Snow White & the Huntsman (FILM REVIEW)
Snow White and the Huntsman
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Yet Another Adaptation of the Beloved Grimm’s Fairytale
The primary problem with Snow White
and the Huntsman is that it was released right
on the heels of Mirror Mirror. Sure, a new version of Snow White has been brought
to the big screen about once a decade since its debut in 1902, but how much of
a call could there be for another just a couple of months after the last one opened
in theaters?
Secondarily,
while Mirror Mirror is a wholesome family film, this decidedly-darker reinterpretation
carefully courts the teen demographic via a thinly-veiled vampire theme coupled
with fairly graphic violence. The
film stars Bella Swan, I mean, Kristen Stewart, of Twilight series fame, opposite
Chris Hemsworth, the hunky heartthrob who plays Thor in the Marvel Comics
franchise.
But
it’s Charlize Theron who turns in the picture’s sole dynamic performance as Queen
Ravenna, a vain villainess in constant need of reassurance that she’s still
“the fairest of them all” from her magical mirror. Like a bloodsucking vampire,
she preserves her #1 status by literally draining the youth out of all of her
comely competition.
The
narcissistic grand dame keeps Snow imprisoned in a dungeon with plans to suck
the life out of her as soon as the blossoming beauty comes of age. Somehow, the
spunky girl escapes, taking refuge in the forest following a spectacular
mountaintop plunge down a waterfall reminiscent of Harrison Ford’s iconic scene
in The Fugitive.
Meanwhile,
back at the castle, the miffed monarch dispatches Eric the Huntsman to track
down and slay Snow White. However, the widowed warrior shifts loyalties as soon
as he sets eyes on her and wises up about evil Ravenna’s true nature.
Directed by Rupert Sanders, Snow
White and the Huntsman is an emotionally-flat, special effects-driven affair,
its incessant display of technical wizardry, notwithstanding. Unfortunately, the
film simply fails to measure up to Mirror Mirror, despite the presence of Chiclet-toothed,
ingénue of the moment Kristen Stewart.
A
brazenly-blasphemous overhaul of Snow White designed to exploit the trendy vampire
formula.
Very Good
(2.5 stars)
Rated PG-13 for intense violence and brief sensuality.
Running time: 127 minutes
Distributor: Universal
Pictures
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