View Full Version : Movie Reviews: "Mirror Mirror"


JamesG
03-30-2012, 07:31 PM
Movie Reviews: Mirror Mirror


The verdict of most critics on Mirror Mirror: fair.

No poison apples but plenty of daggers.





Kyle Smith’s review in the New York Post is utterly lethal (and probably funnier than the movie itself, judging from the other critics’ remarks).

“As garish-looking as Versailles reimagined by Donald Trump, as boring as a dead carp and as campy as a boxed set of Project Runway, this would-be kiddie comedy directed by Tarsem Singh (Immortals) features, as Snow White, Lily Collins and her eyebrows — black furry things that resemble Robin Williams’ forearms.”





Sandie Angulo Chen in the Washington Post offers a similar verdict on Collins (the daughter of Genesis singer Phil):

“The Snow White actress Lily Collins is a washout.”

However, Chen likes the costumes and scenery, praising the “vivid set design, sweeping landscapes and elaborate costumes.”





On the other hand, Ty Burr in the Boston Globe views Collins in a different mirror.

“Best thing here? A charmingly demure Lily Collins as Snow White, balancing the script’s demands that she wield a dagger and turn fight-scene somersaults with a princess-like grace.”

Burr loathes the performance of Julia Roberts, however. “If this isn’t the single most irritating performance of Roberts’s career, I’d be hard-pressed to name what is.”





Joe Neumaier in the New York Daily News agrees.

“Roberts acts here as if simply appearing in a floofy dress is high hilarity. Her playfulness seems like work and her cartoony maliciousness is dull.”





Manohla Dargis in the New York Times praises the look of the film, writing that director Singh:

“knows how to make performers and sets look good.”

But the actors, “look as if they had been art directed into place instead of cut loose.”







Many of the reviews are similarly mixed — and at odds with one another.


Mick Lasalle in the San Francisco Chronicle says:

“All we get are scattered bits of cleverness, some hit and some miss. Miss Roberts' evil queen is self-assured and arch and more funny than scary … the best thing about the picture.”





And Roger Ebert in the Chicago Sun-Times agrees.

“Julia Roberts steals the show with her imperious and autocratic Queen.”

He concludes, “it all looks great, but the dialogue is rather flat, the movie sort of boring.”





And Kenneth Turan in the Los Angeles Times concludes that the sets and costumes:

“give this mostly conventional princess story its fair share of romantic froth and more than a little moxie.”

His take on Roberts: She makes “an exceptionally entertaining evil monarch.”

-IMDB News