The music of Whitney Houston. If you want to listen to Whitney Houston singing, then this is the movie to see.
Other than the music, the rest of the movie doesn't have the drama and intensity of the other musical biographies I've played recently: Bohemian Rhapsody and Elvis. Those were downright thrilling in parts. This happened and then that happened and then the next thing after that; it's all by the numbers and it's ultimately has the same excitement as reading the Whitney Houston wikipedia article.
The "hero/good guy" throughout the movie is record executive Clive Davis. By golly, he's also one of the producers of the movie! What a coincidence!
A lot of the uncomfortable stuff that could have been gripping stories either get really brief mention or get skipped over completely. Even her death is just on-screen text: oh by the way she died - at the end of the show. Another missed opportunity for something dramatic but there's lots of those throughout the movie. I think they're working so hard to not offend the real people who were involved in all of this that they lost the spectacle and excitement that you expect to see in a movie of this nature. There's nothing here that makes you squirm, there are no no triumphs, no tension or wow look at that.
But it does have Whitney Houston's music, so if you're a Whitney Houston fan then this movie is worth seeing for that reason.
I'm not, so it's not a movie for me.
Hopefully the fans will come to see it this week.
Other than the music, the rest of the movie doesn't have the drama and intensity of the other musical biographies I've played recently: Bohemian Rhapsody and Elvis. Those were downright thrilling in parts. This happened and then that happened and then the next thing after that; it's all by the numbers and it's ultimately has the same excitement as reading the Whitney Houston wikipedia article.
The "hero/good guy" throughout the movie is record executive Clive Davis. By golly, he's also one of the producers of the movie! What a coincidence!
A lot of the uncomfortable stuff that could have been gripping stories either get really brief mention or get skipped over completely. Even her death is just on-screen text: oh by the way she died - at the end of the show. Another missed opportunity for something dramatic but there's lots of those throughout the movie. I think they're working so hard to not offend the real people who were involved in all of this that they lost the spectacle and excitement that you expect to see in a movie of this nature. There's nothing here that makes you squirm, there are no no triumphs, no tension or wow look at that.
But it does have Whitney Houston's music, so if you're a Whitney Houston fan then this movie is worth seeing for that reason.
I'm not, so it's not a movie for me.
Hopefully the fans will come to see it this week.
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