crawl for the exit. I kept rechecking my Apple Watch after an hour. So bitterly and disgustingly disappointed. This was a worse musical film adaptation than “A Chorus Line.” Avoid! 3/10 stars for production, decent acting and the first 50 minutes, which does not a complete movie make, but is made into a COMPLETE DISASTER.💔

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