The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
Starring: Ben Barnes, Sergio
Castellitto, Georgie Henley
Directed by: Andrew Adamson (“Shrek 2”)
Written by: Andrew Adamson (“The
Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the
Wardrobe”), Christopher Markus (“The Life and Death of
Peter Sellers”), Stephen McFeely (“You Kill Me”)
By Kiko Martinez
When
humans rule the world of Narnia and fantastic creatures
liked fauns, centaurs, and talking animals take a
backseat to the man versus man conflict, there’s bound
to be some allure missing during a 144-minute long film.
In “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian,” the
sequel to the 2005 film “The Lion, the Witch and the
Wardrobe,” writer/director Andrew Adamson fails to build
on the mythology of his first outing and packages an
epic C.S. Lewis story into a tiresome script.
If you’re
hoping to see character-driven beavers and a valiant
dialogue by the King of the Jungle, then “Prince
Caspian” is not your knight in shining armor. Instead,
Adamson and his writing crew revolve the story around
King Miraz (Sergio Castellitto) and his pursuit to kill
his nephew Prince Caspian (Ben Barnes) so his newborn
son can inherit the thrown and become king.
Meanwhile,
back in England for a year since last stumbling into the
world of Narnia from a wardrobe, the four Pevensie
children – Lucy (Georgie Henley), Edmund (Skandar
Keynes), Peter (William Moseley), and Susan (Anna
Popplewell) – have no idea how much the world of Narnia
has changed over the span of 1,300 years (Apparently one
year on earth equals that amount of time in Narnia).
When the
children are magically transported back into Narnia,
they are all surprised and saddened to find that
Narnians have been pushed into the forest where a
majority of them live in hiding and in fear of the
Telmarines (the human rulers). Determined to keep his
spot in line for the kingship, Prince Caspian and the
Pevensie children, all of whom are looked upon as “the
kings and queens of old” and the saviors of Narnia, set
out to defeat King Miraz and his army before they wipe
out what is left of magical land.
While the
sequel will provide some light escapism, fantasy film
series like “The Chronicles of Narnia,” will forever be
compared to “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy. It’s just
something fantasy films will have to get used to until
the end of time. From a mainstream audience’s viewpoint,
the film has already lost simply because the adaptation
of Lewis’ work is far less rudimentary than J.R.R.
Tolkien.
The
storyline Adamson conjures up is not flavored and
quickly dissolves as the film proceeds forward into
plain scenes of computer generated hokum underwritten by
its own standards. Where we had boisterous beavers and
charming fauns in the first, we get a dull badger and a
team of sword-wielding mice, which are entirely too
reminiscent of the Shrek sidekick Puss in Boots (Adamson
should have known better).
The best
performance of the film comes from actor Peter Dinklage
(“The Station Agent”) who plays a Narnian dwarf named
Trumpkin. His enchanting personality, however, is no
match for the dreary faces of the Pevensie clan.
Although scenes of wartime heroics are high (and
child-friendly), “Prince Caspian” is basic swordplay
with little emotional pull behind any of the characters,
CGI or not. Grade: C