|
THE
THREE MUSKETEERS (2011)
|
||||||||||||
|
Most exclusively the 1993 Disney adaptation which saw much of the same situations occur both of the humorous and dramatic sort. There is even a comical misunderstanding between D'Artagnan and the musketeers in a courtyard that we essentially saw in the predecessor when he schedules three duels for the same day with the trio of swordsmen. Given that, Anderson does take advantage of the stellar cast and spends most of his time on Christoph Waltz relying on him to pull off the role of Cardinal Richelieu, the devious holy man hoping to conquer the land with the help of Milady. Of course Waltz can play this role in his sleep, and most times he looks darn right lethargic. When Anderson has the ability to tell a sophisticated retooling of the Dumas tale, he opts instead for juvenile steam punk dribble where most anachronistic gadgets are introduced, all the while the characters stumble around throughout the course of the picture bandying tired one-liners and failing to show any sort of wit or enthusiasm for the material. The worst aspect of the film is that though the cast is respectable, they simply have no chemistry. The boyish zeal from D'Artagnan is lost on Logan Lerman, while folks like Orlando Bloom and Ray Stevenson are mostly wasted in their roles. The three musketeers barely have friction as a unit; most times they barely seem to like one another, thus most of the action and unifying themes are lost on this installment. I could also never be sure about what Anderson was driving at with his premise about the apocalypse and the Cardinal's master plan as it's lost in a sea of exhausting monologues that fail to inspire any tension or suspense, all the while the fight scenes are mainly nonsensical time fillers meant to distract from the convoluted narrative. Anyone hoping to figure out the grand master plan by the end of the film will be sorely disappointed as Anderson greets us with an open ended climax that Anderson seems to be certain will be met with a sequel.
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
Have something to say about this review? Pop on over to Cinema-Lunatics
and speak your mind in our Answer Back! Forums >> |
|
[
Link to
Us |
FAQ |
Top^
] ¤ ¤ ¤ |