Genre:
Adventure/Fantasy
Director: David L. Cunningham
Cast: Ian McShane, Frances Conroy, Christopher
Eccleston, Alexander Ludwig, Jonathan Jackson, Amelia Warner,
Gregory Smith, Emma Lockhart, Gary Entin, Edmond Entin, John
Benjamin Hickey
RunTime: 1 hr 39 mins
Released By: 20th Century Fox
Rating: PG
Official Website: www.seekthesigns.com
Opening Day: 25 October 2007
Synopsis:
THE SEEKER: THE DARK IS RISING is the first film adaptation
based on the acclaimed novel ‘The Dark Is Rising’
sequence by Susan Cooper. The film tells the story of Will
Stanton, a young man who learns he is the last of a group
of warriors who have dedicated their lives to fighting the
forces of the Dark. Traveling back and forth through time,
Will hunts for a series of mysterious clues and encounters
forces of unimaginable evil. With the Dark once again rising,
the future of the world rests in Will’s hands.
Movie Review:
Having not read the book it is based upon—"The
Dark Is Rising" by Susan Cooper—this big-screen
adaptation cannot be fairly compared to its source material
except to wager that a fair amount of its nuance and depth
probably were sacrificed. Indeed, the screenplay by John Hodge
(2000's "The Beach") is pretty dreadful, the dialogue
liberally covered in a layer of cheesiness and the plot overly
reliant on coincidences and paper-thin "Fantasy for Dummies"
supporting characters. The sorry action set-pieces are no
help, the few of them that there are only proving to be afterthoughts
lacking in scope and elegance. With the camera often jammed
too close to the subject, perhaps as a way of shielding the
underwhelming production values, the film is claustrophobic
at the precise times when it should be building up a sense
of grandeur.
Will
Stanton (Alexander Ludwig) is a teenage American who has been
plucked from his homeland thanks to his professor dad’s
job, which has seen he, mum and the rest of his siblings –
four elder brothers (a fifth, as per the current American
preoccupation with all things war, is serving in the Navy)
and a little sister – move to what appears to be the
most twee village in middle England. On his 14th birthday
he discovers, after a rather unfortunate brush with evil at
a local shopping centre, that he is in fact “the seeker”
– a chosen one whose duty is to find six signs that
will stop evil in the form of Christopher Eccleston from taking
over the world and banishing the light forever.
Helping
him in his quest are the residents of twee central, the local
manor house. Lady of the manor Miss Greythorne (Frances Conroy
ditching her American tones for English vowels), gruff butler
Merriman (Ian McShane) and groundsmen types Dawson (James
Cosmo) and Old George (Jim Piddock) are all ‘old ones’,
basically protectors of the light, who’ve been waiting
for Will to come along and score a home run for the team.
They also tell him the reason for his greatness – he
is the seventh son of a seventh son, but a quick count reveals
that he only knows about five of his brothers - leading to
a rather unnecessary sub-plot about the sixth.
Blandly
directed by David L. Cunningham, "The Seeker: The Dark
Is Rising" resembles 2006's "Eragon" in quality,
if not in story. Both pictures are messy inferior pastiches
of better fantasy-laden efforts, and both are tacky and cornball
enough to feel right at home in the 1980s. In the twenty-first
century, however, they are stylistically and creatively unsophisticated
and lackluster. A tale of a young boy on a quest to retrieve
a series of so-called "Signs" is well and good,
but nothing of interest is done with it. Will too easily tracks
most of them down and, without explanation, all happen to
be hidden within a radius of what must be less than a mile.
This was the one area when some excitement might have been
gleaned from the material, but that possibility is rendered
moot as Will practically stumbles onto the Signs rather than
fights for them. Pitted against Will is the villainous Rider,
and he is as forgettable as they come, showing up long enough
to prance around on his horse and snarl.
It’s
not a total loss. The opening half hour does a pretty darn
good job of convincing a viewer that something good might
just be going on here. The whole first act is seductively
moody with just the right hint of sinister menace, while the
always splendid Eccleston was just born to play the playfully
murderous villain. Few moments this year have been as giddily
terrifying as the sight of an incognito Rider happily singing
along to “Joy to the World” at a church service
while also giving Will the evil eye, the whole scene so masterful
in its bristling malevolence it only makes the utter mediocrity
of the rest that much more difficult to take.
But
soon “Seeker” sputters off into a showdown of
Light and Dark for the future of the world. Heavy, huh? Unfortunately
most of the dramatic execution is left to Alexander Ludwig,
who isn’t the most striking onscreen personality. I
kept hoping McShane would shove the boy aside and take “Seeker”
for a spin with his enchanting Shakespearian acting tics,
matching the apocalyptic tone of the finale assault more comfortably
than a blonde teenage acting novice. That drastic (and needed)
change of focus never comes to fruition.
Movie Rating:
(A
bland fantasy fix that lacks direction. Seek others)
Review by Lokman BS
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