If early sightings are anything to go by, this new audience won't be deprived, they might even get an improvement. The movie came about because music producer Jay-Z (Mr Beyonce), and his equally music-loving friend Will Smith, wanted to take something that was precious to them and put a new spin on it.
Hip-hop. The entire score of Annie, originally composed by Charlie Strouse (music) and Martin Charnin (lyrics), has been rebuilt with beats and cunningly updated lyrics. Sia's new anthem-like take on You're Never Fully Dressed Without A Smile is even more infectious than the original. She chants "Hey America ... your clothes may be, Chanel, Gucci ... " And we all know, already, what Jay-Z has done with It's the Hard Knock Life.
The genius of the concept is not just to shift the musical language into new territory, but also to give the music to its rightful proponents: black foster kids on the streets of Harlem, naturally. There's still Duffy, Pepper and Molly but they've been urbanised, given the Jay-Z treatment. Daddy Warbucks, too, has been recast as a black man: Will Stacks, a New York mayoral candidate who needs an orphan to help his campaign, played by Jamie Foxx.
The story of Annie has been so thoroughly transposed to today's world, from the 1930s Depression of the original, that it's likely to help the first audience get over the fact that they're not watching Albert Finney, Carol Burnett (Miss Hannigan), and Aileen Quinn (Annie), anymore. Rather, they're in the hands of Cameron Diaz (Miss Hannigan), Rose Byrne (Grace) and Quvenzhan Wallis (of Beasts of the Southern Wild fame). That's a good thing because nobody, and I mean nobody, could deliver Miss Hannigan like Carol Burnett did; all that sloshing and skidding around the screen in her drunken, lascivious frenzy. Good on Cameron Diaz at having a go.
Quvenzhane Wallis, as the new Annie, looks and sounds pretty swell, and she's already been Oscar nominated for Beasts so it's safe to say that she'll deliver.
So thank heavens we have them enshrined on the screen for ever. And it's likely that once everyone's got over the hoo-ha of the new Annie, they'll check out the old one again, or for the first time. They'll discover joyful, exuberant choreography by our very own Arlene Phillips; songs with such perfect lyrics that one wonders how Jay-Z and Will Smith had the guts to up them ("Little cheeks/ Little teeth/ Everything around me is little/ If I wring/ Little necks/ Surely I will get an acquittal" - Miss Hannigan, on the fate of running an orphanage); and a fairy-tale story that's timeless in its appeal.
They'll also discover a movie musical by director John Huston that everyone wanted to dislike but nobody really did. In the words of the New York Times critic Vincent Canby, who reviewed the 1982 film, "Annie almost knocks itself out trying to give the audience its money's worth. They don't build movies like this anymore." Well, maybe they do.
What: Annie, the Jay-Z produced hip-hop version of the comic strip turned Broadway musical starring Quvenzhané Wallis, Jamie Foxx, Cameron Diaz
When: Opens Thursday
Who's it for: Curly-haired moppets who like to sing and dance. And their mates.
- Independent