Current:Home > News‘Back to the Future’ review: Broadway musical is a dazzling joyride stuck on cruise control -ValueMetric
‘Back to the Future’ review: Broadway musical is a dazzling joyride stuck on cruise control
View
Date:2025-04-16 00:42:28
NEW YORK – Over on 43rd Street, magic phonebooths and fireballs astound in “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child,” a stage-play sequel to J.K. Rowling’s hit book series.
Now, a new brand of wizardry is happening just seven blocks away at the Winter Garden Theatre, where a time-traveling DeLorean all but steals the show in Broadway’s “Back to the Future: The Musical,” a fitfully thrilling adaptation of the 1985 sci-fi comedy starring Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd.
Thanks to copious projections and some next-level stagecraft, the souped-up sports car manages to zip, flip and fly over the audience in a genuinely “how did they do that?” moment. It’s a jaw-dropping spectacle that may win over even the most skeptical of New York theatergoers, many of whom have long decried the theme-park theatrics wrought by “The Phantom of the Opera” and “Miss Saigon.”
If only the rest of the show could reach such heights.
“Back to the Future,” which officially opened Thursday, is faithfully adapted by original screenwriter Bob Gale and directed by Tony winner John Rando (“Urinetown”). Like the Robert Zemeckis movie, the musical follows a teenage boy named Marty McFly (Casey Likes) who is accidentally whisked back to 1955 by mad genius Doc Brown (Roger Bart).
There, Marty encounters high-school versions of his parents: the painfully shy George (Hugh Coles) and coquettish Lorraine (Liana Hunt), who unknowingly takes a fancy to her son. At risk of changing history and being stuck in the past forever, Marty must find a way to make George and Lorraine fall in love so he can return to 1985.
It’s an ingenious premise that remains just as funny nearly 40 years after the movie’s release, with an eager-to-please cast that mostly nails the film’s tricky balance between cringe and charm. Cole, in particular, is the musical’s hilarious standout. Stepping into the impossible shoes of Crispin Glover, Cole’s rubber-limbed George McFly has all the grace of a newborn foal, with a piercing chuckle that borders on blubbering. His journey from town weirdo to ungainly hero is the most fully realized, and Cole adds a delightfully peculiar energy to his father-son scenes with Likes.
After carrying last season’s short-lived “Almost Famous,” Likes’ star power is once again on full display here. The 21-year-old actor brings easy magnetism and a crystalline croon to Marty, who delivers a rousing one-two punch of Huey Lewis favorites “The Power of Love” and “Back in Time” to close out the show.
Bart’s mugging, shrieking take on Doc Brown is less successful, although he still milks some laughs from the movie’s now-iconic dialogue. His scientist is regrettably saddled with some of the show’s most groanworthy songs: a generic ballad about following your heart (“For the Dreamers”), and a limply choreographed dream sequence imagining the new millennium (“21st Century”).
Like a broken-down DeLorean, the show sputters to a halt almost any time the characters start singing – an unenviable hurdle for any musical, let alone one that carries a hefty price tag of more than $20 million. With music and lyrics by Alan Silvestri and Glen Ballard, the score is riddled with ham-fisted clichés about having no future and feeling misunderstood. Only occasionally do the songs mine the story’s inherent comedic potential: “Cake,” an ironic ode to progressive 1950s society; and “Pretty Baby,” a doo wop-style come-hither between Lorraine and Marty, performed with droll conviction by Hunt.
“Back to the Future” is a technical marvel that hits all the right nostalgia buttons, and in the immortal words of Marty McFly, your kids are gonna love it. But with soulless songs that are more obligatory than earned, you can’t escape the feeling that they’re just running down the clock.
veryGood! (8976)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- CBS News poll on how people are coping with the heat
- Erykah Badu flirts with crush John Boyega onstage during surprise meeting: Watch
- Pro-Trump PAC spent over $40 million on legal bills for Trump and aides in 2023
- Vance jokes he’s checking out his future VP plane while overlapping with Harris at Wisconsin airport
- Pee-Wee Herman Actor Paul Reubens Dead at 70 After Private Cancer Battle
- Malala Yousafzai Has Entered Her Barbie Era With the Ultimate Just Ken Moment
- Islanders, Here’s Where to Shop Everything in the Love Island USA Villa Right Now
- New Orleans mayor’s former bodyguard making first court appearance after July indictment
- At least 5 dead and 7 wounded in clashes inside crowded Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon
Ranking
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Lori Vallow Daybell sentencing live stream: Idaho woman facing prison for murders of her children
- Judge denies Trump's bid to quash probe into efforts to overturn Georgia 2020 results
- Kentucky education commissioner leaving for job at Western Michigan University
- US Open player compensation rises to a record $65 million, with singles champs getting $3.6 million
- Suicide bomber at political rally in northwest Pakistan kills at least 44 people, wounds nearly 200
- Pitt coach Randy Waldrum directs Nigeria to World Cup Round of 16 amid pay scandal
- Alabama health care providers sue over threat of prosecution for abortion help
Recommendation
RFK Jr. closer to getting on New Jersey ballot after judge rules he didn’t violate ‘sore loser’ law
Damar Hamlin puts aside fear and practices in pads for the first time since cardiac arrest
Wicked weather slams millions in US as storms snap heat wave on East Coast
Michigan court affirms critical benefits for thousands badly hurt in car wrecks
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
This man owns 300 perfect, vintage, in-box Barbies. This is the story of how it happened
Ukraine says Russian missiles hit another apartment building and likely trapped people under rubble
As work begins on the largest US dam removal project, tribes look to a future of growth