
Let me breakdown the genre for you. It's always the same thing, some unlikely person (usually a kid) finds themselves on some sort of pseudo spiritual quest for a ring, a book, a sword, a leaf or some other everyday object and along the way they cross paths with some pseudo spiritual guide who helps them along, blah, blah, blah. This is the problem with fantasy stories. They always bring in some kind of religious element into the mix in some mishmash way (thanks George Lucas.) And then without any explanation the unlikely hero attains the goal because of their faith. This makes for a total crapfest and pushes religion as some sort of catchall for everything that is right and wrong with people. To me it's propaganda at it's worst and dangerous. Why can't you just have a great story without all the religious overtones shoved down my throat? If I wanted some new kind of religion than I would sign up for Scientology. Oh wait, they're crazy.
Alas, a fantasy movie for the sane people in society has arrived. "The Golden Compass"

There has been lots of negative buzz about this film from those fanatical religious groups because of the removal of God from the story. This more than anything made me want to see this film. Seriously, why don't all those religious zealots just go away? I mean haven't they learned anything from their own history of torture and murder in the name of religion? This country has been hijacked by these nuts that are so insecure in their religion they attack ANYTHING that they think doesn't include God. They would do much better if they stopped ramming their delusions down peoples throats and stopped judging everyone for their different beliefs. I could go on but this is a movie review not a manifesto.

Anyway, on to the film. Lyra Belacqua (Dakota Blue Richards) is a precocious 11 year-old roaming the collegiate home of her uncle, Lord Asriel (Daniel Craig), with her animal other half (known as Daemons), Pantalaimon, at her side. Gifted with a truth-revealing compass device called an Alethiometer (Golden Compass), Lyra finds herself in severe jeopardy when the wicked Mrs. Coulter (Nicole Kidman) shows up to claim the girl and the compass for the benefit of the vile Gobblers. Meeting up with loyal (and on the run) Gyptians, cowboys (Sam Elliot), witches (Eva Green), and earning the life debt of a disgraced Ice Bear (a polar bear crossed with an attitude and a bad hangover) named Lorek Byrnison (robustly voiced by Ian McKellen), Lyra heads to the arctic to save a group of children undergoing experiments performed by the Gobblers and find the secret of a mysterious luminescent substance called Dust. And if you understood all of that then you've earned bonus points.
Generally, when a new fantasy film is made there has to be lots of exposition just to bring the average commoner up to speed with a new and different world. This film is different because there isn't any long soliloquy from a major character explaining things for the retards out there to understand. It operates with the assumption that people aren't as dumb as we think but that they can catch on to something new. That's a powerful assumption as I happen to think that most people are that dumb, just look at the success of shows like CSI that take away any imagination and spell every damn thing out for you. Anyway, I digress.



There are very clever things in this film that let the viewer know they are in an alternate universe not so dissimilar from our own. The coolest thing were their modes of transportation. Who knew that in an advanced society they travel by a very cool kind of blimp? This is not the Goodyear blimp people, but a very interesting flying fortress. You know the expression, "You can't improve on the wheel", well they did and it looks amazing. The fact that the most stunningly impressive sequence in the film involves a fight in the Ice Bear kingdom is a stroke of pure genius. And finally, every human has their own personal "Daemon" (pronounced demon) by there side since birth to protect and look over them is a very novel and cool idea that externalizes ones own inner conscience (and it should piss off the religious nuts to no end.) Add the fact that they can shape shift when they're children it becomes an even a cooler idea. The deep imagination of Philip Pullman is very evident here and it makes me want to see more.

The other thing was the golden compass sequences themselves. Now Lyra is supposed to be the only who can decipher truths from it, but when she looks into it they show us weird convoluted barely there images and then she looks up and tells everyone in exacting terms what's going to happen. I saw that and said "what?" I mean how the hell did she get this whole story out of some gold particled image that was so obscure? You call this movie "The Golden Compass" and then give us weird and extremely vague images? Those sequences should have been the coolest and direct ones but noooo.
Lastly, the ending was so abrupt it left me wanting more, but not in a good way. Since this is designed to be a trilogy it would make sense that the first film would have an ending just in case it's not received well and then they can leave the second one open-ended. Did they not learn anything from LOTR or "Star Wars?"

At the writing of this review, the film has already opened and not lived up to box office expectations, so it's not known if the other two films will ever get made. This is such a pity because the genre needs films like this. While the religious cults of the country are crowing over their victory in getting people to avoid this film, I feel a profound sense of sadness that the people of the U.S. are actually are every day becoming more of a follower instead of becoming more open-minded leaders.
I just hope that New Line makes the other films to prove to all those Bible wielding fanatics that what they say or think is NOT fact but opinion and to give the rest of us sane people the opportunity to enjoy fantasy films without being preached to.
Musings Grade: A
-- Janaki Cedanna
All images © 2007 New Line Cinema
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for the kind words!