The Sound of Music
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I was just going to turn the TV off and get some stuff done when something happened that I didn’t quite expect. Familiar mountain scenes appeared and an opening orchestral sequence started up, then Julie Andrews spun across the alpine meadows. I was sucked in. I didn’t turn the TV off until four hours later, when the movie was finally over (boy, I’d forgotten how long it is with those commercial interruptions added in).

So much for getting work done. Now, you have to understand that I could have gotten up at any time, put in the video, and watched the commercial-free version of this classic musical. But there was something about the commercials—and the slightly fuzzy reception—that brought me back to the yearly Sound of Music TV viewings of my childhood.

Nostalgia aside, this is undoubtably one of the greatest musicals of all time. The score by Rodgers and Hammerstein is so familiar I often forget how good it is—but bits of the songs, like “Do, a deer a female deer…” and “Raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens…” run through my head for a long time after a viewing. The actors all have the amazing ability to both sing and act, including all seven children. And the plot is well paced and truly enjoyable every time—funny, endearing, romantic, suspenseful, and even charmingly cheesy (but in a good way) by turns.

Well, I suppose I should give those of you who haven’t experienced this movie in the last decades a brief overview of what you’re missing. In 1939 Austria (just before Hitler takes over), Maria (Julie Andrews) is a postulate in an abbey. She wants to become a nun, but since she’s not very good at it, the mother superior sends her to be a governess for Captain von Trapp’s family (von Trapp is played handsomely by Christopher Plummer)—seven children whose mother has died. Maria’s not a very orthodox governess, but she finds her way into the hearts of the family and has a romantic dilemma to face. Unfortunately, Hitler also finds his way into Austria….

If this movie has somehow passed you by—or if you just haven’t thought to watch it in awhile—you might want to pick it up again. You could go to Salzburg for The Sound of Music tour, too (and I highly recommend that as well—beautiful Austrian countryside and it's fun to see the hodge-podge of places from the film), but it’s definitely cheaper to watch this delightful movie again. Just don’t try to get anything done while you’re watching it, and if you're one of those musical cynics, please try to avoid comments about the characters bursting into song.



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