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Rated PG for teen smoking, mild epithets andsuggestive content. DVD Review by Kam Williams When first released in 1988, Hairspray was a socially-conscious satire which delivered a fairly potent political message about the evil of ethnic intolerance. Set against the backdrop of a strictly-segregated Baltimore back in the Sixties, the campy cult classic followed the efforts of some idealistic teenagers to integrate a popular TV dance show.
That edgy original was directed by John Waters, an inveterate iconoclast who has never been afraid to tackle any controversial issue head-on, or in a manner which might cause his audience to squirm in their seats. In 2002, the film was over hauled and revived on Broadway where it won eight Tony Awards, including Best Musical. Now, Adam Shankman has adapted that play back to the big screen as a bubbly but emotionally-eviscerated production which bears only a superficial resemblance to its source material. The remake stars Nikki Blonsky as Tracy Turnblad, alight on her feet, plus-sized teen who has been dreaming of a chance to strut her stuff on The Corny Collins Show with cast regular Link (Zac Efron), a classmate she has a huge crush on. John Travolta (in drag) and Christopher Walken play her working-class parents, Edna and Wilbur, while Amanda Bynes appears as her best friend Penny Pingleton, and Brittany Snow as Link’s girlfriend, Amber von Tussle.
The plot thickens after Tracy’s disastrous audition during which she is rejected
not for her dancing but because she says she’d have no problem swimming in a
pool with black people. To add insult to injury, she ends up in trouble when she
returns to school, because she had tocut class for the tryout.
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