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The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian - Review

The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian Movie Poster
Rated: PG
Distributor: Buena Vista Pictures/Walt Disney
Release Date:  2008-05-16

Starring: Ben Barnes (Prince Caspian), Georgie Henley, Skandar Keynes, William Moseley, Anna Popplewell, Liam Neeson (voice of Aslan), Peter Dinklage (Trumpkin the Dwarf), Vincent Grass (Doctor Cornelius) Alicia Borrachero (Prunaprismia, wife of Miraz), Sergio Castellitto (Miraz)

Directed by Andrew Adamson
Produced by Andrew Adamason, Mark Johnson, Perry Moore, Philip Steuer
Written by Andrew Adamson, Christopher Markus, Stephen McFeely

Visit the movie's Official Site!

Reviewed by Josh Tyler : 2008-05-15 16:33:40
The religious fervor and hype which attached itself to The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe has burned itself out. You won’t see Prince Caspian shown at Church’s in place of Sunday sermons, they’ve already taken what they wanted from Narnia and now we’re simply left with the magic of C.S. Lewis’s imaginative, fantasy world. Whether or not he’s playing the Christ figure, Aslan still roars, and louder than ever.

More than any of the other “Narnia” books on which Disney’s movies have been or will be based, The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian is a war movie. Making what is essentially Narnia’s Saving Private Ryan work in the context of a PG rated family movie had to have been challenging, but director Andrew Adamson pulls it off by riding that PG rating right to the edge. In the process, Narnia loses some of the innocence and wonder that buoyed along the first film, but replaces it with carefully thought out meditation on what it really means to grow up.

This time, it doesn’t start with the Pevensie children, but with a young Prince driven out of his castle by a power mad uncle Miraz. This is Prince Caspian, and in a moment of desperation he blows a magic horn which summons the Pevensies back to the magic land they left. The Narnia we knew from the first film is gone, and while it’s only been a year for the Pevensie kids, it’s been 1500 in Aslan’s land. Humans have invaded, murdered and sent into hiding the world’s magical creatures, and left it a much darker place. When Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy arrive they discover everyone they’ve known there is long since dead, but they set about helping Prince Caspian unite Narnia’s surviving dwarfs, centaurs, talking badgers, and other magical things into an army to fight off Miraz and his hordes of Tellamarines.

New additions like Peter Dinklage as the dwarf Trumpkin, Ben Barnes as Caspian, and a computer animated warrior mouse named Reepicheep really carry the cast. Dinklage, despite his size, almost seems like too good an actor to waste on the usual dwarven prosthetic stuff other diminutive performers are forced into. Yet on the other hand it’s nice to have someone playing a Dwarf who is not only the right size, but can actually act. The kids are still, well, kids. They aren’t a bunch of Haley Joel Osments, which means they come with all the child actor awkwardness you have to expect. At least they aren’t acting robots.

For me, the biggest improvement over the last film comes in the form of special effects. They’ve fixed the problems of Wardrobe and delivered seamless CGI for this one, there’s none of the jarring awkwardness and clipping of the previous movie. It works particularly well in the big action sequences. On the other hand, some of the action may seem overly familiar. It’s no one’s fault really, but many of the big moments in the book bear a striking resemblance to some of the things we’ve already seen in Lord of the Rings. Anyone who’s a fan of Peter Jackson’s movies will find it impossible not to compare the massive battle sequences in this one to Helm’s Deep in Two Towers, or to compare the movie’s big river finale to Arwen’s battle with the Nazgul in Fellowship. It can’t be helped, and Adamson does as much as he can to differentiate these similar action beats from those we’ve already seen in Rings.

The Chronicles of Narnia still lacks some of the subtly and complexity of the fantasy genre’s best entries, but Adamson continues to deliver a solid, enjoyable adaptation of C.S. Lewis’s work. This is a family movie after all, and Narnia stays rooted in its brightly colored world where good wins over evil, a badger can be your best friend, and God is a ferocious, yellow-maned lion.

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  1. Sarah Says:

    Thanks for not totally critisizing this movie! The movie does lack some stuff from the book I would have liked to have been included, but I still love the movie to the point where I can start sulking because I am so sad to leave the theatre, because the movie ended, and because during the hours I was there I began to develop a heavy crush on Caspian (Ben Barnes) with his long hair and accent.

  1. Rich Says:

    This movie sucked. Hard. And I actually thought it was even more religiously guided than the last one ("Now do you believe?" the girl says to the dwarf). Also, I don't think it's going to be the massive blockbuster a lot of people predicted it would be. Granted, the show I went to wasn't the target audience this movie was catering to (I went to the 10:55 show), but still, besides me and my friends, most of the other seats were occupied with tumbleweed and discarded popcorn from the last showing. I hope this movie flops. I hope it flops BIG time.

  1. David Says:

    Well anyone who thinks this movie sucks and hopes it doesn't do well... too bad for them. Why? Because if it doesn't do well in the theatre... I'm going to buy as much tickets as possible and if it doesn't do well on DVD, I'll buy as much as I can. So there! The first one rocked... and so does the second!

  1. Bill Boucher Says:

    Have you even read Lewis? Religion and theology are central parts of C.S. Lewis' writings. If anything, I would have preferred it to be more faithful to his book. The manufactured tension between Caspian and Peter seemed forced and the romantic tension with Caspian and Susan seemed an awkward afterthought. However, I still found it an entertaining movie. But make no mistake, the theology is the message.

  1. patrick Says:

    the makers of Prince Caspian kept to the original story surprisingly well, all thinks considered... i heard they were going to make it into a silly pure-action flick, but thankfully this was not the case

  1. Richard Says:

    Hi!

    For those who didn’t know. C.L. Lewis and J.R. Tolkien were close friends. The Lords of the Rings came out in 1954 and 1955. The 7 books of Narnia were written between 1949 and 1954. Then C.S. Lewis was the first one introducing the walking trees and the river coming to life. The credits goes to C.S. Lewis not Tolkien, even though the movies from Tolkien were made before.

    I really enjoyed the movie even better than the first one.

    Take care!

  1. Phil Says:

    Though I know the special effects will be a bit cheesy, compared to a Hollywood movie, is the story retold better in this movie or in the BBC version? I've seen the BBC version a year or 2 ago, but I forgot how it went. I saw the whole set after I borrowed the set from a local library.

    Thanks!

  1. amin Says:

    why boxoffice this film very little ?!

  1. Helena Says:

    i watched the premiere last night at the o2. It was amazing! Way batter than the first one...

  1. Mike Says:

    How sad that Josh Taylor commenting on this has missed the point . Its man and the directors who have removed the religious slant . CS Lewis was a devout christian who wrote messages through his books - how sad if the main poits he was making has been omitted from the film !

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