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Jackman, Crowe, Hathaway electrify in ‘Les Miserables’

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Important plot points are glossed over. Valjean stealing from the bishop is reduced to a series of jump cuts. The moment that Valjean inadvertently allows Fantine to be fired from his factory gets lost in a flurry of lyrics.

Even though the original show written by Claude-Michel Schönberg, Alain Boublil and Jean-Marc Natel didn’t become a sensation until it was translated into English by Herbert Kretzmer and transplanted to the London stage, it is still galling to hear this French epic sung with British accents.

Jackman, Crowe and Hathaway give first-rate performances that come from the soul.

“The Phantom of the Opera” and “Rent” were disastrous Broadway-to-cinema adaptations. “Les Misérables” is not.

Yet “Les Misérables” is a story filled with heartbreak, emotion and spirituality. Those qualities get muffled in the musical’s translation to the screen. To see how Hugo’s tale can truly work as a film, seek out the 1998 version starring Liam Neeson, which was neglected at the time because audiences expected the musical. That movie now deserves an apology.

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