4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- So Close... Yet So Beowulf, 6 January 2008
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
"I am Beowulf!" yells Beowulf.
Five minutes later, he full-throats again, "I am Beowulf!" for those
arriving late, we presume Divebombing into a raging sea of serpents,
sword slashing on bloodied sinew, warrior man-meat glistening with
sev-- "I am Beowulf!" Okay dude, now you're just feeding some
deep-rooted insecurity complex
"Beowulf" is the oldest known English epic poem (Anonymous author), one
of the first pieces to be transcribed from its oral tradition to
manuscript (somewhere between 700 and 1000 AD.) That's a pretty awesome
pedigree, with a hundred modern media incarnations shouldering their
claim-space, so to tackle another incarnation one needs to bring
something pretty extraordinary to the table. And Robert Zemeckis'
*Beowulf* is definitely extraordinary in one sense. And definitely
mediocre in all others
The extraordinary aspect of this 2007 incarnation is its
3D-motion-capture method. Pioneering this "realistic" method on *The
Polar Express* (2004), Zemeckis now hones it to breath-defying
proportions. Nothing is real, but it is obviously *emulating* reality
through sensors on actors' faces and bodies, and the zenith of
"3D-cartoon" technology. At first, those bi-color glasses suck all the
joy out of the movie-going experience; then once you get used to them,
you marvel at the whizbang technique itself, even though many action
passages threaten to incite ocular myasthenia; after all the 3D wonder
has dissipated, you can sit back to enjoy the movie on its movie
merits, but by then, you've figured out it has sacrificed most of those
merits for the sake of whizbang and annoying glasses.
Now that was a whole lotta nothing for a whole lotta something. But I'd
already paid for the parking, so I guess I was obligated
In this Ye Olde English tale (set in Denmark and Sweden), lush lech
King Hrothgar (voiced by Anthony Hopkins) and his reveling court are
regularly terrorized by the ugliest person/creature in the world, with
an oversensitive external eardrum, named Grendel (Crispin Glover, whose
main dialog outbursts consist of the word "Raaaargh!"). From across the
treacherous seas (we imagine Zep's *The Immigrant Song* accompanying
him) comes Beowulf (voiced by Ray Winstone) and his merry men, borne
only with the desire to accrue glory in slaying Grendel. A tacit bonus
prize is Hrothgar's nubile queen, Wealthow (Robin Wright Penn), whom
Beowulf wastes no time in showing off his pecs to.
In the Great Mead Hall, Hrothgar's manservant, Unferth (John
Malkovich), pooh-poohs Beowulf's tall tales (causing more unnecessary
proclamations from Beowulf about being Beowulf) and Hrothgar unveils a
gleaming chalice as a prize for Beowulf were he to defeat Grendel.
Beowulf illogically figures that to beat Grendel, he must strip naked.
That, and to give the queen a no-hands "wassup."
After Grendel appears that night and kills almost everyone, his arm is
ripped from its socket by a nude Beowulf with artfully-obscured
genitalia. (It irks me that our society still giggles whenever male
genitalia are scantily-hidden by foreground objects it's a juvenile
practice for juvenile viewers and pulls you out of the story quite
forcefully.) Beowulf's liege, Wiglaf (Brendan Gleeson), survives the
attack, to fight and make running gags another day.
Grendel retreats to his dank subterranean domicile, whispers another
gratuitous "Beowulf!" to his most powerful witch mother (who looks like
Angelina Jolie, only hotter) and dies, thereby promoting the
second-ugliest person in the world to first place.
There are plot twists which depart from the original tale, but this
movie ties all the familial threads together very intriguingly: We
discover that Hrothgar had "relations" with the witch to spawn Grendel
his son! When Beowulf enters the dank chamber to finish off the
witch, she seduces him by simply turning up as Angelina Jolie. Years
later we will discover that the dragon that firestorms Beowulf's castle
and causes the sacrifice of his arm and life is, in fact, the spawn of
Beowulf from his union with the witch. It's all very *Days of Our
Lives* and kept pretty succinct, whereas the original legend rambles on
with trysts hither and thither complicating things... and that Olde
English doesn't help
There is minimal exploration of other themes, but they seem forced at
best: Beowulf's lament of his legend growing greater than he ever was;
of his age precluding him from iron-thewed battles, etc. but the movie
itself knows that there is not much TO it, EXCEPT its grandiloquent
Things That Come At You From The Screen.
Though some viewers had trouble adjusting to the *eyes* of the
characters, it all seemed quite realis-- "I am Beowulf!"
