您现在的位置是:探索 >>正文
【】
探索5885人已围观
简介There's nothing really wrongwith the new Lion King.The story is a classic for a reason. The animatio ...
There's nothing really wrongwith the new Lion King.
The story is a classic for a reason. The animation is stunning, so lifelike it'd be borderline terrifying if it weren't so cute. The music, by Hans Zimmer, remains irresistible, and that original track by Beyoncé feels like a welcome addition rather than an intrusive one (as Jasmine's new number in the recent Aladdinremake did).
Oh, and speaking of Ms. Knowles-Carter, that voice cast is top-notch, too. She brings soul and depth to Nala, John Oliver sounds like he was born to play Zazu, and Seth Rogen and Billy Eichner damn near steal the whole show as Pumbaa and Timon.
It's clear that no expense was spared, that no detail was too small to fret over, that a whole lot of blood, sweat, and tears went into ensuring that the new Lion Kingwould deliver everything fans loved about the old Lion King. This is no lazy cash grab. It's a lovingly envisioned, lavishly produced, and painstakingly crafted cash grab. And it's not much more than that.

It tries to be, I suppose. The remake runs about half an hour longer than usual, to let beloved scenes linger longer than they used to ("The Lion Sleeps Tonight" is practically a full-fledged musical number now), and to add a few new scenes for supporting characters like Nala.
Yet none of this amounts to anything fresh or new or vital. The remake doesn't deepen our understanding of these characters, or this story, or this world, in any significant way. It doesn't offer any new insights into the story's themes, or update any of its lessons for a new era. The Lion Kingis content to simply run through the same motions all over again, just with newer, shinier tools.
Zazu and Simba: new look, same hilarious dynamic.Credit: DisneyThe 2019 version does inspire a renewed appreciation of the original, but probably not the ways it intends to. Mostly, it becomes a reminder that there are things traditional animation can get away with that photorealistic animation cannot. Like stack animals on top of each other for a choreographed dance number -- in the new iteration, "I Just Can't Wait to Be King" is reduced to some shots of frolicking animals.
Or, for that matter, sell us on the idea of these lions to begin with. There's only so far an animator can push a cat's facial or body language before they cease to look believable. So we're left with a serious disconnect in moments like Mufasa's death, where the voice actor's teary panic becomes difficult to reconcile with the dry-eyed, relatively reserved animal we see onscreen.
SEE ALSO:People are going wild with their reactions to the first ‘Lion King’ trailerThere is nothing about the new Lion King that feels like it needed to be made at this specific moment, by this specific team, in this specific way.
Tastes have changed since the first Lion Kingcame out, of course, and it's quite possible young viewers who cut their teeth on Disney's Jungle Bookremake (also from Lion Kingdirector Jon Favreau) will prefer this style of animation regardless of its strengths or weaknesses. But speaking as someone who grew up in the '90s, I can't imagine why I'd ever revisit this new version when the old version is still accessible.
There is nothing about the new Lion Kingthat feels like it needed to be made at this specific moment, by this specific team, in this specific way. Perhaps that's an unfair standard for a movie; plenty of projects exist for no obvious reason beyond their slam-dunk box-office prospects, and most of them are shoddier than The Lion King.
On the other hand, Disney put these filmmakers and this cast in a room with that much money and that much time, and the best they could do was a basically fine but markedly inferior recreation of an old movie? Really?
In a way, it does seem appropriate that this story of a young prince finding his way back to duty would itself feel so duty-bound. But at least Simba got to spend some time out in the wild exploring himself first, expanding his horizons and challenging his assumptions.
The new movie about him is all "remember who you are" conventionality and no "hakuna matata" creativity. And while that makes for a perfectly respectable box office king, it doesn't make for an especially interesting one.
Featured Video For You
6 of the richest pets of all time
TopicsDisney
Tags:
转载:欢迎各位朋友分享到网络,但转载请说明文章出处“夫榮妻貴網”。http://new.maomao321.com/news/56d3799906.html
相关文章
Airbnb activates disaster response site for Louisiana flooding
探索Airbnb has activated its disaster response page following the record-breaking flooding in Louisiana. ...
【探索】
阅读更多Google is building a killswitch that will force the internet to play by its rules
探索Switch on the ad blocking toggle that appeared this week in Google's experimental version of Chrome, ...
【探索】
阅读更多Japan has discovered a way to make ice
探索These popsicles are ready to take on the summer heat.Japan's Biotherapy Development Research Centre ...
【探索】
阅读更多
热门文章
- Olympic security asks female Iranian fan to drop protest sign
- There's a new Sansa fan theory and this time it's about her necklace
- Japan has discovered a way to make ice
- This is how Mark Zuckerberg's Oculus VR gloves actually work
- Hiddleswift finally followed each other on Instagram after 3 excruciating days
- Swineapple is the most extra thing to happen to food since pineapple on pizza
最新文章
Sound the alarms: Simone Biles finally met Zac Efron
What iOS 11 might look like on the iPhone 8's new edge
Instagram just launched live video chat — and everyone else can watch
This tortoise called Herman is BFFs with a bread version of himself
Here's George Takei chilling in zero gravity for the 'Star Trek' anniversary
Stephen Colbert is producing an animated series about Trump and oh my god is this real life?
