Dinner and a Movie
There are Vines in the Woods
There are Vines in the Woods
By
Steve Herte
There’s
always a little sadness when it’s time to take down the Christmas
decorations, because, being my favorite holiday, I DECORATE! It took
all day Saturday to do it and pack everything away and, Sunday
morning I found one last ornament. Isn’t that the way? Good thing
last Friday was wonderful. The movie was the major competition for
Best Musical Adaptation and the restaurant was a revival of a former
lovely dining space. Enjoy!
Into
The Woods (2014)
- Director: Rob Marshall. Writers: James Lapine (s/p, musical) Steven
Sondheim (musical). Cast: Meryl Streep, Johnny Depp, Lilla Crawford,
James Corden, Emily Blunt, Daniel Huttlestone, Tracey Ullman,
Anna Kendrick, Christine Baranski, Tammy Blanchard, Lucy Punch,
Annette Crosby, Chris Pine, Joanna Riding, Billy Magnussen, Mackenzie
Mauzy, & Frances de la Tour. Color, 125 minutes.
Having
seen Into the Woods on Broadway with Bernadette
Peters playing the Witch and once again in a local production
featuring two of my nieces, and having viewed the trailers several
times I was still stunned by this movie. With James Lapine’s
screenplay and Rob Marshall’s direction it takes the five fairy
tale allegorical mash-up and faithfully recounts on an epic scale.
Interweaving Cinderella, The Baker and his Wife,
Jack and the Beanstalk, Little Red Riding Hood, and Rapunzel,
the resulting story is about wishing for more and entering “The
Woods” (i.e. finding one’s path in the world) to get it.
Little
Red Riding Hood (Crawford) is a penniless “very hungry little girl”
who mooches bread, cakes and cookies from the Baker and his wife to
“take to her Granny.” She even gets a basket to carry her booty
from the generous wife (over-generous, to the Baker). She enters the
woods having been warned by her mother never to stray from the path,
and thinking she’ll be back before dark.
The
Baker (Corden) and his wife (Blunt) are childless because of a curse
placed upon them by the Witch (Streep) as a result of the Baker’s
father’s transgressions against her (He raided her garden and stole
her magic beans). To remove this curse the couple has three midnights
to procure a cow as white as milk, a cape as red as blood, some hair
as yellow as corn, and a shoe as precious as gold. They enter the
woods.
Jack
(Huttlestone) and his mother (Ullman) are starving in their
ramshackle house and their cow, “Milky White,” has ceased to give
milk. Jack is ordered to take the cow – whom he loves as a friend –
and sell it at the market to get money to buy food. Jack and the cow
enter the woods.
Meanwhile,
at her deceased father’s house, Cinderella (Kendrick) is the
servant and housekeeper for her stepmother (Baranski) and her two
daughters Florinda (Blanchard) and Lucinda (Punch). All they talk
about is the Prince’s (three-night) Festival and Cinderella really
wishes she could go. She sneaks out the back way and enters the
woods.
The
Baker and his wife meet Jack and the cow first and convince him that
the magic beans are worth a pound apiece and buy the cow from him,
promising that he could buy it back once he gets the money. Jack
brings home the beans. His mother swats him up the side of his head
and tosses the beans into the front yard of their house, where they
promptly take root and become a giant beanstalk. The Baker sends his
wife home with the cow and meets Little Red Riding Hood and, after a
lengthy scream from the child, decides he cannot take the red cape
from her by force. He lets her go.
No
sooner does she escape the Baker than she meets the Wolf (Depp) who
hungers after her. But upon learning that she’s heading for
Granny’s and he could have a two-course meal he diverts Red from
the path by convincing her she should pick a bouquet of flowers for
Granny. This gives him time to get there first. Granny (Crosby) gets
gobbled up first and after one “what big ears you have,” Red goes
down the hatch as well.
Riding
through the woods, Cinderella happens upon Prince Charming (Pine),
who is immediately infatuated with her. They part hoping they will
meet again. As evening falls Cinderella is at her mother’s
gravesite where a huge tree has grown and her Fairy Godmother
(Riding) appears and grants her wish to attend the evening’s ball.
But at the stroke of midnight, she runs from the glittering hall,
leaving a perplexed prince.
The
Witch is next seen visiting a lonely tower where she calls to
Rapunzel (whom we learn is the Baker’s sister, snatched from his
father as recompense for the beans). A second Prince (Magnussen)
witnesses this, and he falls in love with the girl with hair as
yellow as corn, the beautiful Rapunzel (Mauzy), visiting her several
times.
In
Cinderella’s flight from the palace, she passes the Baker’s wife,
who notices the “shoe as precious as gold” and after a struggle,
she’s unsuccessful at attaining it. In the struggle, the cow
wanders off. The Baker rejoins her and the Witch appears to remind
them that the first midnight is past. (Two to go before the deadline)
The Baker now has the cape as red as blood because he happened upon
Granny’s tree and heard the two voices in the sleeping wolf’s
stomach. He frees them with a knife – thus killing the Wolf – and
Red gave it to him in gratitude.
Did
I mention this movie is two hours and five minutes long?
The
Baker and his wife relocate the cow when he accidentally sits on it
and shortly thereafter Jack appears with five gold pieces the size of
dinner plates to buy Milky White back, but they talk him out of that.
When
Cinderella hastily leaves the castle on the second night the prince
goes seeking her and encounters Rapunzel’s prince. They sing a song
about the “Agony” of loving a girl who is out of reach and are
overheard by the Baker’s wife. She finds the tower, tricks Rapunzel
into lowering her hair and rips a long piece off on a sharp fence
post. Only one more item to get, and the Witch reminds them of the
second midnight’s passing.
