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‘Oz the Great and Powerful’ — Before the Wizard

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Catholic News Service

Lush visuals and sly humor boost “Oz the Great and Powerful,” director Sam Raimi’s 3-D prequel to the 1939 classic “The Wizard of Oz.”

Michelle Williams stars in a scene from the movie “Oz the Great and Powerful.” The Catholic News Service classification is A-II — adults and adolescents. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is PG — parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children. (CNS photo/Disney)

Like its imperishable predecessor, this fantasy adventure is based on the writings of L. Frank Baum (1856-1919). This second stroll down the Yellow Brick Road, however, incorporates thematic elements that make it unsuitable for small moviegoers, who also might be frightened by some of the spooky creatures jumping out at them from the screen.

Long before Dorothy was ever heard from, so opening scenes reveal, a small-time carnival roamed the plains that featured among its attractions the magic show of Oscar Diggs (James Franco), a charming rogue known to one and all by his nickname, Oz. Off stage, Oscar is gifted at weaving romantic illusions for the many ladies who take his fancy, a talent that sometimes gets him in to trouble.

In fact, it’s while he’s on the run from an outraged rival that he hops into a hot-air balloon and casts off, only to find his escape vehicle caught in the powerful updraft of a tornado. As Judy Garland long ago discovered, transport by twister leads to just one place: the magical land that shares Oscar’s moniker.

There, Oscar discovers that both his arrival and his eventual victory over the forces of darkness gripping the realm have been prophesied. His triumph, should he attain it, will yield Oscar the throne of Oz along with the immense wealth of its treasury.

But Oscar’s self-doubt poses a stumbling block on the way to his promised destiny. So too does his initial inability to determine which of his new homeland’s three presiding witches — Theodora (Mila Kunis), Evanora (Rachel Weisz) or Glinda (Michelle Williams) — truly embodies goodness.  “Oz” emphasizes confidence, cooperation, the marvels of science and the kind of generalized faith in happy endings that constitutes Hollywood’s offense-proof substitute for religion.

Oscar is, nevertheless, shown praying to God in times of need, as, for instance, while spinning through the tornado. And his stated ambition to be a great man, rather than merely a good one – “Kansas,” he says dismissively, “is full of good men’ — is proven to be misguided.

There’s even an echo of the Bible and of John Milton’s great epic “Paradise Lost,” as one character’s consumption of an apple marks her irrevocable embrace of wickedness.

Yet several plot points, including Oscar’s fateful ride in the balloon aforesaid, turn on his womanizing. The specifics of his love-’em-and-leave-’em lifestyle are omitted, as are the limits to which he carries his seductions. Even so, the subject, however vaguely treated, is not one that belongs in a picture for children.

Additionally, tots might be overwhelmed by the sight of grand-scale pyrotechnics and by such sinister beasts as the winged baboons who take flight to protect the interests of dark magic.

The film contains mature references, perilous situations, a couple of mild oaths and potentially upsetting images. The Catholic News Service classification is A-II — adults and adolescents. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is PG — parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.

 

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An enjoyable, slightly rude stay at Hotel Transylvania

September 28th, 2012 Posted in Movies Tags: , ,

By

Catholic News Service

We are used to fables of humans fleeing from spooky ghouls and ghosts, but what if they were as scared of us as we are of them?

That is the premise of animated comedy “Hotel Transylvania’ — an enjoyable, if slightly rude, pro-family romp in which the infamous Count Dracula (voiced by Adam Sandler) has established a “monsters only” resort to provide a safe haven for spooks to relax away from the torches and pitchforks of their antagonists.

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‘Last Ounce of Courage’ has Christian viewpoint that’s loud and clear

September 20th, 2012 Posted in Movies Tags: , ,

By

Catholic News Service

A story with a Christian message is a rare and compelling gem for Catholic viewers in today’s Hollywood culture. At the same time, a film that leads first with a positive message, and merely tacks the story on as an afterthought, is one set to leave even the most devoted Christians cold.

Unfortunately, this is a problem with “Last Ounce of Courage” — a picture about religious freedom and standing up for what one believes against the tyranny of the vocal minority.

