Re: The Time Traveler's Wife (McAdams, Bana, Livingston) - Grade/Discu
Minor spoilers, be warned...
I gave it an Above Average, though I think part of that may be residual love for the book rather than for this movie. This reminded me a lot of the treatment of Dune: Messiah in the SciFi channel's Children of Dune miniseries; they hit many of the high points of the novel, the parts I've been looking forward to seeing onscreen ever since I found out there would be a movie, but they didn't dwell on anything, didn't really give anything time to sink in, and I question whether someone who doesn't already know the book will be able to follow the movie well. At times it felt like the book running on fast-forward.
A lot of things that came straight out of the book were nice to see, but they're not explained at all in the movie. How is anyone who hasn't read the book supposed to know the significance of Henry's running, or the haircut? Especially in a movie that only clocks in at a bit over 1.5 hours, I wish they'd taken an extra 15 or 20 minutes to explain the details more fully, or to let scenes breathe a bit.
Eric Bana is surprisingly good as Henry, and it's really more my fault than his that a few scenes sounded like Nero reading the Time-Traveler's Wife. He even looks like I pictured Henry, even though I pictured two different actors when I read the book. I guess credit the makeup department also there.
Rachel McAdams as Clare I thought was one of the movie's weaknesses. I'm not familliar with her other work so I'm not sure if it's just the way she is or the way she chose to play Clare, but she lacks the fire of Clare from the book.
I didn't think the girls they got to play Alba looked quite like I pictured Alba, but they definitly looked like they were the same person, kudos to the casting folks for that, and particularly the older Alba did a great job in the role, her scenes were beautiful.
Most of the rest of the cast is okay to good, but barely in the movie. Most notably Ron Livingston as Gomez, who I've seen a lot of people express reservations about, I thought was great in the few scenes he was in. He didn't look like Gomez is described in the book, but he embodied the character and made it his own so that that didn't matter. Criminally underused.
Minor spoilers, be warned...
I gave it an Above Average, though I think part of that may be residual love for the book rather than for this movie. This reminded me a lot of the treatment of Dune: Messiah in the SciFi channel's Children of Dune miniseries; they hit many of the high points of the novel, the parts I've been looking forward to seeing onscreen ever since I found out there would be a movie, but they didn't dwell on anything, didn't really give anything time to sink in, and I question whether someone who doesn't already know the book will be able to follow the movie well. At times it felt like the book running on fast-forward.
A lot of things that came straight out of the book were nice to see, but they're not explained at all in the movie. How is anyone who hasn't read the book supposed to know the significance of Henry's running, or the haircut? Especially in a movie that only clocks in at a bit over 1.5 hours, I wish they'd taken an extra 15 or 20 minutes to explain the details more fully, or to let scenes breathe a bit.
Eric Bana is surprisingly good as Henry, and it's really more my fault than his that a few scenes sounded like Nero reading the Time-Traveler's Wife. He even looks like I pictured Henry, even though I pictured two different actors when I read the book. I guess credit the makeup department also there.
Rachel McAdams as Clare I thought was one of the movie's weaknesses. I'm not familliar with her other work so I'm not sure if it's just the way she is or the way she chose to play Clare, but she lacks the fire of Clare from the book.
I didn't think the girls they got to play Alba looked quite like I pictured Alba, but they definitly looked like they were the same person, kudos to the casting folks for that, and particularly the older Alba did a great job in the role, her scenes were beautiful.
Most of the rest of the cast is okay to good, but barely in the movie. Most notably Ron Livingston as Gomez, who I've seen a lot of people express reservations about, I thought was great in the few scenes he was in. He didn't look like Gomez is described in the book, but he embodied the character and made it his own so that that didn't matter. Criminally underused.