The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and The Wardrobe
One particularly vehement reviewer states that one of the biggest
faults of the movie is the Disney logo at the start. Negative reviews
don't get much better than that for jaw dropping amazement. It is not
hard to envision the resentment that reviewer had towards the movie
from the getgo and to find anything positive at all. The majority of
the other reviews of this 65 million dollar first weekend opening movie
are predominantly positive.
Reviewers have a hard time not comparing Narnia to The Lord of the Rings. Given the time the books were written in and the relationship
between C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien (even their names are similar) it
is not hard to see how this is so. Both are works of fantasy and
involve relative innocents being thrust into the role of savior.
Neither take place on "earth" as we know it and both involve the
dispatching of evil for the side of good. Narnia has Aslan the lion
and Lord of the Rings has Gandalf the grey/white.
In this reviewer's opinion, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is the
better movie.
The movie begins with the Pembersly children suffering through a
particularly heavy German bombardment on their city during the second
World War. Afraid to lose them their mother sends the two boys and two
girls to their Uncle's estate in rural England. It is at this stage
that several reviewers compare this movie to the Harry Potter series.
And while somewhat fair (both are British with long train rides and
involve mystery and magic away from home in a castle filled with
wondrous things) are comparisons that simply cloud this particularly
wonderful movie by serving it up as refried Harry Potter enters the
world of J.R.R. Tolkien.
One of the ways in which Narnia works so well is the way in which the
camera captures the wondrous world of Narnia through the eyes and
angles of the children. There are fauns, centaurs, talking beavers and
magic galore and because this world exists a mere wardrobe from ours
there is a sense that these mysteries are but an adult winter fur coat
away.
The pacing of Narnia is slow at times, especially while the children
debate the validity of little Lucy's experience in Narnia during hide
and go seek. And then moves along at an advanced rate before the great
battle between good and evil. Some reviewers have used these pacing
issues to revile the movie as lacking and there is credence to their
viewpoint as Susan's constant doubts and nagging wears and grates on
the viewer. Nevertheless the decision to believe Lucy and attempt the
wardrobe is the critical point of the movie, for first Edmund and then
Susan and Peter, as it initiates their own need to fight for the side
of good in a war against evil that they cannot fight at home against
the Germans.
To C.S. Lewis it was the story and the characters in the story that
were important. To J.R.R. Tolkien it was the creation of a complete
world. C.S. Lewis' world was a backdrop for the stories he wished to
tell and in the case of The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch,
and the Wardrobe there isn't a finer movie out there.
4 stars out of 4.
Kyle Gould is a University of Calgary Graduate in
English devoutly trying to make the 25,000 dollar piece of parchment
not just a glorified ink blot. Currently it would serve better as a
Rorschach test. Feel free to throw some ink his way at wkkgould@hotmail.com.