Enchanted Movie Review
Enchanted Review

"Enchanted" Overview

Rating: PG
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Kevin LimaProducer : Barry Josephson,Barry Sonnenfeld
Screenwiter : Bill Kelly
Starring : Amy Adams,Patrick Dempsey,Susan Sarandon,James Marsden,Timothy Spall,Idina Menzel,Rachel Covey
In a fairly surprising move, Disney has come forward and shown it has an actual
sense of humor about its patented brand of cheesy, clichéd, and relentless
peppiness. Previously, self-reference has been limited to cross marketing
between one Disney film and the next; but in Enchanted the message seems to be:
Yeah, we know we've got our share of hokey archetypes, but it works for us.
It's a refreshing attitude.
Giselle lives in the conflation of every single Disney trope ever, in an
animated, magical fairy-tale kingdom full of songs of her one true love. The
evil queen (who is also a wicked stepmother) can't have some upstart marry the
prince and move in on her territory, so she banishes Giselle from animation to
reality: New York, to be precise.
Now, Giselle is Amy Adams, and her hoop skirt wedding gown and sunshine
disposition are purely preposterous in the real world. Giselle is pretty
useless, but she still gets her prince: a dour divorce attorney named Robert
who's obsessed with the practical (and who is played by Patrick Dempsey, not
really stretching past his persona to play a modern-day Prince Charming).
Robert is hapless when it comes to dealing with Giselle's wide-eyed naiveté,
which generally plays like dementia in this context; even more befuddled are
the other fairy tale creatures who follow Giselle through the rabbit hole.
There's Prince Edward (James Marsden), come to save his princess; Nathanial
(Timothy Spall), the queen's henchman; and a furry chipmunk sidekick.
As concepts go, Enchanted is pretty high up there, with its
fairy-tale-princess-meets-modern-world, but in the end it's all Disney
adventure, for better or worse. It may mock the overused story, but at the same
time, Enchanted is no more realistic, or less moralistic, than the average
fairy tale. But we also get the fun side of a Disney flick, with the sharp
musical numbers (written by the tried and true duo of Alan Menken and Stephen
Schwartz) that have the added hoot of being performed live in Central Park, or
by New York's own mythical woodland creatures, namely rats and roaches. The
animation side is also expectedly well done, and all of the drawn characters
are dead ringers for the actors who portray them. It's a clever little idea
that is lots of fun, even if the execution doesn't always live up to it.
Enchanted drags a bit when it begins to suffer from an identity crisis -- is it
a live-action fairy tale for the kids who love Disney, or is it a gentle satire
for the parents who are a little sick of the toons? It's somewhere in between,
and unfortunately the cheesiness we accept in cartoons does not always play
with real people, even if it comes with a cheeky attitude. The joke may start
out cute, how ill-suited fairy princesses are for real life, but the gag feels
a bit too real as Giselle's simpering simply does not end.
Fortunately, there's a lot to make Enchanted generally more fun than it is
awkward. Dempsey mostly just has to look stern and pretty, but everyone else is
clearly having fun. Adams does well with doe eyes and unflagging cheer; as the
evil witch come to life, Susan Sarandon is gleefully evil, even if her costume
looks part Party America clearance rack, part stripper wear. But surprisingly,
it's Marsden who steals the show. His Prince Edward is simply preposterous, but
he never breaks from or lessens the arrogant buffoonery, and his facial
expressions and line delivery are stellar.
While it won't make many lists for movie of the year, Enchanted has two very
important things going for it: It's got a great, clever concept, and it's
family fun, released the day before Thanksgiving. Those two things combined
pretty much assure it to be a hit, even if kids find real life dull compared to
the fairy tale, and parents were hoping for a bit more satire.
Enchanting gown!
|
Review by Anne Gilbert
|