Jack
returns from his second climbing of the beanstalk with a giant golden
egg, which he show to Red, who doesn’t believe his story. He tells
her about the Magic Harp, she dares him to get it and he’s off.
Unfortunately, when he successfully steals the harp, the Giant is in
hot pursuit. He chops down the beanstalk and kills the Giant.
Once
again, Cinderella flees the palace but gets stuck in the pitch the
prince had spread on the stairs. She leaves one shoe as a test and
runs off into the woods, where, once again she meets the Baker’s
wife. The wife tries to buy the shoe with the last magic bean (which
gets tossed over Cinderella’s shoulder and takes root in the forest
behind her), but wins the shoe by offering her own shoes for it (to
help her run away).
Complex
enough? One has to see this story for oneself. Remember, it’s all
about wishing and having to be careful what you wish for. Everyone
gets his or her wishes. The Baker and his wife have a child,
Cinderella and her prince are married, Red Riding Hood has a brand
new wolfskin cape and has learned to not stray, Jack and his mother
are no longer poor and starving, and Rapunzel has left the Witch to
be with her prince. But…the Giant has a wife (de la Tour) who
descends the second beanstalk looking for revenge and causes so much
destruction the entire cast is lost in the now unfamiliar woods and
blaming each other for their problems.
It’s
a wonderful tale with excellent special effects and great,
award-worthy performances. I was amazed at the singing, particularly
Meryl Streep’s “Last Midnight” – the most difficult song in
an extremely difficult musical. Stephen Sondheim, depending on how
you view him, is either a genius or a looney. His melodies (if you
can call them that) are so convoluted as to be unmemorable (unless
you practice them for a long time – and then, who would you sing
them to?) and the lyrics are fabulous, but they’re sung so quickly
the audience could not possibly catch all the clever innuendoes they
contain. It took my full concentration and this was my third time
around. I loved the movie despite the annoying music and recommend
that parents leave the toddlers home again. There’s plenty of
visual wonder about the film, but they will still get bored. You’ll
like it. And if you’re a fan of tongue twisters, try learning the
title song.
Rating:
4 out of 5 Martini glasses.
Madison
and Vine
299
Madison Avenue (at 41st Street), New
York
When
I first visited the website, the photo showed the kind of restaurant
I would normally avoid – one completely open to the street. But,
this is winter and the location made it perfect for an evening’s
dinner. 299 Madison also sounded familiar and, when I arrived I knew
I had dined there before. Although, then it was called “Branzini,”
and Helene and I would have dinner there rather than the ho-hum food
down the avenue at J.T.’s American-Italian Grill, (now “Pera,”
a fine Mediterranean restaurant) where we would go for karaoke. The
cherry-wood framed window on Madison and the sliding doors on
41st Street all looked pretty dark inside, but I
boldly entered the “airlock” which billowed the velvet curtain
and announced myself.
The
young blonde in the skin-tight sparkling leotards and three-inch
Lucite-heeled shoes led me to a table far enough away from the
entrance to not feel the cold when other diners arrived. She
presented me with the menu and wine list. Soon after, a striking slim
redhead with even redder lipstick arrived to hear my water selection.
Micaela would be my server that night. When she asked if I wanted a
cocktail (their selection appeared way too silly) I asked if they had
Beefeater gin. They did, and I ordered my favorite martini, which,
surprisingly, was done swiftly and correctly.
The
dinner menu had the usual classifications but was amazingly lacking
in soups. I decided to ask about the Caesar salad. “Is it
garlicky?” “No.” “Can it be made to be garlicky?” “I’ll
ask.” By the time Micaela returned, I had a three-course meal
planned. The wine list was a two-sided card with whites on one side
and reds on the other and several with decent prices. Judging by my
dinner choices, I selected a 2012 Sauvignon-Blanc from the Loire
Valley (Domaine Alain Cailbourdin) whose crisp dry tones would
highlight each course.
The
Caesar salad started the meal and was appealing both to the eye and
the palate. The crisp, fresh greens redolent of the extra chopped
garlic added for my tastes were snowed under by freshly grated
cheese, and two toasted slices of baguette stood guard on either side
acting as croutons. There was not a hairy fish in sight and I loved
it.
Next
on the bill were the Maine Peektoe crab cakes with both a double
roasted pepper topping and a creamy yoghurt sauce. The garnish of
micro greens added color to the dish. Are Peekytoe crabs different? I
would say yes, they’re a lighter flavored and not as dense crabmeat
as others. The yoghurt proved much better than a mayonnaise, which
would have buried their flavor. I chose this dish because I saw the
portion of the crispy Rhode Island calamari at the next table. Though
they smelled heavenly, it was too much. This dish was just right.
The
baked wild trout, dusted with cornmeal and served over “seasonal”
vegetables (in this case, baby asparagus, carrots, winter squash and
string beans), was totally boneless and easy to cut with a fork. The
lemon-herb butter sauce was divine, giving the fish a citrus-y tang,
as well as a sweet accent. The vegetables were crunchy and not
over-cooked. The portion was ample but not too big for me to order a
side of the truffled French fries. They were served in a paper cone
supported by a wire frame, which also held a ramekin of homemade
catsup for dipping. I had to concentrate so as not to eat all the
fries first and forget the wine and fish or vice-versa. All was
wonderful. Micaela said the trout was her favorite.
“Are
you ready for dessert?” said Micaela, sweetly smiling.
“Absolutely!” The coconut panna cotta was so irresistible it was
gone before I thought of photographing it (I love to take pictures of
my meals). There was nothing left to do but relax with a double
espresso and an icy glass of Nonino grappa.
When
I told them about the previous incarnation both girls asked what it
was like. I told them that the cuisine was basically Italian and
seafood, but that they made a killer cavatelli that I loved. “Maybe
next time,” they suggested. Maybe indeed, but in winter.
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