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Hard to believe that it's been 20 years since the release of The Princess Bride, if only because it hasn't aged a day. Bereft of the pop-culture gags that curdle the Shrek movies and absent the cynicism of most other kids' films used solely to peddle fast food and impulse items, it remains a spellbinding experiencea fractured fairy tale spastic with ironic twitches that melt away beneath the joy and warmth with which Rob Reiner and William Goldman tell their story. And it's even more special because The Princess Brideis one of the few truly great movies that a parent can watch with a young child; never once does the grown-up satire strangle the swashbuckling romance. Better still, there's nothing formulaic or silly about itcharges that Pauline Kael leveled at children's cinema in a mid-'60s essay about how Walt Disney had ruined movies for kids by peddling "pacifiers" to them so their parents could zone out for 90 minutes.
The trailer for Disney's new Enchanted at least suggested that it aspired to Princess Bridegreatness; if nothing else, it didn't look like something concocted in a test lab. The premise had promise: Characters from a "vintage" Disney movie suddenly find themselves thrust into our worldTimes Square, to be precise, long a retrofitted, sterilized amusement park anyway. Disney, referencing everything from Fantasia to Toy Storyin the advertisements, has sold the film as something both smartly postmodern and decidedly old-fashioned: merry maidens serenade white-collar princes, who joust with MTA buses as wicked witches unleash fire-breathing dragons on midtown high-rises.
But somewhere between conception and execution, what could have been so much smart, sharp fun turned decidedly pedestrian. Director Kevin Lima has made lousy Disney movies before2000's 102 Dalmatians, most recently, one in a long line of unnecessary and loathsome Disney sequels that squeezed every last penny out of those puppies. Enchanted, though, isn't even something to get worked up overnot only because it's so boring, but because it can't even be bothered to adhere to its own internal logic. And while that may not sound like a big dealeven a little nitpickywhen your movie's got but a single gag, you have to tell the joke right.
Enchanted fails from its very first moments, as Julie Andrews (aw . . .) narrates the opening animated sequence about a girl named Giselle (voiced by Amy Adams) who, as she's being dressed by a mélange of woodland critters, pines for a Prince Charming to sweep her off her tired feet. The animation's meant to look oldDisney, circa 1937's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. But instead it looks shabby and shoddyDisney, circa 2002's direct-to-video Cinderella II: Dreams Come True.
Giselle meets and sings with hunky Prince Edward (James Marsden), whose evil mommy, Queen Narissa (Susan Sarandon), is none too pleased about a commoner taking her throne. So the queen, who's also a witch, dispatches Giselle to the Real World, the entranceway to which is a sewer that runs through Times Square. Before long, Giselle, now played by Adams in the flesh, rescues a divorce attorney named Robert (Patrick Dempsey), who has little time for the whimsical or romantic. Which doesn't stop him from taking in Giselle and allowing her to sleep on his couch, in the same apartment he shares with his six-year-old daughter Morgan (Rachel Covey). Because there aren't crazy people running around New York claiming to be princesses. Not at all.
The movie crumbles to teeny bits the next morning, when Giselle summons New York's indigenous wildlifechiefly rats and pigeonsto clean Robert's nasty apartment, just as she'd done in the animated sequence. So the real world is apparently no different than the cartoon one? This obliterates the gag entirely. If a cartoon character can make magic in this world, what's the rush in getting home?
Jeeze, it was a enchanted movie. Of course he lets her sleep on the couch and helps her. Its supposed to be a fairy tale. You people need to read some other more open minded reviews and enjoy the enjoyable.
Pitch on this one had to be: It's Airplane!, but of, by, and for Disney. Too bad the critic is so unacquainted with the Disney oeuvre to actually understand what is actually happening at the adult level in this movie.
I am very pleased to read that I am not the only person who thought that it was odd that Robert allows Giselle even into his apartment, let alone sleep on his couch. Sure, it helps further the plot along, but it was very clear to me that Robert questioned Giselle's mental stability. Therefore, him allowing her into the apartment did not make any sense.
You are spot on. My two sons, 9 and 12, and I were discussing the movie's problems on the way home...chiefly, we wish the silly dame hadn't chosen "reality"--i.e. "getting angry" and living in NY....we wanted her to stay goofy and unspoiled, stick with the Prince and live the frickin fairy tale. Reality bites. My older son pronounced the hairy chest moment "kind of uncomfortable." We hated when she took the credit card, went shopping, straightened her hair, and streamlined her look. We thought the "girl power" moments with the sword and dragon were pandering. Ugh, ugh, ugh. The only character that stayed true was the Prince--we loved him. The Central Park musical number--not bad, ripoff of High School Musical tho. I wish someone had the courage to sell us a flat-out fairytale with no contemporary crap spoiling it. I also agree with you that, on its own terms, Game Plan was totally delightful! Who knew The Rock was so appealing? Now I have to find and read that review. Anyway, thanks for making me feel I'm not alone in the Rotten Tomato world.
Dear Mr. Wilonsky: Whoa, The Princess Bride is a fairy tale for parents that kids can enjoy too. Enchanted is a fairy tale for kids that parents will not simply pull their hair out and die at. So you went hoping for your favorite slice of pie and instead found yourself immersed in Disney's marketing campaign for its next theme park attraction. What a crushing thing for you! You are obviously sitting on the edge of your seat waiting for someone to echo "The Princess Bride". May I suggest it won�t be Disney? I mean get real. I guess you don't know much about Disney to be so foolish as to even hope such a thing. I assume you do not plan to attend Disney�s theme parks any time soon. I hate to break it to you, but the minions that be will attend said theme parks. They will go to most magical places on earth. They will buy outfits from "Gizelle's Creations"; mark my words. You call this work pedestrian and you�re right. Enchanted is a cup of hot cocoa and cookies on a cold winter's night. Very commonplace. I totally agree cocoa and cookies for Thanksgiving. Crazy stuff. Let's just never do it again because we've done it before. Overall, I think you really just didn't get the jokes. I get it. You don't wish to be mastered by the machine. You haven't given into the corporate infiltration of Disney. I am not such a person. As someone who has been stuck in a minivan with four kids under the age of 12 for 15 hours on a drive to the most magical place on Earth, I have truly known the hell of listening to Lion King 1 1/2 for the third time. The Enchanted animation brought back all of that for me in waves of laughter. The whole bit was so painfully awful and so hideously true; there was nothing to be done but succumb to the hilarity. I do admit that the funniest moment of the film was probably not intended by the filmmakers, but almost made me throw up I laughed so hard -- when Gizelle reaches out to touch Robert's chest hair, a tiny girl in our theater let off the most appropriate "EEEWWW" in cinematic history. So, to the guy who gave the Rock's Disney picture, The Game Plan, a positive review, in a way, I am baffled by your negative review of Enchanted. You could take a child to this film and not cringe every five seconds. Easily. Loosen up and keep the hope within, I daresay someone will echo the Princess Bride someday and all your dreams will come true too. All best, Molly Blaisdell
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