Genre:
Romance/Comedy
Director: Elizabeth Allen
Starring: Joann ‘Jo Jo’ Levesque,
Emma Roberts, Sarah Paxton, Jake McDorman
RunTime: -
Released By: 20th Century Fox
Rating: PG
Opening
Day: 27 April 2006
Synopsis
:
Following
a violent storm, a beautiful and sassy mermaid named Aquamarine,
washes ashore and into the lives of two teenage girls. As
Aquamarine struggles to discover a new world beyond the sea
and to fit in with her new environment and friends, she falls
for a local, hunky lifeguard and enlists the girls’
help to win his heart.
Movie
Review:
As far as light-hearted preteen comedies are concerned, this
movie screams ‘Chick Flick Alert!’ all over. Based
on the novel written by Alice Hoffman, this mermaid story
is a far cry from the classics of ‘Splash’ or
‘The Little Mermaid’, but for the audience it
is aimed at– mainly girls between the ages of 8 to 15,
it does succeed on connecting with them.
Claire
and Hailey (Emma Roberts and JoJo Levesque) are spending their
last summer together before the latter has to move to Australia.
Dreading the move, the girls make a desperate prayer to the
gods of the Hurricane, which somehow leads to a miracle of
getting a mermaid washed up into their swimming pool after
a heavy freak storm.
The girls
discover the mermaid the next day and it doesn’t take
long for them to befriend each other. Aquamarine (Sara Paxton)
is a runaway mermaid who has made a deal with her father in
order to escape an arranged wedding. She needs to find the
mythical emotion of human love in three days, or else it’s
back to the aisle and wedding bells for her. Naively, she
randomly selects the resident lifeguard hunk, Ray (Jake McDorman)
to be her target of love, and enlists the assistance of the
two girls in exchange for a wish to be granted for their good
deed. The task is overcome with hurdles including teaching
Aqua how to behave like a normal girl, and fending off a rival,
who happens to be your regular clichéd villain –
the spoilt and mean rich girl.
Newcomers
Emma Roberts (famous niece of Julia Roberts) and Jojo Levesque
are charming on screen, but those acting skills could do with
some improvement. Jojo looks very much like a younger Lindsay
Lohan, and makes an improvement in the image department here
compared to her underage vamped up persona when she’s
singing. Sara Paxton is a lot like a young Reese Witherspoon
and though she will need more challenging roles in future
to prove herself, she probably has the best potential of having
a successful career in Hollywood.
This
movie is mostly fluff and bubbly fun entertainment and the
plot does get a little predictable at certain points. However,
it does bring across two key values clearly – that are
the concepts of love and friendship. The laughs and the story
are rather enjoyable on the whole if you don’t mind
the overall cheeriness of it. Bare in mind, this movie is
catered for young girls, so don’t watch it if you don’t
like seeing giggly boy-crazy girls practically stalking after
a guy.
Movie
Rating:
(A
bright and cheery movie for teenage girls, you have been warned
that this is pure chick flick territory)
Review
by Jolene Tan
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