Film
What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases
Pan's Labyrinth (2006)
Director: Guillermo del Toro
Synopsis
The guardian of a labyrinth tells a young girl that she is the long lost princess of a magical kingdom and sets her three dangerous tasks that she must complete in order to achieve her destiny.
Movie review
From Time Out London
A girl on the cusp of adolescence is inducted into a threatening fantasy world where she discovers her own power. It’s a familiar, even archetypal story well suited to the dreamlike parallel reality of cinema: Alice, Wendy and Dorothy found their ways on screen and have been joined by the young heroines of ‘Labyrinth’, ‘Spirited Away’ and ‘Mirrormask’, to name just a few. ‘Pan’s Labyrinth’ is another version of the tale, but an unusual one in that it isn’t suitable for children. Not only is it replete with violence visited on the body, but its lessons – in the inadequacy of fantasy as a countermeasure to repression – might have sensitive youngsters chucking in the towel.As in ‘The Devil’s Backbone’ and a prospective new project, ‘3993’, del Toro (who is Mexican) arranges his supernatural drama against the backdrop of the Spanish Civil War. The setting is 1944, so the conflict proper is over, but skirmishes continue between anti-fascist guerrillas and forces under the command of sadistic, narcissistic Captain Vidal (Sergi López) – or ‘father’, as young Ofelia (Ivana Baquero) is instructed to address him when she arrives at his forest base with her pregnant, ailing mother (Ariadna Gil), Vidal’s new bride. The maid, Mercedes (Maribel Verdú), is friendly and in some ways a mirror character for Ofelia, but the girl is basically alone – until a large cricket transforms into a fairy and leads her to a crumbling stone maze in the grounds, where an ageing faun greets her as a lost princess, pending her completion of certain tasks…
It’s no coincidence that the fairy appears after the double-killing that establishes this fable isn’t kids’ stuff, or that the jeopardy of Ofelia’s challenges pales in comparison to real-world struggles. Reality increasingly dominates the story; in fact, the faun’s realm can seem merely the stage for a series of set-pieces whose grotesque and detailed design impresses more than any sense of momentum or high stakes.
Yet as escapist fantasies go, this supernature is markedly muddy – both literally, as when Ofelia ventures into the belly of a great tree, and in the general creepiness that marks even those ostensibly sympathetic to her, like the faun, with its unnerving habit of appearing in her bedroom. The labyrinth has echoes of authentic atrocity: a pile of children’s shoes lies ominously near the banqueting table of a bald-bodied, blank-faced baby-eater. At least as evident, though, is del Toro’s own immersion in fantasy and horror cinema, with nods to ‘Don’t Look Now’, ‘Rosemary’s Baby’ and ‘The Shining’ among others (not to mention Goya and ‘The Spirit of the Beehive’). It’s as a filmmaker, rather than storyteller, that del Toro is most successful here: a disjunction remains between the story’s childlike form and its gruesome execution, but few directors are so adept at conveying both the uncanny in the real and the recognisable in the fantastic.
Author: Ben Walters
Time Out London Issue 1892: November 21-28 2006
User reviews of this film
-
- Richard Freeman said...
-
Posted on Feb 18 2010 18:47
Film making at its best. Del Toro wanted to include adragon but didn't have the buget. I can't wait to see Smaug in his upcomming versio of The Hobbit.
The monster with eys in its hands is called Te-no-me and it isthe ghost of a murdered begger who has eyes in his hands. - Report as inappropriate
-
- Erika Winpenny said...
- Posted on Jan 10 2010 21:45 Absolute genious. Beautifully filmed and acted, and an absolutely fantastic soundtrack. A very eye-opening view into post-civil war Franco's Spain. I've seen it several times and can't get enough of it.
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Norman Lowther said...
-
Posted on Jan 06 2010 19:50
DelToro take a bow ! Top notch in every department !
This film had me completely absorbed very early in & pushed all my emotional buttons right until the closing credits ! One of the best films in the last 20 years or so. - Report as inappropriate
-
- SIdney Whitaker said...
- Posted on Dec 14 2009 22:09 Frighteningly ingenious use of digital animation in grim faire-tale, all the more horrible for paralleling the brutality of the soldiers hunting down revolutionaries, and the semblance of a "family story" (girl's father has been killed,& she hates brutal step-father---a captain in Franco's army). Lighting of interior scenes sometimes evocative of Velázquez, but the tone is so horrific that you'd have to be sick, or hardened, to stomach it.
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Helen said...
- Posted on Aug 08 2009 23:04 In response to "emperors new clothes" comment, (note this is the only negative commenter) I would like to say the film is brilliant. The comment made by emperors new clothes is just an attack on people who have a different taste in film, implying that those people cannot possibly have a mind of their own and only take their reference from what the critics say, quite a biggoted viewpoint. I suggest to those who have not seen this film to watch it with an open mind judge for yourselves. x
- Report as inappropriate
-
- serious moonlight said...
- Posted on Jan 13 2009 15:38 an absolutely wonderful, fantastical study of escapism
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Magmabulle said...
- Posted on Jun 09 2008 10:51 A very enthralling tale for grown-ups, that leaves the viewer realizing that the reality is more brutal than any fiction.
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Emperors New Clothes said...
- Posted on May 20 2008 16:28 Complete tripe. Only appealing to pretentious critics who think they know something about film.
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Rachel said...
- Posted on Apr 20 2008 00:46 This was one of the most powerful, beautiful and heart breaking films I have ever seen. I whole-heartedly enjoyed every minute of it and would recommend it to evryone.
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Love Can't Save You said...
- Posted on Mar 01 2008 19:03 a really interesting and unusual film considering its technically a fairytale
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Technoguy said...
-
Posted on Dec 26 2007 11:31
This is a strange film: like a crushed grape it distils
the eerie awfulness of the end of the Spanish civil war period,with it's festering sense of betrayals and smashed idealism into a set of gruesome tasks in a parallel fantasy world,which has punishments almost as deadly and inevitable.I thought his previous film The Devil's Backbone worked better but this was a major work. - Report as inappropriate
-
- Di Edwards said...
- Posted on Jun 30 2007 22:28 interesting original film. worth watching
- Report as inappropriate
Cast & crew
Director: Guillermo del Toro
Producer: Bertha Navarro, Alfonso Cuarón, Frida Torresblanco, Álvaro Augustín
Cast: Sergi López, Maribel Verdu, Ivana Baquero, Doug Jones, Ariadna Gil full cast
Genre(s): Fantasy, Horror, Drama
Rated: 15
Duration: 120 mins
UK Release: Nov 24 2006
Most popular on this site
Top Stories
Has David Cronenberg turned tame?
Has director David Cronenberg veered too far from his radical and bloody roots with new film 'A Dangerous Method'?
Pop-up cinema for Valentine's Day
Side-step romantic clichés with some alternative Valentine’s viewing
The 10 worst date movies
Just in time for Valentine's Day, we present ten of the least romantic films ever made
10 unlikely badboy biopics
Featuring Phil Collins, Jeremy Clarkson, Nick Clegg, David Starkey and a host of other unlikely subjects
Interview: Sean Durkin on 'Martha Marcy May Marlene'
The first-time director of the brilliant new thriller discusses religious cults and robot boxing





What do you think?
Post your review now