Thursday, 23 March 2017

Beauty and the Best: review

Beauty and the Beast 2017 poster.jpg

Director: Bill Condon
Running time: 129 minutes


Beauty and the Beast is a remake of the 1991 Disney classic, which is still the studio's only animated feature to ever be nominated for a best picture at the Academy awards. It follows a recent trend in Disney remaking their classics into live action features, so is this recent endeavour a cynical money grabber or a worthy re-imagining of a masterpiece?

The story is about a vain Prince who refuses an old beggar seeking shelter, who in her revenge turns him into a beast, and then gives him a rose. If he does not find love before the last petal falls, he will live out his days as the beast. When Belle's (Emma Watson) father, Maurice stumbles upon the the Castle while travelling to a market, he is taken prisoner, so Belle makes her way to the castle and she takes his place.

On its own merits, this version of the fairy tale is good if rather forgettable, it misses certain nuances that worked so well in the animated original, such as the facial expressions of the beast, which gave the character a little depth and a number of comedic moments.

The film is uneven in its presentation, the village looks stagy and fake, this might have been intentional but at certain points it took me out of the movie. The castle is also a mixed bag, the outside design is gothic and intimidating in an intriguing way, but from my recollection there's never a moment where it's shot in a foreboding way, its scale is never really explored in the same way for example, Hogwarts was in the Harry Potter movies. The inside of the castle has better scope to it but its visually drab, which is the most surprising thing about the whole movie, aside from one particular music score nothing of the visuals ever stood out.

The musical numbers are fine, some stretch for a bit too long and some of the cast have noticeably better singing talent than others, but they are all typical Disney which is a good thing.

Of all the casting it's Luke Evans that stands out, his take as Gaston never strays too far into exaggeration, and you can see that he's put everything into his performance so that the character is unlikable, but we still find sympathy to his cause. It's only towards the end of the film that he really turns into a vicious villain. His rapport with LeFou (Josh Gad) is a joy, and a slight change in contrast to the original where LeFou was literally a goof and a tag along. Emma Watson is passable as Belle, Kevin Kline's portrayal of Maurice has been changed for the better, he is far less wacky in this interpretation.

The supporting characters of Cogsworth and Lemiere (the candle and the clock) provide the comic relief in the film, they play off each other with great chemistry, but it's in their design that they lose the charm and the expression of the original.

There are differences with the original, we get a backstory to Belle's mother, but aside from that all of them are slender and leave with little impression or difference. Maybe it's the quality of the original that doesn't allow this to divert in any serious manner, which begs the question of whether it was worth it in the first place. Now don't get me wrong, this is a fine movie, but it just lacks the courage of its own conviction, so it just ends up being a mere imitation. Overall, I would recommend going to see this film, especially for a family trip.

Verdict-7.5
C    

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