Weird Musicals
Pairing wine with movies! See the trailers and hear the fascinating commentary for these movies and many more at Trailers From Hell. This week we find wine pairings for three musical movies which may cause us to need a drink – Weird Musicals.
When we say weird, we mean weird. Cannibal! The Musical could hardly get any weirder. If you thought a musical featuring Nazi soldiers was weird – and there have been a few: The Sound of Music, Cabaret, Blazing Saddles – wait until you get a load of this. Cannibal! The Musical is a 1993 black comedy about people eating other people, set to music.
From the comedy team of Trey Parker and Matt Stone, in their pre-South Park days, the script loosely follows real-life events from the late 19th century. You know how it is – a winter excursion strands your group in the mountains and, well, ya gotta eat.
You may find it surprising that someone could find humor in that sort of desperation. You may even find it disturbing, or disgusting. Parker made a successful career off of making people feel those emotions after this directorial debut. Have you given any thought to what you’ll snack on while watching Cannibal! The Musical? Ears of corn? Kidney beans? Lady Fingers? That’s up to you. My job is to select a wine pairing.
Cannibal Creek Winery in southeastern Australia offers a great place to start the search, and to stop it. They have a full line of wines that will pair incredibly well with a movie featuring both cannibalism and a thoughtful score.
https://www.cannibalcreek.com.au/
The Apple made 1980 memorable for fans of horribly bad movies. It is a scifi musical with biblical overtones, hence the prominently placed apple. The Menahem Golan picture took a look into the future as far away as … 1994. Really? Was that a dollar store crystal ball? You look into the future of rock and roll and can’t see farther than 14 years? I’d get my dollar back.
Golan likely wanted at least some of his millions back after getting a look at what most critics and viewers consider to be one of the worst movies ever made. The musical aspect of the film reportedly ate up some seven thousand dollars per day of production – and we don’t even have a soundtrack album to show for it! Not that we would really want one.
There is a feeling that there may be something here that’s entertaining. A god-like person named Mr. Topps, who rides in a Rolls Royce-shaped cloud? That sounds like we may be onto something good. Then we find that the savior sent by the supreme being was trying to save the gifted singer from the evil clutches of glittery gays and drag queens. I’ll bet there wasn’t a Bud Light to be had on the set.
Let’s pick a wine for The Apple befitting of this misanthropic marvel. Washington state’s Chateau Ste Michelle has a red blend called Prayers for Sinners and Saints, because they feel that our true self lies somewhere in between those two extremes. For real-life choices, there is a lot of gray area there. It is simpler with the wine – white or red?
https://www.smwe.com/estates/details/prayers_of_sinners_saints
1982’s Pink Floyd – The Wall is one of the more depressing musicals out there – which is saying something, as we have already chalked one up to cannibalism.
Alienation, the horror of war, the danger of hammers and becoming comfortably numb are not exactly the stuff of Rex Harrison moments. And nobody ever accused Roger Waters of being either Lerner or Loewe.
Pink Floyd – The Wall was a big enough hit that we might have expected musicals made from other Pink Floyd albums. However, Pink Floyd – Obscured By Clouds, Pink Floyd – A Saucerful of Secrets and Pink Floyd – Ummagumma never materialized.
Oh, by the way, which one’s Pink? Bob Geldof. Bob Geldof is Pink. But, we’ll go full red for one of the Wines That Rock. They don’t have one dedicated to The Wall, but the Cabernet Sauvignon for The Dark Side of the Moon is close enough for rock’n’roll.