Welcome To XND! Login if you are a member or Join XND for a free account.
HANGOUT HOME | BOOKMARK US | HELP
FORUMS | CHATROOM
 Tuesday, September 07, 2010
XND Search:
Previous Article Next Article Table of Contents Share!
Inkheart

"Inkheart" (quality rating: 6)
Director: Iain Softley
Screenplay: David Lindsay-Abaire, based on the Cornelia Funke novel
Cast: Brendan Fraser, Eliza Bennet, Paul Bettany, Helen Mirren, Jim Broadbent
Time: 1 hr., 46 min.
Rating: PG (fantasy adventure action, some scary moments and brief vulgarity)
By Marty Meltz


    Lotta detail.  Little involvement.  Fun to watch. So easy to forget.
     In "Inkheart," a wildly ambitious fairy tale fantasy, a lot of people move around among a lot of objects and things, threatening each other, victimizing, controlling and, each time they do that, we're left with a shrug. Not that it hasn't been neat to watch. This film is just bristling with flawlessly done special effects, endless and countless.
     But we are bedecked here with supposedly magical characters who don't radiate magic.  Why not?  Well, y'see, on screen, when fanciful persons and critters materialize out of nowhere, you kind of expect them to follow through with catchy personalities and fanciful things to do. Otherwise you walk away having seen simple demonstrations of visual effects. Pretty, but . .
.
  
     The film, understand, is aggressive. Its performances are more than energetic. Its villain is so very bad like you wouldn't believe -- besides threatening good and decent persons with perfectly awful punishment’s, his little army of baddies lethally threatens parenthood and burns books.  What one senses is missing in all this menace and mayhem, however, is a theme with something of substance a little more compelling than all of that. One recollects the "Lord of the Rings" series in which cosmic forces of untold power drew our heroes into confrontation. "Inkheart" doesn't reach for those kind of stakes. Without that, its moment-to-moment conflicts crave momentum.  And a search for a lost mommy isn't a theme with the intrinsic energy to sustain you.
      In this very bizarre fantasy, perhaps designed more for adults with its convoluted philosophy, we have bookbinder Mortimer "Mo" Folchart (Brendan Fraser) who's forever visiting now here, now there, all over the world, dragging along his unappreciative daughter Meggie (Eliza Bennett).  
     At the last home arrives an old mysterious acquaintance of Mo's named Dustfinger (Paul Bettany).  This event is to make a sudden change in Mo's life with Meggie. Without explaining to her what's happening, the next morning Mo packs up and leaves with her.
    They stop at Meggie's Great Aunt Eleanor's (Helen Mirren). Dramatic events will now come together. It seems that 10 years ago Mo discovered within himself a strange gift in which, when he reads a book aloud, the characters come to life and actually leave the book. He's known in the metaphysical world as a "silvertongue." But the process then dictates that these characters must be replaced by "reading in" somebody else.
      At that time, in a mishap he had read in a rare book called "Inkheart," a thug character from long ago named Capricorn (Andy Serkis) emerged. And Mo inadvertently "read in" his own wife (Sienna Guillory). Now, some thugs arrive and kidnap Mo to bring him to Capricorn.  Capricorn, a cruel man, now wants Mo to read out "The Shadow" an evil power which will aid Capricorn in his world conquest ambitions.
      Meggie goes forth with Eleanor to Capricorn's village to rescue him.  Not so easy. As soon as they arrive, they're adbucted themselves and locked up with Mo. It turns out that she too is a silvertongue. But there are two others who had come out of the book and the great heroics begin. Some are by Dustfinger, who desperately wants to prove to the author of Inkheart (Jim Broadbent) that he's better than his written character. Meantime, obviously, Mo and Meggie want mom back.  This all heads an apocalypse-type finish. 
        Too much of the film's plot elements were loosely handled.  It just wants to be remembered for its monumentally sensational effects at the end. 


 

             


 



BOOKMARK AND SHARE THIS ARTICLE SOCIALLY:
del.icio.us digg reddit Technorati StumbleUpon Windows Live FURL ask Blogmarks Blogmarks Slashdot


ADD A COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE:
Name:
E-mail: (optional)
Say Hello:
Smile: smilewinkwassattonguelaughingsadangrycrying

| Forget Me



Poetry
One Last Stand
Soaring Our Heights
The Perfect Wife
Be Bold and Courageous
This Quit Blessing
As Long As I Have
The Wind Seduction
Loser
The Better World
Tackling the Abstract
To Be
Disposable World

ARCHIVES
ADVERTISEMENTS



























Visit XNDSHOP.COM and SHOP FOR EVERYONE
mo8383
michaellangley
KandeeMusic
Feedback

WEBSITE DESIGNED BY SB TECHNOLOGY