Genre: Adventure/Family/Fantasy
Director: Iain Softley
Cast: Brendan Fraser, Paul Bettany, Helen Mirren,
Jim Broadbent, Andy Serkis, Eliza Hope Bennett, Rafi Gavron,
Sienna Guillory
RunTime: 1 hr 46 mins
Released By: Warner Bros
Rating: PG
Official Website: http://www.inkheartmovie.com/
Opening Day: 22 January 2009
Synopsis:
Based
on the book by Cornelia Funke, "Inkheart" is a timeless
adventure tale of imagination that centers on Meggie, a young
girl whose father has a secret ability to bring characters
from books to life when he reads them aloud. But when a power-hungry
villain from a rare children's fable kidnaps Meggie's father
to bring others out of the boundaries of fiction, she and
a disparate group of friends both real and magic embark on
the kind of adventure she has only read about in books to
save him and set things right.
Movie Review:
Something happens when ‘silver tongues’ read a
book. It comes to life- well, at least the characters do.
But for every storybook character that is freed from the shackles
of the pages, someone from our world gets trapped in the fictional
realm.
Inkheart
is the story of one such silver-tongue, Mo Folchart (Brendan
Fraser), whose wife Resa (Sienna Guillory) is now within the
pages of a book (incidentally also titled Inkheart) after
he accidentally reads it aloud without knowledge of the powers
he possesses. It is also an adaptation of the first book of
the fantasy trilogy by bestselling German author Cornelia
Funke.
No
doubt the story and its characters have been brought to the
big screen; whether they are in the process brought to life
is however questionable. Because this adaptation by director
Iain Softley and Pulitzer Prize winning dramatist David Lindsay
Abaire doesn’t quite leap off the pages as one would
expect it to.
Much
has to do with the difficulty of translating the hefty source
material into a 105-minute feature film. Not only is there
a lot going on, there are also plenty of characters tightly
compressed into this brisk telling. As a result, the story
seems to rush from one location to another, breathless to
the point that it fails to stop and let its audience absorb
its finer interesting details- like how the characters brought
to life by a stuttering ‘silver tongue’ still
have the words of the book stained across their faces.
The
breakneck pace of the plot-driven story also fails to develop
the book’s many characters. Mo Folchart becomes less
the anguished husband searching for the disappearance of his
wife than another Brendan Fraser adventurer running from one
point to another. Faring worse is Mo’s daughter’s
distant aunt Elinor Loredan (Helen Mirren) and the book’s
author Fenoglio (Jim Broadbent) who are reduced to just sideshows
to lighten up the proceedings.
What
the movie does get right is the many cheeky references to
classic children’s books. Avid readers will definitely
have a field day identifying famous quotes from popular literature
and spotting their many iconic representations as well- including
the flying monkeys from “The Wizard of Oz” and
Rapunzel from (well) Rapunzel. (Were it not for copyright
issues, I’m sure we’d probably be seeing more.)
The
many themes in the book are also retained in this adaptation,
though to varying degrees of success. There is that of fascism,
what with the reminder of the power of the written word and
the burning of books by the power-hungry Capricorn (Andy Serkis).
But the most fleshed out theme is that of fate, as exemplified
by Dustfinger’s (Paul Bettany) resolve to be better
than the selfish character he has been written to be in Fenoglio’s
book.
Thanks
to an energetic and lively cast, Inkheart also receives a
boost of adrenaline. Brendan Fraser is likeable as always,
but he is outshone by an ensemble supporting cast. Helen Mirren
is delightful as the eccentric Elinor and Andy Serkis injects
gleeful malice and smarminess into the role of despicable
Capricorn. The scene-stealer here is Paul Bettany who lends
his character Dustfinger enough gravitas to convey his moral
predicament as he struggles with his own self-centred nature.
There
is a never a dull moment in the picture- something is always
happening somewhere to someone. But fantasy is more than just
about adventure- it is equally, if not more, about that sense
of wonderment and emotional engagement- both of which unfortunately
have failed to make the leap from print to screen. This sadly
leaves both readers and viewers yearning for more.
Movie Rating:
(More a hobble than a leap off the pages- this Inkheart
could do well with more of the book’s magic)
Review by Gabriel Chong
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