Showing posts with label Emma Thompson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emma Thompson. Show all posts

Friday, 17 March 2017

Beauty and the Beast


I never had any love for Disney’s animated version of Cinderella so I went to see the live action remake with no expectations and ended up falling in love with it.  Cinderella is a gorgeous film that does not and cannot fail to make me happy.  Beauty and the Beast is one of my favourite films so the remake had a lot more to live up to. The stakes were raised to an even higher level due to the very convincing trailer, but there would be no middle ground. Beauty and the Beast would deserve either love or hate.

PLOT:  Set in post-war, pre-revolution, Three Musketeer referencing, France, a widowed inventor named Maurice gets lost on his way to a market no further than half a day’s ride from his front door and stumbles upon an enchanted castle.  After Maurice is taken captive by a Beast for stealing a flower, his daughter Belle, offers to take his place as the Beast’s prisoner.  Belle and the Beast bond over their love of books and tomato soup.  However, the Beast must also learn to love and be loved in return, by the time the last petal falls on his enchanted rose, otherwise, the castle will remain enchanted forever. END PLOT

I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve seen Beauty and the Beast so it was fun to watch a familiar plot play out in another format.  There were enough new scenes, such as the section with Gaston, LeFou and Maurice in the forest, to add an element of freshness to a script I could perform all by myself. 

I would never have chosen Emma Watson as Belle but it’s hard to criticise her performance.  Watson is not on Paige O’Hara’s level when it comes to singing but I don’t believe she was pretending to be.  Dan Stevens added depth to the Beast, which is missing from his animated counterpart, but my heart will never fail to sink during the transformation scene. A Beast should remain a Beast.

Luke Evans' Gaston is perfection.  

The supporting cast has some flaws: Ewan McGregor, despite being married to a French woman for a quarter of a century, seems not to have heard his wife speak, Emma Thompson appears to have taken elocution lessons from the Artful Dodger and Sir Ian McKellen is criminally underused.  The flaws don’t matter as Ewan McGregor justifies his casting during Be Our Guest, Emma Thompson is the heart of the film and, when he shows up, Sir Ian McKellen’s voice commands the screen as much as his actual presence. Beauty and the Beast is a hard film to cast, but any film that has the wonderful Stanley Tucci overact like crazy while playing a harpsichord can’t be too far off the mark.

The songs are just as memorable as the original. I was worried that Emma Watson would not be able to handle the Belle Reprise, which is the best musical moment in the original, but she put her own spin on it and did not attempt to tackle the big vocals.  I respect her for that.  I confess that I do not have any love or affection for Be Our Guest.  My deep dislike for that song is as dark as my secrets get, but I did love this version!  There were no flat musical numbers and Bill Condon did the set pieces justice.

Beauty and the Beast is a stunning film.  The entire film has a fairy tale glow about it which makes, what could otherwise have been some very questionable CGI characters, acceptable.  The tone of Beauty and the Beast was never aiming for realism and I think this was the correct decision. 

There will be folks that did not or could not fall in love with Beauty and the Beast.  If they were to explain to me why, I would in all likelihood see where they are coming from but I will not be swayed.  It made me happy and that is reason enough for me to fall in love all over again.  Beauty and the Beast gets 9.5/10.  It would have scored a perfect 10 had there been a bit more Cogsworth.  I’ll see it again in the cinema but I’ll also purchase the bluray and actually watch it.  I can’t give it any greater recommendation than that.

Oh, and to those folks who want to boycott the film due to their homophobic or prejudiced thought processes.  Good. Don’t see it.  You don’t deserve it.

Sunday, 17 February 2013

Beautiful Creatures

 
I am not a huge fan of teen franchises.  The train to Hogwarts had already left the station several years before I showed up to catch it and the notion of sparkling vampires both terrifies and amuses me. 
If it wasn’t for a decent trailer Beautiful Creatures would have passed me by.  I don’t care that I haven't read the book.
PLOT:  After Ethan (Alden Ehrenreich) falls for Lena, (Alice Englert) the new girl at school he discovers that she is a “caster” and on her approaching sixteenth birthday she will be claimed to either serve the dark or light for all eternity. Will the star crossed lovers live happily ever after and more importantly will I give a shit by the closing credits?  END PLOT
Forbidden love, family secrets, supernatural powers and homework – Beautiful Creatures has all of the key attributes expected from a teen fiction adaptation.  The plot isn’t ground breaking but the history of casters is given a local feel within the town of Gatlin which gives the mythology more depth than expected.
With a running time of just over two hours Beautiful Creatures takes its time getting to final showdown but unfortunately it couldn't build up any real tension.  The finale was essentially two women standing in a field shouting at each other on a blustery afternoon.
Beautiful Creatures does attempt to be different by telling the story from Ethan’s point of view rather than Lenas.  This works out very well thanks to the ridiculously charming performance of Alden Ehrenreich 
Ehrenreich and Englert have decent chemistry and with support provided by Viola Davis, Emma Thompson and Jeremy Irons the quality of the acting is very fine indeed.  Thompson is clearly enjoying herself which is always fun to watch.
There are a couple of set pieces but they don’t rate above average.  The effects, such as spinning tables, shattering glass and angry lightening have all been done before.  The smaller moments, such as the writing appearing on the walls and books, were handled much better.
I feel sorry for Beautiful Creatures as it will constantly be compared to Twilight.  The comparisons are to be expected but are completely unfounded as the actors in Beautiful Creatures are not charmless droids devoid of any personality – it is the actors who save this film.
Beautiful Creatures is certainly not in the running for the best film of the year and for those who have no interest in reading the books I would probably advise you to stay away.  It wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be is the strongest compliment I can give.
Watchable. Enjoyable. Forgettable.  Beautiful Creatures gets 5.5/10