The Greatest Showman is …who again… Hugh Jackman or P.T. Barnum? This is Barnum’s biopic but Jackman’s show, designed to feature who? Jackman, singing and strutting as only Hugh Jackman can do.
The Greatest Showman’s greatest problem is that Jackman likes to be liked. Unfortunately, likable isn’t a term one associates with P.T. Barnum, the promoter associated with “There’s a sucker born every minute.”
Jackman does put on a hell of a show, an old fashioned musical with touches of contemporary wokeness. Yet it’s all kinda incongruous. Plus the songs aren’t great, barely memorable actually. If you’re gonna do a musical, at least one song better be great. Musicals are a tough sell with a great song, but hopeless without.
Hugh Jackman is a multiple threat, sure, yet a P.T. Barnum who smiles a lot and often breaks out in song isn’t the best use of his particular set of skills. But he’s only got himself to blame. The Greatest Showman was made for one reason and one reason only: to be a star vehicle for Jackman. He doesn’t disappoint.