Rating:
****/*****, or 7/10
Second
foray of Robert Zemeckis into the realm of 'performance capture' (the
first being The Polar Express (2004), allowing digital artists
to record the motions of actors in blue suits on stage, especially
their facial movements for maximum emotional impact, and filling in
everything else via the computer afterwards. This time Zemeckis
appropriated this technique for telling the epic tale of the medieval
hero Beowulf (Ray Winstone), a valiant but arrogant warrior who comes
to the aid of a king (Anthony Hopkins) who is plagued by the hideous
monster Grendel (Crispin Glover). Beowulf fights the monster
successfully, but must than deal with his seductive mother (Angelina
Jolie) who promises him fame and riches in return for him giving her
a new son. Beowulf accepts, but finds he made a deal with the devil:
though he gets what was promised it makes him feel empty and alone.
When his son returns as a dragon and lays waste to his kingdom,
Beowulf gets one last chance to set things right and be a genuine
hero again. Plenty of good action and amazing visuals, but the
digital technique just didn't prove able to convincingly breathe life
into the pixelized cast, making them feel eerily artificial and
soulless. It did prove effective for getting Angelina Jolie stark
naked though. Zemeckis, not one to give up on an evolving means of
effects, applied performance capture a third time to his take on A
Christmas Carol (2009). Beowulf was the first film I ever
watched in (IMAX) 3D, and still one of the very few I feel made
effective use of the 3D process (just before the 3D craze got a hold
of Hollywood and most blockbusters used it to squeeze more bucks out
of the audience without delivering the promised goods): the way those
giant sea serpents alone came at you made the movie quite
spectacular, despite its digital shortcomings. Overall, a good
version of the old English poem, effectively combining the very old
with the very new.
Starring:
Ray Winstone, Anthony Hopkins, Angelina Jolie
Directed
by Robert Zemeckis
USA:
Paramount Pictures, 2007
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