Pan's Labyrinth Movie Review
Pan's Labyrinth Review

"Pan's Labyrinth" Overview

Rating: R
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Guillermo del ToroProducer : Bertha Navarro,Alfonso Cuarón,Frida Torresblanco,Alvaro Augustin
Screenwiter : Guillermo del Toro
Starring : Ivana Baquero,Sergi López,Maribel Verdú,Doug Jones,Ariadna Gil,Alex Angulo,Cesar Vea,Roger Casamajor
Unfolding before viewers' eyes like luxuriantly blooming nightshade, Guillermo
del Toro's Pan's Labyrinth is a dark treat that delivers a powerful sting. The
nightmare conventions are here in his story of a young girl whose moorings to
the real world have been quite effectively cut, everything from mysterious
forests and exaggeratedly evil father figures to subterranean monsters and a
fairy world existing quite close to our own. But instead of losing himself in
the otherworldly, del Toro bases this fantasia in the deadliest of realities.
In 1944, Ofelia (Ivana Baquero), a bookish 12-year-old arrives with her
pregnant mother Carmen (Ariadna Gil) at an isolated farmhouse in northern
Spain. Here, amidst the dark woods and quietly subservient peasants, her new
stepfather Vidal (Sergi López), an army captain, has set up base to harass
leftover anti-Fascist rebels from the Civil War. The carefully sadistic Vidal
has no squeamishness about the humanity of his anti-insurgent campaign, coolly
ordering that all food and medical supplies for the nearby villagers be locked
up in the farmhouse and only doled out under guard -- an attempt to starve out
the rebels hiding up in the mountains. While the adults (including the
excellent Maribel Verdú from Y Tu Mamá También as a woman with rebel ties) are
fully enmeshed in their pungent dramas, Ofelia has her own problems of a
different sort.
A small, fluttering fairy takes Ofelia to an ancient and partially overgrown
labyrinth near the farmhouse. There, she meets a horned faun who tells Ofelia
that she is the reincarnation of the underworld kingdom's long-vanished
princess. So far, so good: what young girl doesn't want to hear some
approximation of those words? The faun says that if she only completes three
tasks, she'll become an immortal, magical being once again. While the
guerrilla fighting sputters bloodily in the thickly wooded mountains, and her
mother's pregnancy turns dangerous, Ofelia pursues her mythological tasks
(retrieving a key from the stomach of a giant frog, stealing a dagger from a
child-eating monster's lair) with the single-minded ardor of a child with
nothing to lose. These tasks are filmed by del Toro like mini-epics, flooding
over with white-knuckle tension and near-euphoric release, as little Ofelia
sets herself against all the powers of evil. One of the adults says to Ofelia,
"The world isn't like your fairy tales. The world is a cruel place." They don't
understand that Ofelia's fairy tales are as cruel as anything she encounters in
the "real" world.
Possessing both a rich sense of the pulpy fantastic and a realistic view of the
evils of war, Del Toro (who also wrote the pitiless tear-jerker of a script)
entwines his two stories with an unexpectedly emotional context. He still
retains the comic fanboy love for the trappings of villainy -- an entire sound
department must have been deployed simply to get the evil creak of Vidal's
leather gloves just right -- but there's a character-driven impulse here which
lifts the film far above the level of del Toro's banal comic book concoctions
(Hellboy and Blade II). In Pan's Labyrinth, del Toro pays as much attention to
his humans as he does to his beasts, unleashing a story with all the shivering
intensity and satisfying denouement of the darkest Grimm's fairy tale.
Reviewed at the 2006 New York Film Festival. Aka El Laborinto del Fauno.
Don't call me a cylon.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti



