Fantasy

Alice In Wonderland

First Hit: Despite the beautiful and curiously created scenes, the re-telling of this story was not compelling. The 3D effects were used to demonstrate as much as enhance the scenes and after a short while I could have left and I wouldn’t have missed anything.

Tim Burton is known for creating interesting visual worlds and for the most part he does it again in this re-telling of Lewis Carroll’s famous tale.

Unfortunately, there isn’t much more to this re-do except an expansion of the characters and a different plot which probably wasn’t intended by Carroll.

The fantasy and quirkiness of the original tale is gone and what we have is Alice (played by Mia Wasikowska) pondering a grown up decision at age 20. She is being asked her hand in marriage, but appears to struggle for the answer but how is this so hard? It is obvious that they aren’t a couple. She panics when asked in front of hundreds of people and runs away. She follows a vested rabbit into a hole and the now the story begins.

The Wonderland folks who greet her don’t know if she is the real Alice, and wonder if she is the original (sort of like the second coming). Alice herself doesn’t know because all she knows is that her name is Alice and it’s her dream, or so she thinks. She meets the Mad Hatter (played by Johnny Depp) who has a lisp, falls in love with Alice and is bent on helping Alice rescue a dog family and others from the Red Queen's castle.

The Red Queen (played by Helena Bonham Carter), who has a huge head and chops off the heads of anyone who crosses her, wants Alice captured because she is the one who is foretold (the original Alice In Wonderland story) as the slayer of the Jabberwocky who is the Red Queen’s main fighting force and protector.

But before Alice can be captured, Alice tries to rescue her fantasy friends who are locked in the Red Queen’s castle. To get across the moat, she walks across the bobbing heads of the Red Queens "off with their head" victims.

This scene sort of finished off the film for me. It moved it from fantasy and into a more Gothic heavy handed film that tries to make too much sense from the wild original tale of a little girl lost in Wonderland.

What we have is a grown up girl confused about making a decision about her life in the real world and her childhood dream overtakes her and through the spinning of this yarn, she gets her answer.

Wasikowska was interesting enough and did what the writer and director instructed her to do but she didn't bring a true sense of wonder to the role. Bonham Carter was probably the most interesting character in this version of the story. Her over sized head, fiery language and heart shaped lips were fun. Depp was quirky but why he played the Mad Hatter with a (sometimes) lisp was odd. Steven Fry the voice of the Cheshire cat was fun as a smiling disappearing cat. Anne Hathaway as the White Queen was lost and seemed clueless in this role. Matt Lucas the voice of Tweedledee and Tweedledum was funny at times. And Alan Rickman as the wise hookah smoke blowing Blue Caterpillar was overdone. Burton would have done well to do a remake of the original story to flaunt his greatness at making magical worlds. Making a complex story and plot took away from the original story and his beautiful scenes. Burton also needs to take a page out of James Cameron’s book on how to use 3D, we don’t need more demos of stuff sitting in our laps or being poked right at us.

Overall: This film ended up to be very disappointing despite the effort Burton put into making a wonderful “Wonderland”. This story is overly convoluted and would have been better if he had stuck to the original.

The Chronicles of Narnia: Price Caspian

First Hit: Although some of the lush shots were visually impressive, this film never found a true flow losing its momentum time and time again.

While Georgie Henley, Skandar Keynes, William Moseley, and Anna Popplewell playing Lucy, Edmund, Peter, and Susan Pevensie respectively, were well versed and brought interest to their characters, Ben Barnes playing Prince Caspian seemed out of his league, miscast, and misplaced.

This film is about the return of the four Kings and Queens of Narnia to Narnia because the kingdom has become tyrannical.

The call for their return comes from Prince Caspian who escapes the palace because he is soon to be killed as his uncle's wife has finally born him a son who will be the next king. This means Prince Caspian must be killed. In his escape he is given a horn to blow only in a dire emergency.

The horn will summon the Kings and Queens from the secular world and bring them back to Narnia. While riding his horse at a full gallop he hits his head on a large stationary tree limb and doesn't suffer a cut or even a bruise (simply unbelievable).

This followed by the moment he chooses to blow the horn which didn’t seem like a most dire circumstance to me. Upon their return to Narnia, the Pevensie’s are shocked at the state of their old home.

Soon they meet up with Prince Caspian and the other citizens of Narnia whom gather together and make an attempt to overthrow the current regime.

As this plot meanders along it continues to make attempts to pull itself on course but then strays into a plot less mess.

Ben Barnes is cute enough to be a fantasy prince but he just seems stupid in this role. Maybe it was the lack of direction or maybe it was a poor script; whatever it was it wasn’t a good fit of actor and role. What I particularly didn’t like about this film was the focus on the killing and that killing is noble.

Overall: This film was a long way from the true fantasy and wonder of the first film.

The Spiderwick Chronicles

First Hit: The effects are great, some of the acting felt a little awkward and forced, but overall it was very entertaining, well paced and fun.

The enjoyment of this film was the fantasy behind it. There are funny, beautiful, and menacing well created creatures all combined in this plot to find, preserve, and destroy Arthur Spiderwick’s book.

The basic premise is a mother and her three children are moving to their great-great Uncle Arthur’s house way out in the country. They are moving because the mom is divorcing the children’s dad.

The mom, Helen (played by Mary-Louise Parker), has brought her three kids here to start a new life in an old, strange, and empty family house which is spooking looking and appears to have some oddities.

The kids; Mallory (played by Sarah Bolger) and twins Jared and Simon (both played by Freddie Highmore) are unhappy about the move to the middle of nowhere. Simon is the pacifist quiet boy while Jared is the rambunctious one and the older sister, Mallory, is appropriately bossy over her younger brothers and conveniently fancies swords.

Jared finds a book written by Arthur which explains the unseen secrets surrounding our world.

Mulgarath (played by Nick Nolte), head power monger of this unseen world, wants the book because with its knowledge he can control all worlds, seen and unseen thereby having unlimited power.

Jared discovers that he must either destroy the book or destroy the creatures of the unseen world. Not knowing how to do either he and his sister they seek the assistance of their great-cousin (Arthur’s daughter) Lucinda (played by Joan Plowright). She says they must use the book to find her father as he is the only one who knows how to destroy the unseen creatures or the book.

Fortunately Jared and his siblings are assisted by two of the unseen characters; one eats birds and wants to kill Mulgarath because Mulgarath killed his family, while the other lives in the house and was Arthur’s assistant.

With their assistance, the use of salt, tomato juice/sauce, and swords the family defeats the unseen army who break into the house. And Mulgarath, the shape-shifting ogre turns into a bird as an inopportune moment and gets eaten.

Overall: This film moved along briskly and never got boring by over explaining anything. The visualizations were terrific as were the use of common food items to ward off the creatures. I didn’t think Helen’s part was particularly well acted and some of the exchanges between her and the kids seemed forced, however the speed, plot and computerized characters were great.

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