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4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

So Close... Yet So Beowulf, 6 January 2008
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
"I am Beowulf!" yells Beowulf.
Five minutes later, he full-throats again, "I am Beowulf!" for those arriving late, we presume Divebombing into a raging sea of serpents, sword slashing on bloodied sinew, warrior man-meat glistening with sev-- "I am Beowulf!" Okay dude, now you're just feeding some deep-rooted insecurity complex
"Beowulf" is the oldest known English epic poem (Anonymous author), one of the first pieces to be transcribed from its oral tradition to manuscript (somewhere between 700 and 1000 AD.) That's a pretty awesome pedigree, with a hundred modern media incarnations shouldering their claim-space, so to tackle another incarnation one needs to bring something pretty extraordinary to the table. And Robert Zemeckis' *Beowulf* is definitely extraordinary in one sense. And definitely mediocre in all others
The extraordinary aspect of this 2007 incarnation is its 3D-motion-capture method. Pioneering this "realistic" method on *The Polar Express* (2004), Zemeckis now hones it to breath-defying proportions. Nothing is real, but it is obviously *emulating* reality through sensors on actors' faces and bodies, and the zenith of "3D-cartoon" technology. At first, those bi-color glasses suck all the joy out of the movie-going experience; then once you get used to them, you marvel at the whizbang technique itself, even though many action passages threaten to incite ocular myasthenia; after all the 3D wonder has dissipated, you can sit back to enjoy the movie on its movie merits, but by then, you've figured out it has sacrificed most of those merits for the sake of whizbang and annoying glasses.
Now that was a whole lotta nothing for a whole lotta something. But I'd already paid for the parking, so I guess I was obligated
In this Ye Olde English tale (set in Denmark and Sweden), lush lech King Hrothgar (voiced by Anthony Hopkins) and his reveling court are regularly terrorized by the ugliest person/creature in the world, with an oversensitive external eardrum, named Grendel (Crispin Glover, whose main dialog outbursts consist of the word "Raaaargh!"). From across the treacherous seas (we imagine Zep's *The Immigrant Song* accompanying him) comes Beowulf (voiced by Ray Winstone) and his merry men, borne only with the desire to accrue glory in slaying Grendel. A tacit bonus prize is Hrothgar's nubile queen, Wealthow (Robin Wright Penn), whom Beowulf wastes no time in showing off his pecs to.
In the Great Mead Hall, Hrothgar's manservant, Unferth (John Malkovich), pooh-poohs Beowulf's tall tales (causing more unnecessary proclamations from Beowulf about being Beowulf) and Hrothgar unveils a gleaming chalice as a prize for Beowulf were he to defeat Grendel. Beowulf illogically figures that to beat Grendel, he must strip naked. That, and to give the queen a no-hands "wassup."
After Grendel appears that night and kills almost everyone, his arm is ripped from its socket by a nude Beowulf with artfully-obscured genitalia. (It irks me that our society still giggles whenever male genitalia are scantily-hidden by foreground objects it's a juvenile practice for juvenile viewers and pulls you out of the story quite forcefully.) Beowulf's liege, Wiglaf (Brendan Gleeson), survives the attack, to fight and make running gags another day.
Grendel retreats to his dank subterranean domicile, whispers another gratuitous "Beowulf!" to his most powerful witch mother (who looks like Angelina Jolie, only hotter) and dies, thereby promoting the second-ugliest person in the world to first place.
There are plot twists which depart from the original tale, but this movie ties all the familial threads together very intriguingly: We discover that Hrothgar had "relations" with the witch to spawn Grendel his son! When Beowulf enters the dank chamber to finish off the witch, she seduces him by simply turning up as Angelina Jolie. Years later we will discover that the dragon that firestorms Beowulf's castle and causes the sacrifice of his arm and life is, in fact, the spawn of Beowulf from his union with the witch. It's all very *Days of Our Lives* and kept pretty succinct, whereas the original legend rambles on with trysts hither and thither complicating things... and that Olde English doesn't help
There is minimal exploration of other themes, but they seem forced at best: Beowulf's lament of his legend growing greater than he ever was; of his age precluding him from iron-thewed battles, etc. but the movie itself knows that there is not much TO it, EXCEPT its grandiloquent Things That Come At You From The Screen.
Though some viewers had trouble adjusting to the *eyes* of the characters, it all seemed quite realis-- "I am Beowulf!"
Oh, give it a rest!
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