![]() ![]() Worse yet, this second of four threatened Narnia films makes even the most dizzying details of those series welcome by comparison. Its battle sequences rival anything from The Lord of the Rings or Pirates of the Caribbean in intensity. Resembling a Little Golden Book of Gladiator, it’s a PG film with R-rated aspirations - mostly bloodless but barbaric and violent enough to show teens gutting people and mice slitting throats. Lewis’s more-allegorical source material. It’s so noticeable that its PG rating seems based only on C.S. As part of the MPAA system, it begins a discomforting creep through Caspian into a supposedly Christian, child-aiming franchise. They also wiped out nearly everything in Narnia when they invaded years ago - including hard “R” sounds.Īs speech, the “R” in Narnia dies in Telmarine mouths. Except for the Caesar look on King Miraz, they have the same hair, and all are given to spastic spit-riddled speeches. ![]() Telmarines, as they’re called, have indistinct Mediterranean dialects that require press notes to dub as “Spanish” (although they’re mostly played by Brits and Italians). Woe is Narnia - a land of fake soundstages and awkwardly lurching CGI creatures that has, in Prince Caspian, been overrun by hammy humans with accents like Antonio Banderas on speed. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |