I
have to admit it did feel a but repetitive going to see this merely 2 months
after watching Mirror Mirror which in effect, is the same movie but this
seemed like a darker twist on the tale - more like the recent Red Riding Hood
from last year which interested me greatly as there's nothing better than a
fairytale made for grown-ups (and my weird love of Grimm on TV
currently is just heightening the temptation to see kiddie tales gruesomely
transformed somewhat), that is unless Tim Burton does them as Alice in
Wonderland was just plain weird!
Its easy to get the comparisons of these two adaptations of Snow White sorted from early on - they are nothing alike. Whereas Mirror is a comical romp through the enchanted fairytale with a slightly hilarious queen and a number of adorable dwarfs & even a goofy prince in tow, this movie has zero resemblance - making it exactly what I'd hoped for!
Lets start with the plot. Most of
the movie to be fair plays along with the original tale pretty closely - After
losing her parents, Snow is locked in the tower by the new wicked queen, she
escapes to the woods and then has the Huntsmen track her down through the
Forbidden Forest, being rescued by a number of Dwarf's and then with the newly
acquainted Huntsman on her side and an army bought together under the war
colours of her Fathers true followers she seeks vengeance against the Queen to
take back her kingdom and regain her rightful place on the Throne.
Just as you remember it right? but this is definitely a darker and more sword slaying adaptation that may not entirely be suitable for your Disney loving clan of under 5's. Charlize Theron (who now appears in back to back blogs) is brilliant as the Queen - totally vengeful and jealous of Snow's beauty and with a slightly 'too close for comfort' relationship with her brother makes a great villain - her hoard of nasties are also on track with her with the aforementioned Brother seeming to more worship his sister than answer to her. Snow herself (Kristen Stewart) and the Huntsman (Thor) pair off brilliantly together once they meet up in the Woods and it doesn't take long for him to see she's not all bad and switch sides to protect, rather than destroy our heroine.
Then there was a surprising twist
- and one I though might happen after reading the previews but not to the
extent it did. The Dwarf's.
They were brilliant - but surprisingly not your usual band of famous 3ft actors this time it was a far more recognisable bunch with Ian McShane, Bob Hoskins (okay, he's tiny anyway), Ray Winstone, Nick Frost & Eddie Marsan (to name a few) who strapped on the prosthetics and by what I can only assume was the same trickery that made Coltrane's Hagrid appear giant like in Potter, made our normal band of 5ft+ actors minuscule in comparison to Stewart, Hemsworth, Theron and the rest of adult sized brood.
They were violent, comedic &
lovable and when you pair this with the true cuteness of their forest glade of
a home, the residential fairies and the animal magnetism from Snow White, only
really explained in the Disney original animated classic that this feels more
like any fairytale adaptation yet to make the big screen.
The Battle
scenes are great - there is a real medieval feel to them with molten tar being
poured upon our troops as they battle the evil armies and then the Queen
herself seems to be nothing short of pure evil when seeking her only
requirement - eternal youth. Stewart has shown that there could be life outside
of Twilight - although the Apple dare fall too far from the tree and Hemsworth
- well, lets just say his Scottish is not great, but he's likable all the same.
If as an Adult you want a piece of
childhood memory pimped up a little for modern times then this is the
one for you - All the cast were great, the Dwarf's were excellent and it pairs
the adorability factor nicely alongside all the blood and battle
compared closest (in my mind) to Russell Crowe's Robin Hood.
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