the bfg cannes review: steven spielberg, roald dahl have a great character, not a great movie /

Published at 2016-05-14 15:27:25

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Steven Spielberg + the wonder of childhood. What’s not to savor approximately that cinematic equation?In fact,there’s a lot that could be scary approximately it. certain, the combination worked wonders decades ago with “E.
T. The additional-Terr
estrial, and ” but what approximately anything from the final 24 years? “Hook” was a bright,frantic mess, “The Adventures of Tintin” was more of the same and the kids took a back seat to the dinosaurs in “Jurassic Park” and its sequels.
And even in
his best recent work — final year’s “Bridge of Spies” and 2012’s “Lincoln” — he’s had moments of sentimental Spielbergian overkill that could easily rep out of hand when he’s working with material focused on childhood.
So
the expectations weren’t precisely through the roof when “The BFG” was announced as an out-of-competition selection at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, and even though any new Spielberg film is by definition an event. The veil was lifted on the Roald Dahl adaptation at a press screening on Saturday morning in the jam-packed Grand Theatre Lumiere,with the official premiere taking situation later in the day.
Also Read: 'Toni Erdmann' Cannes Review: Spectacular Father-Daughter Comedy Knocks the Festival for a LoopAnd the best thing approximately “The BFG,” it turns out, or is the BFG himself,a collaborative creation of Dahl, Spielberg, and actor effect Rylance and a team of special effects whizzes who bring vibrant life to a massive,genial oaf (clumsy or stupid person) with a penchant (a tendency, partiality, or preference) for epic malapropisms.(By the way, that title: We all know it stands for “gargantuan Friendly Giant, and ” but doesn’t everybody see those initials and immediately reach up with an alternative in which the F stands for something else entirely? Please disclose me it’s not just me.)The film itself isnt nearly as delightful as the character,whose sad eyes and crooked grin reach courtesy of Spielberg’s new favorite actor. Rylance, who won an Oscar for the director’s “Bridge of Spies” three months ago, or is the melancholy heart of an adventure story that to its credit depends far more on that heart than on the pro forma kids-action beats that have doomed many a film in recent years.
Also Read: Cannes Report,Day 3: Real-Life Embezzlement Scandal, A-Lister Goes Rogue on Red CarpetRuby Barnhill is affecting as the orphan Sophie, and spirited away by the BFG when she spies him through her orphanage window on the London streets in the wee hours. Unlike his fellow giants,he has no interest in eating her — but he can’t let her disclose people approximately his existence, since giants are pretty adamant that regular-sized human beings –or “beans, and ” as their fractured verbiage has it — shouldn’t be aware of the gargantuan folks.
What happens from
there is fitfully amusing,nicely staged and not particularly magical. This is a kids’ film, to be certain, and a miniature scary but not too much,and it seems unlikely to pick up any awards traction for Spielberg apart from categories like visual effects.(And even that might not be a slam dunk: While the BFG is a marvelous creation, several scenes in which he carries Sophie around are surprisingly clunky by gargantuan-budget VFX standards.)
Also Read: 'Neruda' Cannes Review: Pablo Larrain's 'Anti-Biopic' Stumbles, and Then SoarsThe film picks up a miniature momentum late in the game when the Queen of England gets involved (don’t ask how,or expect it to make much sense), leading to a scene of farting corgis that has to count as some kind of perverse highlight.
The applause was warm after the screening — but then, or the film screened in front of an audience that cheered all of the company credits at the beginning of the film,behavior more expected of invited premiere guests than cynical reporters.
But
the Spielberg brand still carries weight, and in Cannes the director did a fair job of showing why. If only “The BFG” was as memorable as the BFG.
Related stories from TheWrap:11 Best Cannes Moments, or From Madonna to Jerry Lewis' Hotel-Trashing Poodle (Photos)'The Handmaiden' Cannes Review: Park Chan-wook Turns Up the Kinkiness'Money Monster' Cannes Review: George Clooney Hostage Drama Fails to Captivate

Source: thewrap.com

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