Skip to content

DEAR EVAN HANSEN

Written By:

Joel Harley
Evan Hansen Crying

The enormously popular Broadway musical takes to the silver screen in this movie adaptation by Stephen Chbosky and screenwriter Steven Levinson. Troubled ‘teenager’ Evan Hansen (Ben Platt) finds his life spiralling out of control when a writing exercise from his therapist falls into the wrong hands. As Evan’s letter winds up with the grieving parents of a teen who took his own life, Evan quickly becomes a fixture at the family dinner table. In dear Evan Hansen, the Murphys (Amy Adams, Danny Pino) find a way to connect with their dead child, getting to know him through Evan’s stories and anecdotes. In the Murphys, dear Evan Hansen learns to grow in confidence and kickstart a movement and a moment. The problem? Dear Evan Hansen is a fraud, and his stories are all bullshit.

Depending on how you look at it, dear Evan Hansen is either a duplicitous outsider infiltrating the ranks of a grieving family, or a well-meaning dimwit who gets caught in a lie and in over his own head. Like the broadway show, Chbosky’s adaptation is neither chilling horror movie nor farcical comedy, and plays dear Evan’s plight with a straight face. If ever The Guest: The Musical or an all-singing, all-dancing Talented Mister Ripley is greenlit, producers could do far worse than to look to Dear Evan Hansen for inspiration.

Dear Evan Hansen’s creepy vibes are only exacerbated by flat and pallid cinematography, largely refusing to give in to flights of fantasy or out-there imagery. That works for the songs, which are heartfelt, heart-breaking and human – full of a very real pain and torment – but whenever the singing stops, the creepiness returns. Platt gives it his all, but all is too much, in a role which threatens to cross the line into Tropic Thunder-style caricature.

There’s the germ of a great movie there, if Chbosky and the stage show writers (Levinson, Benj Pasek and Justin Paul) had been interested in dissecting the performative activism of dear Evan Hansen’s classmates. But there’s no self-awareness to it, even as dear Evan Hansen becomes an Internet sensation and starts making moves on the dead guy’s sister. In cutting one of the show’s best songs (“Good For You”), the film not only loses out on more Julianne Moore, it’s also missing anyone to call dear Evan Hansen out on his grotesque behaviour. Depiction is not necessarily endorsement, but in playing this out as an uplifting coming-of-age story, it looks a lot like it.

Which is frustrating, as the songs are truly great. The show’s biggest numbers, “Waving Through a Window” and “You Will be Found” are so good that it becomes easy to overlook how creepy the rest of the story is. “Sincerely, Me” injects a much-needed sense of humour, while “Requiem” gives the Murphys a chance to join in on the singing too. With the mighty “Disappear” also cut, the film doesn’t give anyone who isn’t dear Evan Hansen much of a look-in. Classmate Alana (Amandla Stenberg) gets her own brand-new-for-the-movie song, but it doesn’t hit nearly as hard as “Good For You” or “To Break In a Glove” would have.

With a songbook like that, it’s easy to get caught up in the emotion and taken in by dear Evan Hansen. Like its lead character, it’s a guilt trip, exploiting all-too-real mental health issues for its own shady purposes. It’s a dark psychological horror film repackaged as a sweet coming-of-age musical for the ‘who cares if it’s not true if it makes you feel good about yourself’ crowd. Dear Evan Hansen is the most unsettling movie musical since Cats.

You May Also Like...

Colchester Gets a Midsummer Scream from Black Sunday

Black Sunday Film Festival returns with its annual summer mini-fest Midsummer Scream on Saturday July 18th at Firstsite in Colchester. Alongside a stacked selection of feature presentations and acclaimed short
Read More
armando iannucci to pen script for paddington 4

Armando Iannucci Tapped To Direct PADDINGTON 4

The Thick of It and Veep creator Armando Iannucci is taking on Britain’s favourite marmalade-eating bear, with news that the Scottish comedian will be penning the script for Paddington 4.
Read More
jean grey and cyclops in the season 2 trailer for x-men '97

X-MEN ’97 Season 2 Trailer Sees Mutants Lost In Time

“The X-Men are scattered through time; In the past, from the start of Apocalypse’s reign, to the future, at the height of his rule,” so announces the X-Men ’97 season
Read More
robert de niro in angel heart

ANGEL HEART Series Adaptation To Star Zac Efron

A new adaptation of William Hjortsberg’s 1978 novel Falling Angel, which was famously turned into the Robert De Niro-starring neo-noir horror movie Angel Heart in 1987, is on the way
Read More
robert pattinson plays chris hansen in primetime film about to catch a predator

PRIMETIME Teaser Trailer Sees Robert Pattinson As Chris Hansen

Robert Pattinson loves any excuse to put on a weird voice, and his latest role is no exception: he stars in the new teaser trailer for Primetime, A24’s upcoming film
Read More

BABYLON 5 Heads to LEGEND

The cult sci-fi TV show Babylon 5 is heading back to screens as it lands on LEGEND from June 8th. The show’s synopsis is: Following a war between Earth and
Read More