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DVD Reviews
by Lon
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events
Wow, what a great title. It just rolls off the tongue.
Anyway, this is the #1 movie in America this week, and I caught it at
an afternoon show today back in Orange County with my brother Jon and
his lovely girlfriend Paula. Children had the run of the theater, much
to the chagrin of my younger sibling, who prefers a more somber, hushed
film-viewing atmosphere.
Anyway, the film is based on the first three books in a long series of
children's adventures of the same name. Lemony Snicket, the fictional
psudonym of author Daniel Handler, played in the film by a silhouette
of Jude Law, relates the tragic misadventures of the Baudelaire children
after the death of their parents in a massive fire. His narration, wry
and British in its foreboding warnings and exaggerated language, provides
some insight into the filmmaker's intentions: their story is scary enough
to please children who have outgrown saccharine entertainment like "The
Littlest Elf," but not so scary that they won't be able to sleep
that night for fears of death by arson.
More and more unfortunate events follow the children even once their parents
are buried. Their home consumed by flames, and with no close relatives
or friends to turn to, eldest daughter Violet, middle child Klaus, and
infant Sunny are sent to live with failed actor Count Olaf (Jim Carrey),
who plans to kill them and steal their stately inheritance. Even after
the kindly but non-observant banker Mr. Poe (Timothy Spall) frees them
from Olaf's evil clutches, placing them with a variety of other relatives
that includes friendly herpetologist Montgomery Montgomery (Billy Connelly)
and the highly neurotic Aunt Josephine, they are not safe from his wild
scheming, as he chases them from foster home to foster home in a murderous
frenzy.
This sharply dark sense of humor is something of a relief, seeing it as
I did the day after I witnessed the treacly horror that is Finding Neverland.
I don't know when I've last seen a children's film with death so clearly
in mind at all times (okay, I do...Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban),
and it's refreshing that director Brad Silberling refuses to soften the
harsh realities of life for his young protagonists, providing them with
a steely resolve in the face of countless setbacks and unimaginable suffering.
He is aided in this task by the entire effects and design team, who have
created for Lemony Snicket a vast storybook world mirroring our own, but
definitely apart from it. The sets, particularly Olaf's deteriorating
mansion and the home of Aunt Josephine, literally teetering on the edge
of a rocky cliff, echo the gothic themes of the storytelling, and never
fail to impress. The effects work similarly dazzles. Clearly, a lot of
very talented artists spent a great deal of time fashioning a unique visual
style for the film, and all of their hard work appears on the screen.
And let me just say that Jim Carrey has had, in 2004, his best year of
film acting yet. His performance in this year's Eternal Sunshine of the
Spotless Mind was the best, most subtle work he's ever done, and Count
Olaf provides him with the most promising comic role he's had to date.
Though Snicket's production brings considerable charm and flair along
with it, Carrey runs away with the show, zapping the movie full of much-needed
life, particularly during a slowly-paced final half hour. Olaf, who fancies
himself a Master of Disguise, has frequent need to stalk the orphans incognito,
the better to carry out his nefarious plans, providing Carrey with a reasonable
excuse to engage in his usual brand of over-the-top shenanigans. But it's
in some of the quieter moments between him and his tempermental charges
that Carrey really shines, imbibing Olaf with a gleeful menace he's never
really carried off before (particularly in his abysmal portrayal of The
Riddler in Batman Forever).
It's not all gravy, unfortunately. Though all the aforementioned factors
fit nicely into place, and Snicket is a solid-enough literary adaptation
sure to please fans of the original books, the movie never really comes
together as a whole. It was entertaining enough, sure, but I doubt it's
a classic children will return to over the years. The storytelling has
wit and charm, but never dares to explore the emotional life of any of
its characters.
This is understandable, in a way. So many horrors face the Baudelaire
children that to deal with them honestly for even a few scenes could kill
any comic momentum the film had built up. But with such a segmented story
(it is, after all, based on three separate novels) and so many cartoonish
set pieces, Lemony Snicket barely finds time to make us invest in its
world of wonders at all. It feels oddly distant, like an exhibition we
are invited to admire but not to touch, placing it completely at odds
with Cuaron's Harry Potter film of this year, that enveloped the viewer
in the cool blues and grays of the English countryside.
And the children don't much help matters. Sure, I feel weird writing a
review bagging on child actors, and they are by no means horrible performers
by any stretch of the imagination. In fact, whereas most child actors
annoy me by "acting," speaking their lines as if they've had
tremendous amounts of preparation from overly attentive stage mothers,
these actors underplay most of their scenes. Subtlety of performance is
great, but these kids can barely work up a sob when they are told of their
parents untimely demise. In fact, the most dramatic shot in the film,
which Silberling comes back to several times, shows only the shadows of
the orphans backlit through a tent, with the outlines of their parents
projected above them. It's pretty telling that the most emotionally involving
moment in the entire movie features not a single actor's face on screen.
At the film's close, we are treated to a single scene of pathos, where
the children resolve to remember their parents warmly and get on with
their lives, but by then, it is too late. The movie has zigged and zagged
through a thousand Looney Tunes set-ups by that point, and we have stopped
viewing the Baudelaire's as a real family confronted by dangers, but as
pawns in a labrynthine chess game being played by Lemony Snicket and Brad
Silberling.
To make matters worse, rather than resolve the numerous mysteries the
film has set up, Silberling and screenwriter Robert Gorden have seen it
fit to keep their ending completely open-ended. We get no information
on the fate of the Baudelaire's or Count Olaf, and don't get any conclusion
on the investigation the children have conducted for the film's entire
running time. I understand that more Snicket movies will likely follow
(the book series already contians 11 volumes), but that is no excuse for
failing to finish a movie at all. Even Jude Law sounds perplexed by his
narration at the film's conclusion, letting us know that the Baudelaires
will be fine because they have each other, but that he has no idea what
it is that actually happens to them once the action of the film has ceased.
This is unsatisfying in the extreme.
So, some good and some bad. If you have any interest in the film at all,
I'd recommend seeing it in theaters, where its visual splendor will not
be lost on you. The children sitting around me really didn't seem all
that captivated by the movie, except when Jim Carrey was on-screen hamming
it up, but this could be as much a product of sugar overload as a failure
on the part of the filmmaking. I enjoyed the movie, but would be loathe
to rewatch it any time soon. Like the first Harry Potter film, it provides
workmanlike entertainment with the promise of greater things to come.