Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events Movie Review
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events Review
"Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events " Overview

Rating: PG
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Brad SiberlingProducer : Laurie MacDonald,Walter F. Parkes
Screenwiter : Robert Gordon
Starring : Jim Carrey,Meryl Streep,Jude Law,Billy Connelly,Emily Browning,Liam Aiken
This film lives up entirely to its title. The events are as follows: Death of
parents by fire, three siblings turned into victims of their closest relative,
deception, escapes, disguises, greed, murder attempted and accomplished, evil
genius, egomania, abduction, forced marriage, and more wickedness than we might
want to witness.
It also has the genius of a multi-disguised Jim Carrey, the narrative voice
(and silhouetted presence) of a finely articulated Jude Law, and a basis in a
best-selling series of books, 18 million copies of which have been sold since
1999. The movie has seamless effects, inspired inventiveness, and a serious
dramatic "problem." More on that below.
The Baudelaire kids are Violet (Emily Browning), at age 14 the eldest, Klaus
(Liam Aiken), 12, and baby sister Sunny (Kara and Shelby Hoffman). Each one has
a special ability. Violet is a juvenile inventor who can come up with solutions
to problems that outrival the best of MacGyver. Klaus has a photographic mind
for everything he reads (like 15 books on sailing). Little Sunny, who likes to
bite on things, has the jaws of a titanium clamp.
They are rich. Very rich. They live in castle-like comfort on their parents'
estate. Until, that is, it mysteriously burns to the ground. The Baudelaire
parents perish; the children survive only to be placed by blunder-headed
bureaucrat Mr. Poe (Timothy Spall) into the care of Count Olaf (Carrey), whom
he considers their closest living relative. Poe seems to be under the
impression that this means geographical proximity, and the count lives just a
few blocks away.
This proves to be a blunder of potentially lethal consequences for the poor
orphans with a sizable fortune. Olaf makes no bones about his true intentions,
which is to eradicate the trio and claim their inheritance. No deep thinker,
his methods are as obvious as his avarice, starting with trapping his victims
in his locked car on the railroad tracks as a train is bearing down.
Ever-resourceful Violet puts a few items together from what's in the car to
escape oblivion.
This attempt on the kids' lives doesn't sit well with Mr. Poe, who may now be
taking more seriously their misgivings about Count Olaf's evil nature. (Duh!)
Poe then places his charges into the care of python-scarved Uncle Monty (Billy
Connolly), weird, but a far more sympathetic relation. But when this
snake-loving Scotsman dies under strange circumstances, the kids go to
off-the-edge Aunt Josephine (Meryl Streep) who lives in a house with a rickety
foundation on the side of a vertical cliff, giving new meaning to the term
precarious. The single-note Olaf proves to be a relentless threat, popping up
under one persuasive disguise after another with a series of artless stratagems
to grab some spoils.
Director Brad Silberling's and writer Robert Gordon's version of Daniel
Handler's first three Lemony Snicket books makes so many leaps of logic and
doltish character choices, they strain an adult's ability to enjoy the tale and
appreciate its source. Mr. Poe's supposed ignorance of what would be evident to
a moron, for example, is a simplistically caricatured device to move the story
to its various episodes. On the other hand, there are touches of humor that
work well, such as the onscreen translation of infant Sunny's sweet gurglings.
But such rays of sunshine don't make the dark and nightmarish fantasy go away,
and it might not be such a fun time for sensitive teens and tots in the theatre
-- even with a redemptive ending. The problem is that the true hero of the
piece, the dominating character, is the villain. With the three underage
victims required to courageously escape time after time, it's the ubiquitous
Count Olaf who moves the drama and demands the attention. He's the three-ton
elephant in the frame, and he's a study in undiluted, flamboyant treachery.
Against this guy, Scrooge is a role model. It's hard to imagine that a series
of episodes constructed around such an undisguised demon -- even with the
Carrey portfolio of rubber faces -- will amount to widespread support. But long
lines at the box office seem inevitable, made up of the legions of Snicket book
fans, the lovers of Carrey shtick, and admirers of technical achievement.
Bill Corso's makeup and costumes by Colleen Atwood and Donna O'Neal are part of
an outstanding visual package that includes the world class work of
cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki (The Assassination of Richard Nixon, The Cat
in the Hat), and the rich and clever production design by Rick Heinrichs. But,
compared to other movies with a similar literary pedigree, this fairy tale will
leave some of us shaking our heads thinking that the most unfortunate of the
events is the shadowy adaptation of the author's creations and the fact that we
didn't leave the theatre for a happier film, as narrator Snicket wickedly
advises us to do in the prologue.
The DVD includes more extras than you could possibly ever watch, including 15
minutes of outtakes, commentary from Silberling, and behind the scenes short
flicks. A second disc includes much more making-of footage.
Well, this morning actually.
Reviewer: Jules Brenner





