Os Cavaleiros do Zodíaco - Saint Seiya: O Começo
O jovem Seiya luta por dinheiro enquanto procura por sua irmã sequestrada. Quando uma de suas lutas explora poderes que nunca soube que tinha, Seiya se vê lançado em um mundo de guerreiros e... Ler tudoO jovem Seiya luta por dinheiro enquanto procura por sua irmã sequestrada. Quando uma de suas lutas explora poderes que nunca soube que tinha, Seiya se vê lançado em um mundo de guerreiros e uma deusa reencarnada que precisa de proteção.O jovem Seiya luta por dinheiro enquanto procura por sua irmã sequestrada. Quando uma de suas lutas explora poderes que nunca soube que tinha, Seiya se vê lançado em um mundo de guerreiros e uma deusa reencarnada que precisa de proteção.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 indicação no total
- Marin
- (narração)
- (as Katie Moy)
- Docrates
- (as TJ Storm)
- Jaki the Beast
- (as David Török)
Avaliações em destaque
So how much does it stray? Well, there *are* some callbacks to the original IP. A few notes in the musical score, taken straight from the anime soundtrack. Some visuals that made my heart skip a beat, including the very first, somewhat misleading scene. They are all too few, though. This is not the Saint Seiya we grew up with.
The armors are way too different - and not particularly appealing. The fighting scenes, heavy in martial arts, guns, and military vehicles, are not what the original series was all about. Hard to tap into nostalgia when you turn your back on 90% of what people liked in the first place. But again, the main trouble lies in the story.
It's bland. The characters are poorly written. Their arcs, poorly developed. Key scenes late in the movie are laughable, including some that were supposed to be poignant. It's not altogether surprising: rather than adapt the 80's masterpiece, this movie is based on the more recent Netflix adaptation, which flopped commercially and critically.
The film's about a young man struggling to accept his destiny as a knight while spouting that nobody's fate is predetermined and the reincarnated goddess he's supposed to protect, a spunky young girl who lived in fear of being unable to control her immense power, in a rehash of the (also poorly adapted) Dark Phoenix saga from the X-Men.
It feels all-too familiar, especially with Famke Janssen (Jean Grey in the X-Men movies) overlooking the action as the movie's antagonist. There's also Sean Bean (LOTR, GOT, etc.) and Marc Dacascos (Crying Freeman, John Wick 3) in there, but everyone's acting is flat throughout. Hard to shine with the run of the mill story and dialogue.
As for newer faces, Mackenyu looks the part, but there's something lacking. You feel he may have done a better job with more decent lines. Madison Iseman as Sienna showed some charisma, but she too fell victim to the plot holes and inconsistent behavior that plague her and all the other characters.
Could the sequel, with the expected introduction of some key characters, come closer to evoking the thrills the original story did? Perhaps, but I doubt they'll get the chance to do so after botching the launch of what was expected to be a multi-picture saga. Then again, I'm not confident this creative team could have done a good job at it.
No, this is not Dragonball Evolution. The glimpses - teases, really - we get of the original Saint Seiya hint at what could have been a great film. The action scenes are well-choreographed and the main two characters, sympathetic enough. It's all 100% watchable, but nobody's recommending it to anyone, and it will be forgotten soon.
It's a shame. You had some great source material. You could have gotten an awesome movie out of it. Why the lack of faith in it? I came away disappointed and suspect many others will, as well. You want to like or at least enjoy it, but you just end up frustrated at the missed opportunity.
(+) A select few callbacks to the original manga and anime, particularly at the very beginning, in the training scenes, and for a few seconds in the movie's climax. Some actions scenes are decent, albeit heavy in martial arts.
(-) Spotty plot. Lousy third act. Bland characters and storylines taken straight from Netflix's poorly received adaptation. Movie really strays from the source material to tell a rather unoriginal story - and tell it poorly, to boot.
I guess Seiya works well and he kind of has a good chemistry with Saori. His training with Marin is done well and the first fights that don't have the armor are nicely choreographed but everything else is terrible.
I couldn't care more about Famke's character, her motivations are so shallow together with Ikki, who is there mainly so there's a final fight. We have Mitsumasa who isn't Mitsumasa. The VFX looks straight from a 2012 PS3 game. There are so many futuristic ships I didn't know if the movie was supposed to be an alternative world or 20 years in the future.
But the main thing for me is that the movie didn't feel like Saint Seiya, it was like someone who saw the anime 30 years ago tried to explain it to a Hollywood producer who didn't bother to watch the original content and stick to the description given to him. In the end it didn't have the sense of humanity against gods and the sense that even when Seiya lost all his senses he would never give up.
There is no overarching set of quality control for acting skills, special effects, and it makes the movie neigh unwatchable after awhile.
Want to be an indie film? Hire hungry actors and go cheap on effects. Want to be a blockbuster? Hire A-listers and splurge on effects.
This film is jarringly uneven in quality and even though some of the newly faced actors seem to be bent to pour their hearts into their lines and action sequences, others obviously seem to be there just for the check.
This movie would have been better if it had been run a budget 1/10th the size with actors who actually wanted to do their jobs.
If someone made a movie about the ancient Greek Gods for the 21st Century, and used Asian martial arts action cinematic techniques, then this would be the movie they made. And they did.
The soundtrack is loud and obnoxious. All of the dialogue is ego-oriented; i.e. "Listen to how clever I am." And the fights scenes are out of late night Kung Fu fare from the 1980s.
For all that, it's technically a competent film like all big budget films, but it's agenda is about letting female energy reign in spite of a lot of hijinks by the males, ironically led by a female character., and it's a female instructor that teaches the main protagonist how to fight.
So ... it's pretty cliche and predictable, but is it a bad movie? Eh, I'm not really partial to it, I could see all the plot points and story oriented character moments coming a mile away, including the whole "date outside your social circle" motif, and the feminine angle regarding the responsibility of wielding power and who should and why.
It's a film made for teens and so-called "geek culture". I gave it a chance, and all I can say is that I liked it better than the first Guardians of the Galaxy, but again this is a movie made for the teen comic-book crowd, and not for an older individual like me.
Loud, over the top, predictable, lots of ego oriented moments, if you're looking for some updated martial-arts action with god like powers thrown in, then look no further than this movie. But don't expect high art.
Sadly these positives are few and far between, and the movie is too often bogged down by dialogue that's inhuman and stilted, a plot that's somehow generic and excessively convoluted, and visual effects that are laughably underfunded and unfinished.
The cast is full of capable supporting actors who aren't helped by the unintentionally funny script nor by the charisma-free lead actor.
Lastly, the movie takes itself far too seriously, and this makes the goofy stuff hard to watch rather than campy and enjoyable.
It had the pieces to be good, but it just dropped too many of them to work.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesNero bears an earring in the form of a chain. This refers to his sibling Andromeda Shun, who has the power to manifest chains.
- Citações
[first lines]
Alman Kido: [narrating] In days of legend, gods walked the earth and tormented mortals. Athena, goddess of warfare and wisdom, had the power to destroy humanity, but chose to protect us. Brave young knights from across the globe swore their allegiance to her. They learned to harness cosmo, the power of the stars. Their fists cracked to the heavens in battles against those who wished Athena dead. Over time, the gods retreated and became myths. But then, eighteen years ago, Athena was reborn as a helpless child. A knight, clad in gold armor gave his life to protect her as they crashed to earth. And that's how I found her, laying in his arms. A mortal girl with a power of a god. Since then, I've been searching for a new generation of knights to protect Athena, and the earth.
- ConexõesFeatured in Brad Tries Podcasting: Book Club 2/Knights of the Zodiac/Blackberry (2023)
- Trilhas sonorasCourage
Performed by P!nk (as P!NK)
Written by P!nk (as Alecia Moore), Greg Kurstin, Sia (as Sia Furler)
Courtesy of RCA Records
By arrangement with Sony Music Entertainment (Japan) Inc.
(c) Pink Inside Publishing, EMI April Music Inc., Kurstin Music and Pineapple Lasagne
Principais escolhas
- How long is Knights of the Zodiac?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Centrais de atendimento oficiais
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Los Caballeros del Zodiaco: Saint Seiya - El Inicio
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 60.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 1.090.155
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 557.533
- 14 de mai. de 2023
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 6.986.177
- Tempo de duração1 hora 52 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.00 : 1