Been there! |
Easter, of course, offered the perfect opportunity to
indulge, so a list was prepared, cushions plumped and the cupboard checked for
appropriate amounts of nettle tisane.
In the event, the list was overtaken at the start by
the discovery that Hansel and Gretel:
Witch Hunters (2013) was on the telly.
Fascinated by the idea of updating fairy and folk
tales – or to be more specific, allowing them a space in which to continue
evolving – this seemed like a perfect place to begin.
In the event, that perfection was in illustrating how
to get things wrong.
A US-German collaboration, written and directed by Norwegian
Tommy Wirkola, it brought together creative talent from those countries, plus
the UK, Netherlands,
Sweden, Iceland, Poland, New Zealand, Canada, Finland and more.
The idea
of the children growing up and becoming witch hunters is fine – and full of
potential. It might be over egging the pudding a bit to make the adult Hansel a
diabetic as a result of the witch’s attempts to fatten him for the oven, but we
can let that slide.
Tarantino. Without the laughs. |
Fairy
tales can be seriously dark and violent – I am entirely happy with both – but
this uses violence gratuitously and in a way that makes you think it’s actually
trying to be a Tarantino film. Without any of the wit.
There are
other irritants.
The
international nature of the cast is fine – but then why have Brit actor Gemma
Arterton, who plays the adult Gretel, using a faux American accent?
And – oh
god – the constant pronunciation of Hansel with a long, American ‘A’, grated
almost to the point of a foot going through the telly.
I was close to shouting about ‘cultural appropriation!’ – and that’s
something I consider to be a bonkers idea, since it assumes cultures come in
locked geographic/ethnic pigeon holes that have never mixed and informed each
other (until now) and never should.
So, just
to be clear, I hated it.
Still, if
you never experience dross occasionally, how can you judge quality?
Anyway,
next up was The Wonderful World of the
Brothers Grimm, a 1962 MGM affair, filmed in Rothenburg ob der Tauber
itself (and with a glance at Neuschwanstein), so enabling a spot of ‘been
there!’ film tourism.
Brothers Grimm – with Rothenburg and skewed perspective |
In
contrast to Hansel and Gretel, the
international cast is allowed to use whatever accents they’re used to: that the
brothers (Lawrence Harvey and Karlheinz Böhm) speak in received English and with a German accent is
not remotely problematic.
Not
sensational, but worth seeing nonetheless.
Next up was Chitty
Chitty Bang Bang - a film I haven’t sat down to watch from A to Z for
donkey’s years, and one that was, to be perfectly honest, rather shoehorned
into this selection because its locations included, err, Neuschwanstein and
Rothenburg ob der Tauber.
But actually, given the lack of any real character
development of authot Ian Fleming, it works rather well as a fairy tale, since
these are full, after all, of types, rather than 3D characters.
That’s not to say I don’t like it – in fact, a proper
viewing restored my pleasure in it and reminded me that the dire matteing on
the flying sequences should not be allowed to overshadow what is, by and large,
a delightful film.
Gert Fröbe, Lionel Jefferies and mad scientists (inc Max Wall) |
Gert Fröbe is wonderful as Baron Bombast, James
Robertson Justice is, well, James Robertson Justice (his real-life story would
probably astonish you – look it up), Robert Helpmann is fabulously creepy as
the Childcatcher, Lionel Jefferies is a super Grandpa and Benny Hill
illustrates the point that comics can turn in serious performances.
And so what could possibly follow that?
Well, one of the things I’d been tempted into getting
was 2014’s Maleficent - although I’d
also been tempted to buy Hansel and
Gretel: Witch Hunters on the grounds that it looked a really interesting
take on the story, as recorded by the Grimms.
I put it off for a few days after the H&G experience, but eventually
decided that it had to be watched.
And I’m very glad I did. It’s a fascinating take on Sleeping Beauty – so much so that there
is a great deal of material around involving really very serious discussion of
its themes.
Angelina Jolie – and a raven! |
But the problems begin if you start reading the rest
of it too literally from that point. I saw one writer complaining that, while
the rape metaphor was clear, the subsequent story made it appear that the only
way for a female rape victim to recover was by enacting revenge.
It’s fine to make the comparison, but this is also a
fairy/folk tale – and indeed, such a reading of the film rather simplifies what
actually does happen and how the characters develop.
And if you want to look for themes in it, then one of
the others is the question of a nature-based world v an
imperialistic/capitalistic one. This was certainly something that occurred to
me when watching it (and it’s not a unique observation), but if you try to take
it too far, then you’d do your head in.
It’s sumptuous to look at – the CGI works so well; conjuring
worlds, but never detracting from the human.
Jolie is really in fine form – it’s a cracking
performance. And she turns in a perfectly comfortable non-American accent (a
tad softer than as that other very modern fairy tale character, Lara Croft).
Actually, accents are an
interesting point here – we have a mixture between English and Scottish in an
international cast. And no, it’s not one that comes down on simple good v bad
lines. But directing actors to use specific accents here makes a kind of
consistent sense, whereas the issue in H&G
does not.
German vultures. No, seriously. |
The plot is maintained pretty
straightforwardly from the Grimms – one of the major changes is in giving the
dwarves names and personalities; the character drawing is better than the late
’70s era Disney and the backgrounds are beautiful and delicate, while the witch
is still, I’m sure, terrifying for young children.
The only thing I found
myself muttering about was the presence of two vultures: there are no vultures
in Germany – and it grates a tad.
Mind, crows or ravens don ’t have yellow legs and beaks either – well, not in Europe, at any rate.
But it remains a standard
of the fairy tale film genre and formed a perfect addition to the list I had
set out to consider.
There are still two
definite films to come from that original list but for the time being, that’s a
good chunk of fairytale viewing under my belt.
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