![]() ![]() After a psychedelic detour in a hippy love-in bus helmed by Bono (?), via what can only be described as Monty Python's Flying Circus, with a deranged, painted Eddie Izzard as the ringmaster, Max is off to war, while Jude, an illegal alien without a visa, becomes and artist and Lucy gets caught up in radical protest politics.Īnd, well, that's pretty much the entire plot of this two hour ten minute movie – bar the ending, which I won't spoil for you, except to say that it's well worth the wait. Together, the two lads head to New York to pursue the Bohemian dream, renting rooms in a run down apartment in Greenwich Village from a foxy, less-tragic Janis Joplin figure called Sadie (Dana Fuchs) and her sexy, less-druggy Jimi Hendrix guitarist and lover Jojo (Martin Luther).īut despite this somewhat cleaned up, nice and jolly, Oliver!-esque view of the Village in the 1960s, storm clouds are gathering as the war in Vietnam becomes increasingly hard to avoid – and impossible for Max, who is sent his call up papers. While over there, he encounters Max (Joe Anderson), a golden-haired frat boy drop out, and his high school darling of a sister, Lucy (Evan Rachel Wood), who Jude falls for immediately. Our hero, Jude (could he really be called anything else? or be played by an actor who looks any less like a young Paul McCartney than Jim Sturgess?) chucks in his job in the Liverpool shipyards to travel to America in search of his father, a Yankee GI who left his mother after the war. What do you get if you cross Moulin Rouge and Rent with Forrest Gump and Backbeat? Well, Abba have Mamma Mia, Queen have We Will Rock You and even the Proclaimers have Sunshine on Leith, and now John, Paul, George and Ringo have Across the Universe, a bizarre but beautiful fantasy love story set to the music of the Beatles. Starring: Evan Rachel Wood, Jim Sturgess, Joe Anderson, Bono, Eddie Izzard, Dana Fuchs, Martin Luther, TV Carpio, Salma Hayek
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