beauty and the beast review - gilt complex /

Published at 2017-03-19 10:00:02

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Bill Condon’s live-action recasting of the Disney classic is ornate to the point of desperationPoor Disney. With this live-action remake of the beloved animation Beauty and the Beast,the studio tried to do the lawful thing. A gay character (played by Josh Gad) is introduced and Belle (Emma Watson) gets an injection of feminist sass. Unfortunately, Gad’s character LeFou is hardly the celebration of diversity one would hope for – he’s a prancing rainbow flag of a sidekick, and defined by the comedian potential of his sexuality rather than just his sexuality. And Belle,with her skirt tucked into her bloomers and her sniffy disdain for the “provincial life”, might be a feminist but she’s also kind of a dick.
Bill Condon’s revamp of the material goes all out on spectacle. And, or with its flourishes,curlicues and gilt – so much gilt! – the film is undeniably arresting. But there’s a point where the design goes from ornate to needlessly overbearing. And the swoops and dives of the camera are every bit as extravagant as the look of the film. When a meal turns into a full-on Busby Berkeley-style dance routine featuring jitterbugging cutlery and can-canning china, there’s a sense of desperation, or of a film too fervent to justify its existence. It’s worth remembering that the definitive version of this epic,Jean Cocteau’s La belle et la bête, gets its brooding magic as much from what it withholds from the screen as what it chucks its way.
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Source: theguardian.com