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The Greatest Showman is a masterclass in style over substance—a glittery spectacle that sacrifices depth and integrity for catchy tunes and flashy visuals. Beneath its feel-good facade lies a shallow, formulaic narrative that romanticizes P.T. Barnum’s exploitative history while failing to give meaningful voices to the marginalized characters it claims to celebrate.
The musical numbers, though undeniably infectious, feel jarringly modern and out of place, prioritizing audience pandering over authenticity. Despite its popularity, the film’s sanitized themes and lack of emotional nuance reveal it as more empty circus than cinematic triumph.
If you’re looking for substance, you’ll find the tent empty.
When the scene came up with his house burned down and some family member sick/dying, I thought, ok now we'll get some emotional beats, something interesting.
BAM
Everything is solved, musical number
Huh... weirdly this makes me want to go watch this movie.
Somehow you well expressed Barnum's legacy in a manner that makes the movie seem like an accidental critique on him and that's funny.