Cabaret Comments

  • Krista 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    "the dinky little cottage in cambridge. playpen in the bedroom, dipers in the towel rack. how soon would it be before we started hating each other? how seen would it be before i started dashing out and disgracing myself at some nearest pub?" and i'm mesmerized by joel...

  • Everett 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    Wow! A great piece. The most difficult thing is to capture the heart of Isherwood's novel, which is more obvious than the adaptation of the single man. I don't know if it should be attributed to the adaptor of the stage play or the filmmaker The third creation of the novel. The success or failure of a literary adaptation first depends on whether the adaptor can realize the real benefits of the original. Since then, Sally Powers, the famous actor, has had a dazzling screen...

  • Keven 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    Great. Sally is kind and dissolute, with heavy eye makeup and exaggerated long eyelashes flickering, but the handsome British guy across from him can only smile apologetically and return a hug from one of her friends. Every song and dance is amazing, and it fits well with the plot, especially Money, which is both charming and charming. The clips that flashed through the Nazis were all about the small details mentioned in the plot, and they were all musical, but the political background of that...

  • Monty 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    Beyond the Rocky Horror Show as the best musical in my opinion. Sally's absolutely distinctive face has always been haunting my mind these two days. She is really a complex and delicate female image that is rarely seen on the screen. The singing and dancing at the beginning completely amazed me, lamenting its pioneering and treacherous beauty, but sadly there is no such pure beauty now. The montage fast-forward shots and fast flash shots were praised, and the awards for best director and best...

  • Maximo 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    When the show was over, I was embarrassed to go to the small shop to buy water because I was crying, and now I am dead of...

  • Francesco 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    Lisa Mingyuli's performance was really amazing, and the scene where she cried at the end was so sad to watch. I like the opening song welcome to the karaoke hall the most. The last song of life is a karaoke hall, which is really touching. But the singing and dancing movements are really insufficient. The song and dance and the plot are interspersed very well. The editing is so-so, I don't like some parts. In the end, seeing so many Nazi officers in the reflection made my heart go...

  • Thaddeus 2022-03-27 09:01:09

    It is really exciting that the musicals of the 1970s can be so brilliant. Life is like a...

  • Jadon 2022-03-27 09:01:09

    The core and expression of the film >>> the film itself. Advanced, avant-garde, brave, even today is impressive. Before the end, try your best to party, life is a...

  • Ivah 2022-03-27 09:01:09

    The relationship between a talented Cambridge talent and a karaoke actress in Berlin somehow always reminds me of the story of a Chinese talent brothel. The interspersed songs and dances sublime and promote the plot, and under the dual effects of political atmosphere and personal destiny, step by step towards the final "come to cabaret". Lisa Minnelli is so adorable and so radiant, that Nazi song tomorrow belongs to me written by gay Jewish people gives me goosebumps when I hear it in the clear...

  • Westley 2022-03-27 09:01:09

    Gorgeous depravity, apocalyptic carnival! On the eve of the Nazi takeover of Berlin, the current drunkenness of indulging in joyful singing and pleasure to death seems to be flowing with sadness, rehearsing the dark night march under the psychedelic hazy love and lingering underwater, and saying goodbye to the illusion of freedom by prolonging the moment with addiction. The original repertoire has been weakened and integrated into the background of audio and video. The performance on stage is...

Extended Reading

Cabaret quotes

  • Sally: I suppose you're wondering what I'm doing, working at a place like the Kit Kat Club.

    Brian Roberts: Well, it is a rather unusual place.

    Sally: That's me, darling. Unusual places, unusual love affairs. I am a most strange and extraordinary person.

  • Sally: I saw a film the other day about syphilis. Ugh! It was too awful. I couldn't let a man touch me for a week. Is it true you can get it from kissing?

    Fritz: Oh, yes. And your king, Henry VIII, got it from Cardinal Wolsey whispering in his ear.

    Natalia: That is not, I believe, founded in fact. But from kissing, most decidedly; and from towels, and from cups.

    Sally: And of course screwing.

    Natalia: Screw-ing, please?

    Sally: Oh, uh...

    [thinking]

    Sally: fornication.

    Natalia: For-ni-ca-tion?

    Sally: Oh, uh, Bri, darling, what is the German word?

    Brian Roberts: I don't remember.

    Sally: [thinking] Oh... um... oh yes!

    Brian Roberts: Oh, no...

    Sally: Bumsen!

    Natalia: [appalled] Oh.

    Brian Roberts: That would be the one German word you pronounce perfectly.

    Sally: Well, I ought to. I spent the entire afternoon bumsening like mad with this ghastly old producer who promised to get me a contract.

    [pause]

    Sally: Gin, Miss Landauer?