Maleficent first came on my radar because Peter
Capaldi was in it. Unbeknownst to me,
however, his entire role was cut from the movie due to rewrites (on the DVD
maybe?) – Miranda Richardson’s, too.
Annoying, naturally, but Maleficent
is still a decent film, and I thought I might as well blog about it.
Telling
the story of Sleeping Beauty from the
perspective of the villainess, Maleficent
pulls a Wicked and flips a classic
tale. It also goes darker than the
original story, rather like Snow White
and the Huntsman but to a far lesser extent. It maintains a lot of the old Disney imagery,
and the action-packed but entirely bloodless battle sequences inspire a few
eye-rolls. Though I didn’t like it as
well as these other retellings, it makes for an enjoyable day at the movies.
Maleficent
is a denizen of an idyllic fairy kingdom.
All things being equal, she and her people would prefer to live in peace
with the neighboring humans, but humans are of course prejudiced towards things
they don’t understand, and so the fairies and humans are locked in a
quarrel. When Maleficent’s wings are
stolen from her by a human she’d thought she could trust, she transforms into
the sorceress we recognize from the movie.
She’s fueled, not by inherent wickedness, but by grief and a desire for retribution,
and as she observes the girl she’s cursed, the story takes unfamiliar paths.
Much of
the film rests on the strength of Angelina Jolie’s performance. She’s bold, mournful, enraged, and conflicted
as the story requires it, and her low, velvety delivery is charged with
electricity. Elle Fanning is
unremarkable but effective in the rather underwritten role of Princess Aurora –
why does Hollywood so often equate goodness with dullness? The tormented king is an intriguing
character, and I’m fond of Diaval, an enchanted, shapeshifting crow Maleficent
enlists to “be her wings” – in human form, he displays intelligence and reason
while retaining a distinctly animalistic quality. The trio of fairies who raise Aurora,
however, are almost painfully useless; it’s a waste of the actresses’ talents,
especially the fabulous Imelda Staunton
Visually,
it’s a bit prefab but lovely. The fairy
kingdom is well-rendered and populated with a wide variety of inventive
creatures, and some of the magical sequences look pretty cool. Even though it’s been years (possibly
decades) since I saw Sleeping Beauty,
I struck by how precisely the CGI/live-action combination recreates the look of
the animated original.
I won’t
get into it for spoilers’ sake, but I like the way that this film and other
recent fairytale movies (like Snow White
and the Huntsman and Frozen) riff
on the idea of True Love breaking spells.
Each film subverts the trope in a different manner, but it’s clear that
“I saw this woman once, so my love is obviously strong enough to lift her
curse” no longer cuts it. Can I get a
huzzah for that?
Warnings
Scary
scenes, some Disney violence, and thematic elements.
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