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I'm not sure why, but
Kimberly J. Brown is nowhere to be found in this final film of the "Halloweentown"
series. I read an interview online from Kimberly J. Brown that explains
she never got a call to come back to the movies, even though she was
more than willing. I peg it to the fact that Sara Paxton was then
blossoming to be tailored for Disney Channel stardom, thus they kicked
out the very adorable and quite talented Brown in exchange for the more
streamlined and younger Sara Paxton. The difference is immensely
noticeable as the character seems completely different from the original
Marnie. Paxton is a good actress, but she's not as charming or soft
spoken as Brown was, thus there's an element missing from this final
film. Also, Debbie Reynolds is nowhere to be found, another sad fact
considering she was a key element to the formation of Marnie. She was
her Obi-Wan. Without her, Marnie is just another heroine. I'm also
assuming Disney just wanted to reboot the whole shebang, which fails on
every level. The heart of the series is Kimberly J. Brown and without
her, this final installment is just hollow. "Return to Halloweentown" is
very much not a Halloweentown movie in spite of the fact that it tries
to convince the audience it's apart of the series. It features nods to
the character Sophie who is allegedly so far ahead of her training she's
traveling galaxies, while Marnie is still learning her craft (how does
that work exactly?), she is never seen or heard but we hear she's doing
better than Marnie and yet the movies doesn't focus on Sophie at all.
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Marnie is
now a ditzy bubble head prone to using her magic in about as
girliest a way as possible in spite of seeing her mature in
a more matriarchal position in the former films, and Aggie
is seen in only a few moments with Millicent Martin added to
replace Mrs. Reynolds in her absence. And there is no
mention made of any of the other characters from the
previous movies including Marnie's boyfriend Cody. Instead,
Marnie is now just a self-involved college girl heading to
Witch University defying her mom who wants her to go to
school in the mortal world. |
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With Dylan tagging
along, she experiences the same clichés of school life we saw in "Halloweentown
High" except now we actually get to see much more monsters and the town,
which was the point of this series in the first place. Lucas Grabeel who
was being tailored for stardom in "High School Musical" is wholly
forgettable as Ethan Dalloway, Marnie's love interest who was stripped
of his powers in the third film and returns to help Marnie in her quest
to stop a brotherhood hoping to conquer Halloweentown through Marnie who
is a prophesized queen. Since there was never any mention of a queen or
king in the previous films, it's quite convenient. For what it's worth,
this attempted reboot seems to be attempting to appeal to a new audience
with Paxton's stardom, but otherwise it's a bland and awfully convoluted
little kids film with none of the innocence or originality of the first
two films, and it lacks in any of the conflicts of the first movies
mainly because it's all been done before. Secret societies, a hidden
villain, a school for magic, we've seen it all before, and they can
never really do anything new here. But what with Paxton and Grabeel
being the poster children for Disney at the year this was made, "Return
to Halloweentown" is much more concerned with being a vehicle for the
two stars than making any sense or acting as a proper finisher for the
series. And for folks who enjoyed the series offerings, it's a shame.
This is really just a
star vehicle and nothing more. It recycles old plot themes, meanders
from the actual story, garners no entertainment or inspiration from its
audience and is in the end a vapid and listless finisher to an otherwise
amusing family series. But that's okay, there is at least "Wizards of
Waverly Place" to come along years later, an admitted guilty pleasure of
mine. Don't judge me, man.
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