Showing posts with label josh gad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label josh gad. Show all posts

March 17, 2017

Beauty and the Beast

"Well, you know, I love to read. Actually, I'm looking at a book,
I'm reading a book, I'm trying to get started.

Grade:  C +
Director: Bill Condon
Starring: Emma Watson, Dan Stevens, Luke Evans, Kevin Kline, Josh Gad, Ewan McGregor, Ian McKellen, Emma Thompson, and Audra McDonald
MPAA Rating: PG
Running Time: 2 hr. 9 min.

“Little Red Riding Hood,” “Hansel and Gretel,” and “Cinderella” are iconic children’s literature, but it's forgotten that the subject matter of these and other classic fairy tales are exceedingly dark and violent—in the original “Snow White,” the Queen, Snow White’s actual mother, wants her daughter killed so she can eat her liver and lungs.

From the original 1740 French fairy tale by Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont to its acclaimed animated and stage adaptations, the common narrative thread running through every iteration of Beauty and the Beast is the notion that love can tame even the most savage creature, unlocking its inner beauty. The latest version is a lavish, live-action Disney update that nonetheless mirrors the plot and songs in the 1991 Oscar-nominated film. Perhaps the patina of cel animation masked an unsettling underpinning that, 16 years hence, rings rather regressive to contemporary eyes and ears. It’s hardly politically correct to recoil from a romance spawned by a brute holding a young girl captive, positive that if she would only get to know him better that she’d learn to love him and cure his violent impulses. Our court system and women’s shelters are full of such stories.

When doddering dad Maurice (Kevin Kline) wanders across a seemingly abandoned castle and picks a rose for his lonely daughter Belle (Emma Watson), a monstrous Beast (Dan Stevens underneath lots of CGI), the lord of the manor, claps Maurice in his dungeon. When Belle discovers her father's whereabouts, she bargains with the Beast to take his place. That’s just fine with the Beast and the other inhabitants of his castle, all anthropomorphic finery ranging from a candelabra (Ewan McGregor), a brass clock (Ian McKellen), a harpsichord (Stanley Tucci), and a teapot (Emma Thompson). They’re former helpers of the house encased in these animate objects, and the Beast is actually a vain prince damned to this grotesque visage unless he can convince a woman to love him before the last petal falls from a hexed rose.

Belle, a bookworm branded “funny” by her townsfolk, has long rebuffed any romantic overtures, particularly the coarse advances of Gaston (Luke Evans), an arrogant would-be suitor accompanied by LeFou (Josh Gad), his long-suffering sidekick. Much has been made about this LeFou being the first avowed gay Disney character, and while Gad’s interpretation leaves little to guesswork, he doesn’t exactly play LeFou like Harvey Fierstein.

Condon’s coiffed, painterly set design produces its fair share of eye-catching moments, from the opening ball to the frenzied “Be Our Guest” feast. But further hindering the parochial plotline are the two leads. Stevens’ digitized voice makes him sound like a Transformer. Meanwhile, it’s hard to decide which countenance is more devoid of emotion: Stevens’ motion-captured mask, or Watson, who simply and quite unfortunately appears bored and/or lost in the part. She wanders aimlessly through entire scenes without design, and her go-to expression is a bemused, pursed-lip smirk for a role that demands a broader mien. Together, it’s the woolly mammoth meets the woolly personality—I’ve seen better chemistry in Fifty Shades of Grey.

There are the inevitable plot quibbles—the herd of snow wolves that prowl the forest encircling the Beast’s abode accost those approaching the castle as well as those attempting to escape, until the storyline needs them to mysteriously disappear. Beauty and the Beast’s insistent romance will lure susceptible viewers, but there’s little need for this revival to run a whole 45 minutes longer than the 1991 adaptation. The result is overstuffed pastiche, trying mightily to recapture the magic of a story that doesn’t age so happily ever after.

November 28, 2013

Frozen

I'm just waiting for my spin-off

Grade: B –
Director: Chris Buck and Jennifer Lee
Starring the voices of: Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Jonathan Groff, Josh Gad and Santino Fontana
MPAA Rating: PG
Running Time: 1 hr. 48 min.

The classic Disney vibe that Frozen aims to capture is best conveyed before the movie even begins. Get a Horse!, the new short that precedes it, is a marvelous meld of classic black-and-white handdrawn Mickey Mouse animation (Mickey’s voice is actually archival audio of Walt Disney himself) and color computer graphics, all rendered in 3D and blended into a step-off-the-screen setting in the spirit of Buster Keaton’s Sherlock Jr. Directed by Lauren MacMullan, it’s seven minutes of hilarious, glorious animated movie magic.

There are many moments in Frozen that evoke that same magic. Charm and whimsy abound, the 3D computer animation is stunning, and the musical’s Broadway-style show tunes are clever and as broad as the CinemaScope winterscape. However, the story is wispy as a snowflake, a delicate string to connect all the pretty pictures and toe tapping tunes.

Disney’s decades-long struggle to adapt Han Christian Anderson’s The Snow Queen still bedevils this modern update. Two princess sisters, Anna (Kristen Bell) and Elsa (Idina Menzel), are kept apart as children after Elsa’s potent but untamed cryokinetic power to create snow and ice nearly kills Anna. All grown up, Elsa’s glove-covered secret finally comes out on her coronation day, causing the new ice queen to unwittingly unleash an eternal freeze across the mythical kingdom of Arendelle and flee into exile atop a nearby Nordic mountain.

It falls to spunky Anna to track down her sister and coax her return to the throne. Accompanying Anna on her journey is Kristoff (Jonathan Groff), a rakish ice peddler (you see where that subplot is going), his reindeer sidekick Sven, and a buck-toothed, carrot-nosed snowman named Olaf, voiced by Josh Gad of The Book of Mormon fame.

The plotline is predictable and somewhat vapid—essentially, the narrative tension revolves around the fact that Elsa has serious anger management issues. Otherwise, every conflict is ultimately resolved in banal and befuddling fashion (not unlike Disney’s popular Tangled, this film’s creative inspiration).  Beyond the showstopping songs, the only thing that warms Frozen’s frigid story is Olaf’s witty interjections.

Frozen might thaw your heart, but your head will feel like it’s still on ice.