He also forms sweet bonds with all his co-stars, but especially girlfriend Susan (Alexandra Shipp), a dancer who wants to take a staff job in the Berkshires, and Michael (Robin de Jesús), his gay best friend who leaves acting behind for a lucrative advertising gig. He’s honest and personal and sings so well, you forget he was Spidey. You can tell he’d rather be a Bohemian like Larson was - working in the theater for pennies and drinking wine out of Solo cups on a downtown roof ’til 3 a.m. I’m convinced the actor has always been uncomfortable as an action star and red-carpet regular. Larson is a perfect role for Garfield, who does the best work of his career. ‘Rent’ creator’s friends reveal tragic, true tale of ‘Tick Tick … Boom!’ The stage show started out as more of a rock concert than a traditional musical, so Miranda blends footage of Garfield onstage backed by musicians with realistic scenes set in Larson’s apartment, at a diner where he works or in the rehearsal studio as he tweaks his futurist ill-fated musical “Superbia.” The back-and-forth bothered me for the first 10 minutes, which are a tad stiff, but it settles in fast. Lin-Manuel Miranda, as it turns out, can compose “Hamilton” and direct great movies. While Rentheads and Broadway fans will certainly connect to it on a deeper level than those who only know Idina Menzel as Elphaba, not Maureen, “Tick, Tick” is a terrific, moving, propulsive film on its own terms. The entertaining and heartbreaking film is not merely a sister show, though. Andrew Garfield and Alexandra Shipp co-star in the new film. Throughout the movie, for instance, he jots down the frenetic thoughts that flood his mind, a few notes of music here and there, and they all add up to “Rent” - his rock ’n’ roll spin on “La Boheme” about young New Yorkers trying to make art and survive a plague. Larson could never have known he’d write one of the most famous American musicals ever, but we watch as he unintentionally does just that. At a spry 30 years old, he chillingly says that his “time is running out.” He can’t afford to pay the bills for his shabby Greenwich Village walk-up and the power blows. In the new musical, Larson, played by an exceptional Andrew Garfield, struggles to finish a boundary-breaking musical while his friends are dying of AIDS all around him. Rated PG-13 (some strong language, some suggestive material and drug references.) In select theaters and on Netflix.
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