From what I’d read of the plot beforehand I was hoping for a
kind of Goonies crossed with Brazil but what I got didn’t live up to
either of those films. While Terry Gilliam’s directorial style is all over the
film with lavish and unusual sets and costumes and his distinct animation, it
lacked the humour of the Python films and the drama and intrigue of the likes
of Brazil or 12 Monkeys. The film
is obviously aimed at a younger audience than those films and perhaps a younger
audience would have enjoyed it more than me.
Craig Warnock, playing the central character of Kevin was
really annoying but I liked the gang of dwarfs. They each had their own little
eccentricities and quirks and were sometimes amusing. John Cleese has an
excellent cameo as Robin Hood in which he channels Prince Philip. His few
minutes on screen were very funny. Sean Connery is another with a small cameo,
playing King Agamemnon but a version of the King who has a passion for magic. He
is fine, but like Cleese is under used. Co-writer Michael Palin has a couple of
cameos and his small roles are the funniest of the film.
One of my main problems with the film is that it lacked the
laughs you’d expect from a Palin-Gilliam co written piece. There is the odd
subtle bit of humour laced here and there but they are few and far between. The
film focuses too heavily on the adventure which isn’t actually that
interesting. Maybe it isn’t meant to be that funny but I think the film would
have been greatly improved had it been so.
There was one moment towards the end which I liked and
thought was bold. This came when Kevin asks ‘the Creator’ why so many people
had to die in order for him to carry out a little experiment. As an atheist, I
liked this little question as it is something I personally would love to ask ‘the
Creator’ did it exist. Why cause so much suffering when you don’t need to and
can stop it? It’s a nice sly question which might have children watching asking
their parents and priests the same thing.
On the whole the film is fine but lacks excitement and
humour. The sets and effects are superb and the cameos good. I just expected a
lot more from Gilliam, who is a fantastic film maker.
5/10
I enjoyed Time Bandits a lot as a kid, the thing that struck me as an adult when re-watching it is how dark it gets in some places, especially the ending. Of the stylistic Gilliam trilogy of Time Bandits, Brazil, and Baron Munchausen, I enjoy Munchausen the most.
ReplyDeleteYou're right, it does get dark but I think that is sometimes a good thing for family films. A lot of childrens films nowadays are so timid and treat their audience like idiots. Pixar are good at treating their audience like intellegent human beings but not many are.
DeleteI haven't seen Baron Munchausen yet but would like to get round to it soon.