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‘Restless Heart’ portrays St. Augustine’s conversion

September 13th, 2012 Posted in Movies Tags: , , ,

By

Catholic News Service

“Thou hast made us for thyself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they find their rest in thee.” This famous line from the “Confessions” of St. Augustine (354-430) inspires both the title and the theme of “Restless Heart” — a biographical profile of the holy bishop that manages to inspire while steering clear of sentimentality.

The movie draws on aspects of Augustine’s life from youth to old age. Though this necessitates that the leading role be shared by two actors, Alessandro Preziosi as the younger Augustine and Franco Nero as the older man, the casting is well done, so that the difference between the two is not at all jarring to the audience.

The narrative opens in the last year of the life of this great father of the church, as he faces the Vandals’ invasion of his diocese of Hippo Regius in Roman Africa, then goes back in time to guide the viewer through Augustine’s moving conversion story.

Born in Thagaste, North Africa, to a pagan father and a Christian mother, the young Augustine moved to the ancient metropolis of Carthage to study rhetoric. There he rose to be a well-established lawyer, but one who believed that truth was unconnected to reality and belonged instead to the winning side in any given dispute.

Monica Guerritore portrays the mother of St. Augustine, played as a young man by Alessandro Preziosi, in a scene from the movie “Restless Heart.” The Catholic News Service classification is A-II — adults and adolescents. The film is not rated by the Motion Picture Association of America. (CNS photo/’Maximus Group)

Around this time Augustine adopted the dualist Manichaean heresy, a development of Gnosticism that posited an ongoing cosmic battle between equally matched worlds of light and darkness. By his own later account, Augustine also gave way to debauched living.

The 127-minute long move is arduous at times, though it mostly remains focused on the task at hand.

As it covers Augustine’s search for the meaning of truth and his eventual embrace of a heresy-free Christianity, the picture gives plenty of breathing room to the philosophical arguments with which he wrestled. It also highlights the influence exerted on him by his holy mother St. Monica (Monica Guerritore) and by his philosophical adversary, but future friend, St. Ambrose (Andrea Giordana), the bishop of Milan.

Less satisfactory however, is the treatment of Augustine’s career as a priest and bishop, which is touched on only at the beginning and end of the movie.

This is, nonetheless, a well-produced, colorful piece of cinema that communicates uplifting messages about the power of God and the importance of truth. As such, viewers of faith will likely find it extremely nourishing.

The film contains some violence and a cohabitation theme. The Catholic News Service classification is A-II — adults and adolescents. Not rated by the Motion Picture Association of America.

 

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‘The Pirates! Band of Misfits’ swashbuckles in 3-D animation

By

Catholic News Service

We have it on the authority of Victorian librettist W.S. Gilbert that “it is, it is a glorious thing/to be a pirate king.” If the rollicking 3-D animated comedy “The Pirates! Band of Misfits” is to be believed, being the captain of even a motley shipload of 19th-century buccaneers isn’t such a bad lot either.

That’s the role fate has assigned to the luxuriantly bearded central character in this historical fantasy, voiced by Hugh Grant.

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‘Mirror Mirror’ features hoodlum dwarfs, wisecracking queen

March 30th, 2012 Posted in Movies Tags: , ,

By

Catholic News Service

“Who’s the fairest one of all?” The answer may surprise you in “Mirror Mirror,” a fresh live-action take on the Brothers Grimm fairy tale “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.”

This go-round, the handsome prince is the center of attention, as the wicked queen and her lovely stepdaughter stage a battle royal for his hand, and the fate of a kingdom hangs in the balance.

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Surprise, ‘John Carter’ is a Confederate officer on Mars

March 9th, 2012 Posted in Movies Tags: , , , ,

By

Catholic News Service

Thanks in no small measure to the magic of movies, Tarzan is the character most closely associated with author Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950). Yet it’s one of Burroughs’ lesser-known heroes, introduced in his first novel, serially published in 1912, that a group of 21st-century filmmakers have chosen to bring to the screen in a mega-budgeted, sci-fi epic.

A risky and on the whole successful venture, “John Carter” was adapted from “A Princess of Mars,” the first of 11 books Burroughs centered on an ex-Confederate captain who is propelled to the Red Planet where he becomes embroiled in a war between two city states and falls in love with a comely royal.

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