Burchardus
Aug. 2000 ist beigetreten
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Bewertung von Burchardus
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Bewertung von Burchardus
Sherlock Holmes has been interpreted, updated or abused countless times. Some get the essence of the original character right (ranging from the extremely faithful Jeremy Brett series to the American update in the form of Elementary (2012)), some have no relation except in name (2009's Sherlock Holmes (2009) comes to mind).
Here we have a film that at least tries and might have got away with a better lead than Ben Syder. Unfortunately, he is not up to the task. Gareth David-Lloyd is a bit too young as Dr. Watson, while William Huw is quite adequate.
Now, this is a C-movie, so we can not expect much in terms of production values. A major letdown is the cinematography. The basic setup of the shots is not to blame neither the overuse of filters but at the end most scenes were simply way too dark (so I had to apply filters of my own to adjust brightness and contrast).
What makes the film bearable is its short running time and reasonably fast pacing. Storywise it deviates from Arthur Conan Doyle's original material, as do most post-copyright productions. It is not always coherent; I feel it could use a better treatment of character development, their backgrounds and the events leading to those depicted in this film.
Overall, fair enough considering the budget, but probably rather recommendable to fans of Asylum's work than to Sherlockians.
Here we have a film that at least tries and might have got away with a better lead than Ben Syder. Unfortunately, he is not up to the task. Gareth David-Lloyd is a bit too young as Dr. Watson, while William Huw is quite adequate.
Now, this is a C-movie, so we can not expect much in terms of production values. A major letdown is the cinematography. The basic setup of the shots is not to blame neither the overuse of filters but at the end most scenes were simply way too dark (so I had to apply filters of my own to adjust brightness and contrast).
What makes the film bearable is its short running time and reasonably fast pacing. Storywise it deviates from Arthur Conan Doyle's original material, as do most post-copyright productions. It is not always coherent; I feel it could use a better treatment of character development, their backgrounds and the events leading to those depicted in this film.
Overall, fair enough considering the budget, but probably rather recommendable to fans of Asylum's work than to Sherlockians.
Well, let me stress out in the beginning: I don't know anything about (thus also any book by) Dr. Seuss - except that he was this hotshot writer whom every American seem to love (I remember best the bit Joey did in the first season finale on "Friends").
As for the movie I found it good enough to earn its points: Mike Myers is funny, though Americans may find him sometimes risqué for a movie aimed at kids. Overall it was a good mix between a typical children's' message film (though the message is not quite clear) and no-non-sense fun. The FX were more than adequate (well, Rhythm & Hues were mentioned in a book about animation by Julius Wiedemann, that's how I discovered the film - my girlfriend liked the fish), the design was sufficiently artificial to make it work, and finally, for a simple tale like this it was short enough (I guess much longer and I'd have had to downrate the picture).
As a compensation for the predictable story, the Cat was quite unpredictable in the course of events (as I indicated above I can not relate to the book, so I'm writing for one who has never heard/read/seen the story before), so it never suffered from the downsides of the movie. As for the kids, they were surprisingly un-annoying, as quite often children in movies make you squirm. Spencer Breslin proved again (after Disney's The Kid with Bruce Willis) that he can play a character that I would find annoying without being annoying, and Dakota Fanning (I haven't seen her before in any movie, I think) is a girl to watch out for.
So overall, here's a family movie that can please many with (in my free-spirited mind) a slight edge that you know was meant for people to clap their hands over their mouths but actually is quite tame. If you don't mind to actually see the workings of a commercial approach to a story in a movie, you can be entertained for those 82 minutes. (And if you like the technical side of movie making, as I, you can see some mildly interesting features in the motion picture. That's how he earned the little bonus. These days Hollywood often makes super-duper movies that make B-movies appear as technical masterstrokes; witness the awful effects on "Van Helsing" or the mostly unconvincing SFX on "LOTR: The Fellowship of the Ring"!)
As for the movie I found it good enough to earn its points: Mike Myers is funny, though Americans may find him sometimes risqué for a movie aimed at kids. Overall it was a good mix between a typical children's' message film (though the message is not quite clear) and no-non-sense fun. The FX were more than adequate (well, Rhythm & Hues were mentioned in a book about animation by Julius Wiedemann, that's how I discovered the film - my girlfriend liked the fish), the design was sufficiently artificial to make it work, and finally, for a simple tale like this it was short enough (I guess much longer and I'd have had to downrate the picture).
As a compensation for the predictable story, the Cat was quite unpredictable in the course of events (as I indicated above I can not relate to the book, so I'm writing for one who has never heard/read/seen the story before), so it never suffered from the downsides of the movie. As for the kids, they were surprisingly un-annoying, as quite often children in movies make you squirm. Spencer Breslin proved again (after Disney's The Kid with Bruce Willis) that he can play a character that I would find annoying without being annoying, and Dakota Fanning (I haven't seen her before in any movie, I think) is a girl to watch out for.
So overall, here's a family movie that can please many with (in my free-spirited mind) a slight edge that you know was meant for people to clap their hands over their mouths but actually is quite tame. If you don't mind to actually see the workings of a commercial approach to a story in a movie, you can be entertained for those 82 minutes. (And if you like the technical side of movie making, as I, you can see some mildly interesting features in the motion picture. That's how he earned the little bonus. These days Hollywood often makes super-duper movies that make B-movies appear as technical masterstrokes; witness the awful effects on "Van Helsing" or the mostly unconvincing SFX on "LOTR: The Fellowship of the Ring"!)
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