Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of the Ga'Hoole (2010)
Director: Zack Snyder
Synopsis
Zack Snyder follows up his take on Alan Moore's 'Watchmen' with a 3D animated adaptation of Kathryn Lasky's owl-based fantasy novel, 'Guardians of the Ga'Hoole'
Movie review
From Time Out London
To call this clunkily titled adventure movie Zack Snyder’s first foray into animation is misleading: after all, what was ‘300’ but a CG cartoon with some humans slotted in? Based on novels by Kathryn Lasky, ‘Legend of the Guardians’ adopts a standard fantasy-quest structure – bookish kid leaves home, battles baddies, learns lessons – the only difference being that, in this case, everyone is an owl.Jim Sturgess is the voice of Soren, the heroic young barn owl kidnapped by evil queen Helen Mirren and her marauding band of pseudo-Nazi night-hunters, the Pure Ones. But it’s not long before Soren flies the coop, assembling a motley band of helpers and heading across the ocean in search of Ga’Hoole, home of the mythical Guardians. There’s too much story for 97 minutes, leaving much of the film feeling rushed and confusing. The script is overfamiliar and predictable, stuffed with daftly named supporting characters (the villain is called Metalbeak). And it doesn’t help that some aspects of this owl-oriented world feel slightly ridiculous. How do they make armour with those talons, let alone put it on?
But ‘Legend of the Guardians’ has its moments: thanks to the PG rating, the film provides little opportunity for Snyder to indulge his tiresome liking for bonecrunching violence while allowing him room to exercise his knack for action: there are a handful of soaring, immersive and at times beautiful fight-and-flight sequences which utilise 3D in the best imaginable way.
Author: Tom Huddleston
Time Out London Issue 2096: October 21 – 27m 2010
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