Le Monde de Narnia : Chapitre 2 - Le prince Caspian

  • États-Unis The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (plus)
Bande-annonce 6
Aventure / Famille / Fantastique
États-Unis / Pologne / Slovénie / Tchéquie, 2008, 150 min

Résumés(1)

Un an après les incroyables événements du Monde de Narnia - Chapitre 1, les nouveaux rois et reines de Narnia sont de retour dans ce royaume magique. Mais à Narnia, plus de 1000 années se sont écoulées. L'Age d'Or du royaume est depuis longtemps révolu, et ce n'est plus maintenant qu'une légende. Les animaux parlants et les créatures mythiques ont disparu, ils ne sont plus évoqués que comme les héros d'un folklore que l'on perpétue chez les Telmarins, une race d'humains dirigée par le maléfique roi Miraz, qui règne sans pitié sur Narnia. Même si l'on se souvient encore du nom d'Aslan dans la forêt, le puissant lion n'est pas revenu depuis un millier d'années. Les quatre enfants ont été rappelés à Narnia par le Prince Caspian, le jeune héritier du trône des Telmarins. Sa vie est en danger: son oncle Miraz cherche à l'éliminer afin que son propre fils nouveau-né puisse monter sur le trône à sa place. Avec l'aide du gentil Nain rouge, d'une courageuse souris parlante nommée Ripitchip, et du Nain noir aigri et revêche Nikabrik, les Narniens, menés par les puissants rois Peter et Caspian, s'engagent dans une formidable quête à la recherche d'Aslan, afin de sauver Narnia de la tyrannie de Miraz et de rendre sa gloire et sa magie au royaume.... (texte officiel du distributeur)

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Critiques (5)

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Even though the genre is fantasy, the books are grossly lacking in fantasy because of stupid propaganda. In this respect, Adamson remained faithful to the original. He filmed a routine family movie about how four underage brats, with the help of the incredibly egocentric furry Jesus, slaughter hundreds of innocent fathers. And despite the severely ridiculous final fifteen minutes (although the White Witch's mobile arms factory from number one remained unsurpassed) and even though the pace is slow, it is a better movie than last time. It's nice to look at; it's nice to listen to (unless Lucy and Aslan are talking); Dinklage, the mice, and the bad guys make it move along pretty nicely, but they can't make up for the wretchedness of the child "actors", especially the character of Lucy, despite all their efforts. A shorter running time, more tolerable kids, and a director with imagination might have made it a better movie. But that's not very likely in this case. So it gets three feeble-hearted stars. ()

NinadeL 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Andrew Adamson deserves a big thank you for turning my least favorite part of the Chronicles into a film that helped me forget my first infamous encounter with the sequel to The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. To this day, I still don't consider the handling of Susan and her fate C.S. Lewis's biggest problem, but rather the fact that he "dared" to so crudely transplant the kings and queens of the Golden Age into the Dark Ages of Narnia's history. I am fascinated and admire the precision and realism of Telmar and accept all the changes, including the swarthy and older Caspian. In but a moment I am able to forget even the embarrassment that "Caspian" aroused at the BBC (and inspired them to merge it with "The Dawn Treader") and begin to see it entirely as a dense realistic drama. The story of the kings and queens who became children again is fully developed into an excellent clash of authorities. The many inevitable mistakes that both Peter and Caspian are responsible for perfectly underline and illuminate all the questions raised by the all-too-brief ending of the first film. The 15-year reign was indeed no mere dream, and even a year of living in wartime London could not suppress it in the minds of the Pevensies. The fact that on their return to Narnia, they encountered the utterly charming Reepicheep and the ubiquitous Jadis is just the icing on the cake of perfection. ()

Hromino 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais This was an incredible comedown from the first installment. All the fairytale atmosphere that wonderfully highlighted the first movie is gone, and the things that previously immersed the audience into the story – the beautiful sets and an interesting plot – are replaced by tedious mundanity. Instead, we are treated to crude, naturalistic, and barbaric fighting without any sense of purpose, which the majority of the plot consists of this time around. If it was rated PG-15 – so be it, however, how is it supposed to work as a movie aimed at a young audience?! The wannabe smartass clever camera tricks (arrow, flying over the battlefields, etc.) look awkward and all the visual effects, fantastical creatures, and other miscreants, which are, in the vast majority of cases, the movie’s main attraction for the audience, are bland and, apart from the beautiful water giant, completely lost in the course of the battles. Were it not for the slight improvement in the performances of the three leads, Ben Barnes, and the excellent soundtrack by Harry Gregson-Williams, I would have only awarded it one star. This is definitely the biggest cinematic disappointment of the year. ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I will probably have to read Narnia sometime, because otherwise I will think that it is just some modest imitation of fantasy written by other authors. The movies pretend to be epic, but in reality, they seem incredibly intimate, which wouldn't be so bad, except they don't want to be intimate, they just come out that way in the end. It's not a new "Lord of the Rings" and probably never will be, although I am still curious about how the next installments will turn out, which should still be filmed. ()