Movie Review – Strange Magic

Strange-Magic-Review-Logo

Director :  Gary Rydstrom
Year Of Release :   2015
Principal Cast :  Voices of Evan Rachel Wood, Alan Cumming, Kristen Chenoweth, Maya Rudolph, Alfred Molina, Elijah Kelley, Maredith Anne Bull, Sam Palladio, Bob Einstein, Peter Stormare, Kevin Michael Richardson.
Approx Running Time :   99 Minutes
Synopsis:   Goblins, elves, fairies and imps, and their misadventures sparked by the battle over a powerful potion.

******

As a legendary sound designer, Gary Rydstrom makes a very average director. I’ve admired Rydstrom’s career from afar, from his earliest days at Lucasfilm through Pixar’s heyday and beyond, and hold him in high regard as one of the best in the business of mixing film soundtracks. But his sophomore feature, Strange Magic, displays a weird vibe and confusing tone that suffocates joy and barbarises entertainment. Ostensibly a love-child of George Lucas’ imagination, Strange Magic appropriates Shakespeare’s Midsummer Nights’ Dream and gives us singing, dancing, flying fairies, elves, goblins and other mythological ephemera in a bizarre mix of Tinker-Bell via Moulin Rouge grasping towards Lord Of The Rings. If you’d described this film to me before I’d seen it I’d be interested in what it proposed, but the execution of the film is muddled, tepid, and often inscrutably dull as it gapes towards uncanny valley.

strange-magic1280jpg-89bfa8_1280wAs much as Strange Magic boasts the wizardry and majesty of all the visual prowess Lucasfilm can throw at the screen, the fact of the matter is that the story, the characters, and the weird design work on this film skew it well into the too-weird-to-work category. Set in a world of musical imps, fairies and goblins, Strange Magic sees Princess Marianne (Evan Rachel Wood) cheated on by womanising Roland (Sam Palladio), and deciding never to fall for another man again. There was something about a Sugar Plum Fairy (Kristen Chenoweth), a short black elf (Elijah Kenney), and Marianne’s desperately slutty sister Dawn (Meredith Anne Bull), a bunch of goblin henchmen, the dastardly Bog King (Alan Cumming), and spells and potions, but about twenty minutes into this one I’d thoroughly tuned out.

Strange Magic is all parts strange and zero parts magic; the film lacks the wonder of much of its animated brethren, content to dabble in high octane visual dynamism in place of compelling story. The creature design is largely interesting, save the facial features of the faeries, all of whom have that weird plasticised Antz-esque hyper-realism to them, and it really throws the viewer for a loop. This creepy animation style feels tonally wrong for what should be a light, fluffy fairy tale, with the film’s other major problem being the continual barrage of modern pop song motifs used to further the story/emotion. Where Moulin Rouge worked popular music into its very fabric with delight and ease, Strange Magic attempts something similar with the nuance of clattering cymbals. Bizarre song choices, often abysmal vocal performances and clunky segues make the film’s “magical” experience more an exercise in tedium, and aggravation.

I guess if Strange Magic played itself as straight as the majority of other animated films these days it might have worked. In attempting to do something out of the box, Rydstrom and Lucasfilm have missed the mark by a wide margin, creating a visually crooked, narratively clumsy movie that doesn’t work at all. If you need further proof: my daughter (7), who normally swallows this stuff up like its mothers milk, gave up after ten minutes and went off to play with her Lego. I lasted a further ten minutes before discovering that life was meant to be lived, and gave up on it. Were we awarding points for good intentions, Strange Magic would score top marks. Sadly, we’re not, and as such, the end product of all Lucasfilm’s hard work is consigned to the bottom of a very large barrel.

E-Rating

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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2 thoughts on “Movie Review – Strange Magic

  1. Sounds like another George Lucas classic! Honestly, I had no idea it wasn't directed by him, but it seems to have his fingerprints all over it. How much power did the real director even have? I doubt it was much.

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