FILM
Wicked: For Good ★★★½
(PG) 137 minutes
We left Cynthia Erivo’s Elphaba at the end of Wicked part one shortly after she had unmasked Jeff Goldblum’s Wizard of Oz as a dictatorial fraud. In retaliation, she was branded a wicked witch and forced to flee to Oz’s western reaches, while her friend Glinda (Ariana Grande) stayed on, having failed to persuade Elphaba to make peace with the old tyrant.
When we catch up with them again, Elphaba is still plotting his downfall. From her forest hideout, she is zooming around on her enchanted broomstick, making lightning raids on a variety of targets.
Ariana Grande as Oz’s official cheerer-upper Glinda in Wicked: For Good. Credit: AP
Glinda, on the other hand, has just taken delivery of a new form of personal transport – a magic bubble in which she floats about the kingdom in her role as official cheerer-upper. At the suggestion of the Machiavellian Madame Morrible (Michelle Yeoh), the Wizard’s propaganda expert, she has even talked a reluctant Prince Fiyero (Jonathan Bailey) into becoming engaged to her.
I was already convinced by director Jon M. Chu’s decision to expand the stage show by spreading its narrative across two feature films. In the first one, the story flowed more evenly, its didactic stretches and abrupt changes in mood were smoothed out and all the characters on its cluttered cast list given their due.
Ariana Grande as Glinda and Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba in Wicked: For Good.Credit: Universal Films
The setting, too, was impressive. Chu’s designers had come up with an extravagant, candy-coloured world saved from mere prettiness by witty touches of self-parody. And Grande struck a similar note, infusing Glinda’s conceits with a wide-eyed overlay of screwball comedy.
Part two carries on in the same vein, although familiarity has dulled the sense of wonder. You also need to do some homework to cope with the plot’s convolutions. As always, there’s a lot going on.
Let’s start with the earnest stuff. In part one, the Wizard took away the rights of Oz’s animals by robbing them of the ability to speak, and things have only become worse.
