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Music saves silly 'Oliver Twist' plot

An Oliver Twisty urban fairy tale, August Rush is about an orphan, a musical prodigy who in his heart believes that his parents are still alive and that he can find them through his music.

An Oliver Twisty urban fairy tale,

August Rush

is about an orphan, a musical prodigy who in his heart believes that his parents are still alive and that he can find them through his music.

As directed by Kirsten Sheridan, coauthor of the transcendent In America, this piece of magical realism is the movie equivalent of football's Hail Mary pass.

The plot is preposterous. Particularly the part about a kid who has never before played an instrument, but can pick up a guitar and play like Eric Clapton and belly up to a church organ and perform like Mozart.

Yet the actors, especially 11-year-old Freddie Highmore (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Finding Neverland), give it all they've got. And if you've a taste for treacle, you'll root for them and against the Faginesque street stalker named Wizard (Robin Williams), who exploits August (the stage name of Highmore's character) and other young ragamuffins.

The film is fueled by its high-octane music, composed by Mark Mancina, who blends ambient sound with gospel, classical and rock.

With its musical themes for individual characters that come together symphonically at the climax, the music is so persuasive (certainly more than this Dickensian narrative) that it carries the narrative rather than complementing it. Keri Russell and Jonathan Rhys Meyers are on hand as August's progenitors, lost and lonely wandering Washington Square. Terrence Howard plays New York's most compassionate social worker.

August Rush **(Out of four stars)

Directed by Kirsten Sheridan, written by Nick Castle and James V. Hart. With Freddie Highmore, Keri Russell, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Robin Williams and Terrence Howard. Distributed by Warner Bros.

Running Time: 1 hour, 40 mins.

Parents' Guide: PG (Dickensian thematic elements, appropriate for children 8 and up)

Playing at: area theatersEndText