West Side Story

WEST SIDE STORY
2021 | Dir. Steven Spielberg | 156 Minutes


"I saw you and the world went away."


A young Puerto Rican woman and a Polish ex-gangster fall in love in the midst of a tense turf war between gangs led by her brother and his best friend. Inevitably, tragedy stemming from the hatred between their communities tears the couple apart.

While Robert Wise's 1961 West Side Story is rightfully a beloved Oscar-winning all-time classic, Steven Spielberg's 2021 adaptation of the celebrated musical belongs on the extremely short list of cinematic reiterations that improve upon their predecessors on virtually every level. From the quality of the performances to the authenticity of the sets and the social commentary, the picture is an exemplary work of art, featuring more thoughtful and accurate representation in its thematic content and in its cast. This film particularly places heavy emphasis on the fact that all of the lead characters are victims of institutional failure, the Jets products of poverty-stricken broken households without hope for better lives, the Sharks immigrants struggling to make it in an often unduly hostile country.

The extremely impoverished west side of Manhattan as it was in 1957 is realized in gritty, lived-in detail, stripped of any artificial glitz or glamour. The elaborate set pieces feel all the more natural due to the picture's exemplary production design. Choreographed with dazzling precision, the musical numbers are exciting, brimming with infectious energy, delivering arguably definitive versions of time-honored musical theater standards.

In the lead role of Maria, Rachel Zegler is soulful and magnetic, her sensational voice put to excellent use. Ansel Elgort is fine but unexceptional as Tony, capably filling the part of a square-jawed singing and dancing leading man without bringing anything too memorable to the table. Ariana DeBose as Anita is a force to be reckoned with, so naturally playing the part of a woman full of life until she transforms into a grief-stricken casualty of profound misfortune. As Riff, Mike Faist gives a revelatory performance, simultaneously rough-around-the-edges and astonishingly charismatic, pulling off a laid back demeanor that hardly hides the street punk's nothing-to-lose outlook on life. Riff's foil Bernardo is played with amazing physicality by David Alvarez who imbues the character with an authentic air of pride and dignity. Rita Moreno, who played Anita in the 1961 film, brings appropriate gravitas and immediate cinematic respectability to the picture playing Doc's widow Valentina, essentially replacing the classic Doc role, still looking and still sounding fantastic. Josh Andrés Rivera exudes pure sympathy as Chino, a tough role that he plays remarkably well, foil to Tony who never stood a realistic chance as a rival love interest for Maria. Non-binary performer iris menas makes a big impression as the recontextualized Anybodys, giving genuine humanity to the role of a marginalized character who has always been a stand-in for the marginalized people in society. The picture also features Brian d'Arcy James as the hapless Officer Krupke and Corey Stoll as the insufferable Lieutenant Schrank.

Steven Spielberg's take on West Side Story is a rich feast of sight and sound telling a uniquely American tale that grows more relevant every day. The picture is sure to impress those who love the timeless original stage production, challenge devotees of the 1961 film version, as well as delight brand new audiences.


FRAGMENTS
- The film is dedicated to director Steven Spielberg's father Arnold Spielberg

- Impressively, all of the actors in this version did their own singing

- It's difficult not to draw comparisons between this and the 1961 film



MCU CONNECTIONS
- Corey Stoll (Darren Cross in Ant-Man and Ant-Man: Quantumania)