Just to get the elephant in of the room, the supposed "gay" moment was at the very end when LeFou dances with another man. The scene lasts at least two seconds.
I wrote a film review for this film, but eventually I decided to organize the remake into pointing out the highlights and the low points. Overall, the 2017 remake was literally a shot-for-shot remake. What the film told in 80 minutes (4 for end credits), the remake tells in about 120 minutes. That's because of added subplots meant to deepen Belle and the Beast's relationships, as well as new songs composed by Alan Menken and Tim Rice. It's hard to judge the film by its own merits since the film wants to adhere so much to the original film that they even lifted the same exact dialogue.
When it comes to remakes, I'm usually supportive of them, especially when there is room to improve and expand upon the original film. The filmmakers should have followed the example that Jon Favreau took with last year's
The Jungle Book. They adapted the best elements from the 1967 film as well as from Rudyard Kipling's novellas, but created a distinguishingly new storyline that was more tighter and coherent. Here, in
Beauty and the Beast, the storyline is basically the same. The subplots were more of add-ons to the original story rather than take it into an entirely new and interesting direction.
By the end of the film, it made me feel like a kid again and made me more appreciative of Disney's 1991 classic (although I already was). Overall, the film is a faithful remake, but it doesn't quite capture the heart, magic, and charm since there's little room for anything surprising.
Highlights: - Still to this day, people think the Beast was cursed at eleven years old because Lumiere stated "ten years we've been rusting..." and the Beast having until his 21st birthday to break the curse. Actually, Lumiere was referring to the time the servants weren't using their skills because the castle had no guests. This easily could have included time when they were all humans. The glass painting in the prologue clearly depicts the prince (before he was enchanted) as a young man, perhaps in his teens. In this remake, they expand on the prologue and the prince is clearly a young man.
- The writers really improved on Maurice's character. Maurice in the original film was mostly for comic relief and sort of buffoonish. In the remake, he is portrayed by Kevin Kline where he is a Gepetto-esque inventor. He becomes more relatable and sympathetic since they expound upon the loss of his wife (Belle's mother).
- Maurice and Belle had stronger chemistry and it was well-captured in a span of minutes than Belle's chemistry (or lack thereof) with the Beast in a whole hour.
- Luke Evans was well-cast as the vain, but handsome Gaston.
- Ever since it was announced, I felt Josh Gad was a perfect casting choice for LeFou. However, his characterization was changed slightly. In the animated film, while he wasn't entirely stupid (despite his name being "fool" in French), he was a bumbling sidekick. Here, he is more intelligent and has a few witty one-liners.
- While the new Alan Menken-Tim Rice songs aren't even as memorable as the original songs, I did really like the new song, "Evermore".
- The production design was rather fantastic.
- Ewan McGregor and Emma Thompson did justice to the original songs with their renditions of "Be Our Guest" and "Beauty and the Beast".
Low points:- Emma Watson's singing voice was heavily auto-tuned throughout the song, "Belle". It made her voice sound so robotic and mechanical.
- Perhaps, to avoid venturing into the uncanny valley, Lumiere, Cogsworth, Mrs. Pott, Chip, and the other servants are rendered to become more realistic objects. Unlike their animated counterparts, they don't have distinguishable, exaggerated facial features so they don't look expressive enough.
- Belle and the Beast lacked chemistry in this film. Dan Stevens injected some humor into the Beast as he reforms, and Watson does her thing, but the romance goes through the motions following the original film beat for beat.
- The visual effects during the "Be Our Guest" felt forgettable.
- The cover version of the song, "Beauty and the Beast", by John Legend and Ariana Grande doesn't even compare to the original version by Celine Dion and Peabo Bryson. Celine and Peabo had chemistry and emotion in their version. Legend mostly copies Bryson almost note for note, and I didn't feel the two were really singing with each other. It's good, but not great.