Alex, le destin d'un roi

  • Canada L'Enfant qui voulut être roi (plus)
Bande-annonce 5

Résumés(1)

Alex (Louis Ashbourne Serkis) pense qu'il n’est qu’un garçon ordinaire, jusqu'à ce qu’il trébuche sur la mythique épée dans la pierre, Excalibur. Maintenant, il doit réunir ses amis et ses ennemis au sein d’une même bande de chevaliers et, avec le légendaire sorcier Merlin (Patrick Stewart), affronter la méchante enchanteresse Morgana (Rebecca Ferguson). Avec l'avenir en jeu, Alex doit devenir le grand dirigeant qu'il n'a jamais rêvé de devenir. (20th Century Fox)

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Critiques (4)

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A modern wannabe Amblin flick that is too tame for an adventure ride, bland and noticeably lacking the charm of a child's quest for adventure. It’s saved mainly by the likeable protagonist and a few scenes that have that proverbial Amblin spark. ()

lamps 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais If you like the Arthurian legends and want to share them with your children, The Kid Who Would Be King may be the film for you. To everyone else, a warning, although the film is not bad or lacking ideas, those two hours are way too much and there aren’t enough attractions to fully plug those plot holes. But lets be honest, it couldn’t have turned out in any other way. ()

Stanislaus 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Two years ago we were treated to a historical-modern take on the legend of King Arthur by Guy Ritchie, and this year we are served a teen version without blood and set in the present. I found the child stars mostly unlikeable, and frankly, if it weren't for Patrick Stewart, the cast would have been bland through and through. Perhaps it's a shame that Rebecca Ferguson wasn't given more space. The visuals aren’t bad considering the budget (just under $60 million), and I was quite taken with young Merlin's presentation of magic (finger snapping and all sorts of gestures and sneezes), though Angus Imrie's face looked goofy. I'm not at all surprised that this film didn't go into cinemas here and was released directly to DVD, as it doesn't offer anything that groundbreaking worth showing on the big screen after all. ()