For all its hi-tech wonder, motion-capture technology still hasn’t perfected the human factor.
Beowulf (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:186
Fresh:132
Rotten:54
Average Rating:6.5/10
Consensus: Featuring groundbreaking animation, stunning visuals, and a talented cast, Beowulf has in spades what more faithful book adaptations forget to bring: pure cinematic entertainment.
Rated: 12A [See Full Rating] for intense sequences of violence including disturbing images, some sexual material and nudity.
Runtime: 1 hr 54 mins
Genre: Science-Fiction/Fantasy
Theatrical Release:16-11-2007
Synopsis: Director Robert Zemeckis mines the epic Old English poem for his latest action adventure to feature performance capture animation. The medieval tale was adapted for the screen by Neil Gaiman and... Director Robert Zemeckis mines the epic Old English poem for his latest action adventure to feature performance capture animation. The medieval tale was adapted for the screen by Neil Gaiman and Roger Avery, and no doubt it bears little resemblance to the text you studied in high school. So the story goes, King Hrothgar (Anthony Hopkins) and his people are being terrorized by the horrific monster Grendel (Crispin Glover). Hrothgar puts out a call to any brave man who can come and slay the monster. Enter Beowulf (Ray Winstone) and his brave band of soldiers. Beowulf is a mighty warrior, and he quickly dispatches Grendel, but in doing so he enrages Grendel's mother--played here by an extremely sexy and serpentine Angelina Jolie. Beowulf journeys out to lay waste to Grendel's mother as well, but soon finds his resolve tested by great temptation. His choice ultimately brings about a new curse--one far worse than Grendel--and he must live with regret, until the day finally comes when he is given a chance for redemption. Zemeckis first utilized performance capture in the magical Christmas story POLAR EXPRESS, but one certainly shouldn't expect any dancing elves in BEOWULF. The film features enough gore and bloodshed to rival a teen slasher film, and in the 3D versions, the viewer is sometimes given the perspective of blood actually raining down upon them. However, if one can stomach the ooze and innards, the 3D effects are truly something to behold, as spears and dragons seem to soar mere inches from your face. No doubt poetry purists will have much to haggle with in this violent, sexed-up version of the tale, but teenage boys everywhere are likely to queue up multiple times--if not to see Grendel, then to eyeball his mother. [More]
Starring: Ray Winstone, Anthony Hopkins, John Malkovich, Robin Wright Penn
Starring: Ray Winstone, Anthony Hopkins, John Malkovich, Robin Wright Penn, Brendan Gleeson, Crispin Glover, Alison Lohman, Angelina Jolie
Director: Robert Zemeckis
Director: Robert Zemeckis
Screenwriter: Neil Gaiman, Roger Avary
Producer: Steve Starkey, Robert Zemeckis, Jack Rapke
Composer: Alan Silvestri
Studio: Paramount Pictures
Reviews for Beowulf
The film strives for mythological depth and epic breadth, but it's hard to get below the flat, shallow gloss over every surface.
Ultimately, Beowulf feels a lot like a video game blown up large: noise, action and funny walking intact.
It's a visual experience and maybe the best use of 3D-IMAX that we've seen. On a standard screen, it might not be as impressive.
As off-putting as the half-artificial characters are, and as slow as the movie is in parts, the images still have what seems to be endless depth and detail, which gives the action scenes an unprecedented, gut-whomping power.
It's imaginative, and it has the barreling forward motion and lurching thrills of a Dark Ages theme park, even when it's exercising battle-worn clichés.
Heads roll, arteries gush and spleens spill across the IMAX screen in Beowulf, just as you'd expect in a screen adaptation of the oldest surviving epic poem in the English language.
You want to read Beowulf? Get the book, I'm not stopping you. You want bloody adventure with a brain, see the movie.
The stuff that works in Beowulf really works, and the interaction between the human characters and the effects is so intricate that, flaws notwithstanding, I'm convinced this movie could have been made no other way.
It's the Beowulf saga once again, and the movie becomes tiresome and trivial -- well done within the narrow limits of its aspiration but not worth the inflated effort.
Director Robert Zemeckis moves things along lickety-split; for such a dark, heavy tale, lit by gray, diffuse far-northern skies and golden torchlight, the film is remarkably light on its feet.
Director Robert Zemeckis and his technical wizards have turned an English-class staple into a ripping -- not to mention ripped -- comic-book yarn that looks spectacular in Imax 3-D.
The film is utterly rousing and transporting -- sufficiently, in fact, to make you forgive, if not forget, the somewhat clumsy telling.
Zemeckis has been seduced by the siren call of motion capture... Memo to Zemeckis: come back to earth!
Beowulf is as dazzling a feast for the eyes as the hungriest eyes can take.
If all this can be defined as animation, then Beowulf must be considered the front-runner for the Oscar in that category.
Carp about it all you want, but as Hollywood revisions of ancient writing go, Beowulf beats nonsense like Troy and 300 on all fronts: formally, thematically and intellectually.
Latest News for Beowulf
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May 06, 2008:
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February 25, 2008:
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He...is...Beowulf! Robert Zemeckis' latest CGI hero leads the charge among this week's new releases - get those pause buttons ready for Angelina's nude scene, fellas! - but... More...
January 13, 2008:
Beowulf (2007): Exclusive interstitials ![]()
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