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Review: Broadway dreams loom large in 'Tick, Tick... BOOM!' starring Andrew Garfield

Andrew Garfield's Larson is a paragon of artistic struggle. He lives in a dilapidated downtown apartment with a revolving door of roommates and casually crafts songs at late-night parties.

November 13, 2021 / 21:52 IST
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Actor Andrew Garfield in a scene from "Tick, Tick...Boom!", streaming on Netflix. (Photo by Macall Polay/Netflix via AP)
Actor Andrew Garfield in a scene from "Tick, Tick...Boom!", streaming on Netflix. (Photo by Macall Polay/Netflix via AP)

"Tick, Tick... BOOM!," Lin-Manuel Miranda's affectionate, well-crafted adaptation of Jonathan Larson's "rock monologue", captures all that's grand and beautiful about musical theater, and a little of what can make it insufferable, too.

Miranda's film, his accomplished directorial debut, is a portrait of the artist as a deeply passionate, overwhelmingly self-involved young man. As played by Andrew Garfield, Larson is a paragon of artistic struggle. He lives in a dilapidated downtown apartment with a revolving door of roommates; he casually crafts songs at late-night parties; he daydreams while waiting tables at a diner.

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If the Jonathan of "Tick, Tick... BOOM!" seems mythologized, that's appropriate. Larson, himself, never got to see his success. He died from an undiagnosed heart defect at the age of 35, the day his opus, "Rent", began previews off-Broadway. Before "Rent", Larson spent years developing a futuristic musical, "Superbia". When it failed to get produced, he turned the story of making that musical into a one-man show about his all-consuming pressure to succeed as an artist before he turned 30. The prospect of being not a playwright with a side-hustle to pay the bills but a waiter with a hobby looms for Larson like a terrifying purgatory. The show's title, "Tick, Tick... BOOM!" suggests a make-or-break countdown.

Miranda's movie is exuberant and big-hearted—maybe too much so. It's easy to aggrandize young artistic ambitions, and easier still when the dreamer in question died far too early. "Tick, Tick... BOOM!" is a tender ode to Larson, just as it is a tribute to all Broadway pursuit. And coming from Miranda, whose own New York-set breakthrough, "In the Heights", was inspired by Larson's "Rent", the film is in some broad sense autobiographical, too. Miranda's journey isn't Larson's, but as two of the most essential American composers and playwrights of the last 30 years, they share a bond of city and quest.