Immortals (2011) Review
By Eric English
3 Min Read
After witnessing his mother's murder at the hands of King Hyperion (Mickey Rourke), Theseus (Henry Cavill) vows to destroy the cruel monarch. Little does he know that the angry tyrant is planning on finding the legendary Epirus Bow, a weapon that can unleash the legendary Titans from their underground prisons. The purpose of this is to bring about the end of mankind and defeat Gods such as Zeus (Luke Evans) once and for all. Hyperion raids a local monastery to find the virgin oracle Phaedra (Freida Pinto) who knows of the item's location. He eventually captures Theseus as well. With the help of our hero and a thief named Stavros (Stephen Dorff), the seer escapes. She informs Theseus of his destiny and he becomes determined to prevent Hyperion from retrieving the weapon. He also will not rest until the villain is dead.
If movies can be judged on certain sections, at least part of Immortals is squeal-worthy action. Whenever swords clash, whenever our actors duke it out in incredible slow-motion mayhem, the experience is mesmerizing. Borrowing heavily from the more recent film and TV type of slaughter (lots of CG blood spray and body damage) but also avoiding the light-speed editing that turns fighting into an unwatchable frenzy, Tarsem wows us with his style. From Theseus' failed attempt to save his mother to the last act battle between the Titans and the Gods, the spectacle is beyond belief. It's great. We want more of it and are glad for a last minute hint at the possible heavenly histrionics to come.
But then the actors start speaking and Immortals loses all of its momentum, between a mishmash of bad accents, weird line readings, weak dialogue, and even more mundane emotions it is impossible for any audience member to become fully engrossed. We never once care about Theseus, the beautiful prophetic priestess, or the bloodthirsty nemesis known as Hyperion. Their motives are meaningless, reduced to empty shells in a plot that is simply moving us along to the next hyperactive beat down. While they all look the part, the actors are given nothing to do except be imagery and while it's easy to blame the script, it's actually more of a question of context. Had the director found a way to get us invested in this young man's particular quest, we would follow Immortals anywhere, it just looks that good. Unfortunately, such substance never arrives.
Perhaps a better way to say it is this: Tarsem is fantastic at creating eye-candy, great in fact. Sadly, the kind of texture he's interested in come from bright flashy colors and just wind up rubbing the mainstream movie audience member the wrong way. On the outside, Immortals is something to behold. On the inside, however, everything is dry and dull.
Cast:
- Freida Pinto,
- John Hurt,
- Joseph Morgan,
- Kellan Lutz,
- Stephen McHattie,
- Peter Stebbings,
- Isabel Lucas,
- Henry Cavill,
- Robert Maillet,
- Luke Evans,
- Stephen Dorff,
- Steve Byers,
- Corey Sevier,
- Mickey Rourke,
- Greg Bryk,
- Tarsem Singh,
Directed By:
MPAA Rating: R
Running Time: 110 minutes
Distributed By: Relativity Media
For more information about Immortals visit the FlickDirect Movie Database. For more reviews by Eric English please click here.
Immortals images are courtesy of Relativity Media. All Rights Reserved.
Read More Immortals Reviews
Immortals 3D Physical Media: Blu-ray Review
Immortals plays like the illegitimate offspring of 300 and Clash of the Titans.
Full Review | Grade: B
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