| In Short: | Entertaining enough for a throwaway laugh or gasp |
| Recommended? | Kind of... |
| SOLON | Not exactly confidence inspiring... |
I watched the original Clash of the Titans merely days
before the new remake to try and understand why it has become
such a cult classic since its original release back in 1981.
While people will tell you it is one of those films that are so
bad it slowly becomes good, I actually found the film to be
quite entertaining. It was by no means a great film, but it had
heart and an epic scope limited only by its need to employ the
effects of Ray Harryhausen.
Enter the remake, or reimagining as it so conveniently seems. As
the people of Argos lash out against the gods, including Zeus
(Liam Neeson) and Hades (Ralph Fiennes), the gods start to lash
back. Caught in the crossfire is Zeus' bastard son Perseus (Sam
Worthington), who seeks revenge against the gods, but quickly
finds out it is his destiny to save the townspeople and to help
Princess Andromeda (Alexa Davalos) from being sacrificed to the
mythic Kraken.
What was charming about the original film was its lack of
dimensionality and complications. Perseus is raised and trained
to fight against the gods, and find his calling in saving
Andromeda out of love. The plot was focused entirely around him,
and the gods took a back seat to his storyline. Hell, there
really is no specific bad guy in the film at all. In the remake,
it seems like they attempted to pile on as much story as they
comprehensively could, cutting out certain gods almost entirely
(or having them stand almost as a placeholder and do next to
nothing, such as Danny Huston's Poseidon or Alexander Siddig's
Hermes), cutting out or changing characters around entirely, or
curbing the screen time of some of the first film's integral
characters (Jason Flemyng's Calibos immediately comes to mind).
But even with the changes and the added dimensionality for some,
the film almost entirely lacks the heart that drove the
original. There is nothing charming here, nothing fun. Sure the
film is exciting, but it lacks the pulse that made the original
so enjoyable. Of course, this is not helped by the script, which
plays itself out much too seriously for its own good. There are
a few amusingly ridiculous one-liners sprinkled throughout (the
blatant sexual euphemism "Ease your storm" is a gem that sticks
out), but the majority of the dialogue jumps quickly along a
scale from bad to worse. There was a reason huge chunks of the
original film did not have any words; apparently the filmmakers
here did not get the memo, and decided to amp up the silly
dialogue as much as they could at any moment they could. And was
there really a reason to replace Bubo the mechanical owl with a
not so subtly camouflaged rip-off of Chewbacca?
Acting wise, the film is entirely hit and miss. The majority of
performers are lifeless, and emotionally banal. While Neeson and
Fiennes do their best to overcome the contrivances of the
script, you can tell almost immediately that they really have no
place in a film like this. They are much stronger thespians than
that (although Fiennes appears to be channelling his inner
Voldemort in far too many scenes). While it is nice to see them
in a goofy picture like this, I find it very disheartening to
note the last film they appeared in was Schindler's List.
Bond veterans Gemma Arterton and Mads Mikkelsen seem to get the
juiciest material in the whole picture, but both lack the real
charisma and drive for the audience to really care about their
characters, or their relationships to anyone else. Davalos fares
even worse, making even a damsel in distress look difficult to
pull off.
Worthington is the glue that holds the film together, and for
the most part he does well. Even when he is clearly being held
back or delivering the silliest pieces of dialogue, he still has
the emotional presence to carry the film and make you care about
his quest for revenge. I was not overly excited about the cliché
revenge plot, or that he was playing an off-shoot of Jake Sully
from Avatar here, but he still manages to make the
character unique enough to stand alone. He may have been a
breakthrough in Terminator Salvation, and simply great
in Avatar, but here he merely maintains his status as an
excellent newcomer. I look forward to his next film with great
trepidation.
While there are a few bad green screening moments (and a few
throwaway shots clearly thrown in to appeal to 3D viewers), the
special effects are quite excellent. Gone is the stop motion and
claymation of the original film, and in its place are CG effects
that make everything look more realized that I imagined (and
even include a few great makeup effects too). I was impressed by
just about everything thrown at the screen (outside of the
absurd scorpions), as they looked a lot better than I imagined
they would. While not every scene is as polished as the next,
they all come away looking very well done.
I did not expect a whole lot from Clash of the Titans
going on what the trailers offer us, but having the shell of the
original story still in place works in its favor. The film, even
at its worst, still manages to be entertaining enough for a
throwaway laugh or gasp. Although it is done in a more epic way
in the God of War video game series and with more heart in the
original film, there are still some things to like about this
remake. It is not great by any means, and it likely will never
find the cult classic status of its brethren. But it is
enjoyable enough, and could have been so much worse.

Clash
of the Titans (2010)
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