"The Lion King," Walt Disney Co's latest remake
of its own beloved animated films, shows off advanced techniques
that blend virtual reality, live action and digital imagery to
bring a hyper-real feel to the animals and African settings.
But early reviews said the overall result was a letdown,
although most critics conceded the movie will perform well at
the box office where some analysts are predicting an opening
weekend of around $150 million when it arrives in North American
theaters on July 19.
"Everything here is so safe and tame and carefully calculated as
to seem predigested. There's nary a surprise in the whole two
hours," wrote Todd McCarthy for The Hollywood Reporter.
McCarthy predicted, however, that the film "will be duly gobbled
up by audiences everywhere like the perfectly prepared corporate
meal it is."
The new version, starring Beyonce and Donald Glover as the
voices of lions Nala and Simba, is a faithful, sometimes shot
for shot, recreation of the 1994 film, including much of the
original dialogue and Elton John's hit songs.
"That raises the inevitable question of, 'Why bother?'," wrote
Variety critic Peter Debruge, calling the film "undeniably
impressive but incredibly safe."
"The answer can be spelled in dollars," Debruge wrote.
"The Lion King" starts its international rollout in China on
Friday and arrives in the rest of the world in the middle of
next week. The 1994 film was a $968 million global smash that
spurred a long-running Broadway stage show and more than 20
international productions.
Despite the hyperrealism of the new version, some critics found
the film lacking in emotion and said the life-like singing and
talking lions, hyenas and warthog felt odd.
Some reviews were unusually harsh. Alissa Wilkinson at culture
website Vox.com said the movie lacked magic, calling it a
"bloated retread without a reason."
"Be prepared for a crushing disappointment," wrote Scott
Mendelson at Forbes.com.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant in Los Angeles; Editing by Matthew
Lewis)
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