BOTTOM
LINE: Surprisingly
entertaining popcorn flick with some fun action, humour and mystery,
only let down by some lapses in to predictable cliché and
an emphasis on noise over story.
THE
GOOD:
On paper, this film seemed like another disposable Jerry Bruckheimer
adventure production but in the capable hands of Mike Newell, “Prince
of Persia: The Sands Of Time” is surprisingly entertaining,
making use of its history through the video games quite well (which
is no doubt a result of game creator Jordan Mechner’s involvement
in the writing duties). Jake Gyllenhaal plays Prince Dastan, a street
boy adopted by the King of Persia as one of his own sons. When he
perpetrates a successful raid on a holy city, not all is at it seems,
and as he digs deeper, he suddenly becomes thrusts in to a plot
which sees the King murdered, and himself a fugitive on the run.
In essence, this story follows this basic plot structure of the
various iterations of the video games, and as a result, we get to
see a lot of action scenes of the Prince running, jumping and performing
acrobatic stunts across roof tops and fighting bad guys. There is
a decent enough story to follow as well with “The Sands Of
Time” having the power to turn history backwards for whoever
activates the dagger containing the sand, thus giving its bearer
the ability to change history and the world. The cast performs very
well, with Jake Gyllenhaal being the ultimate surprise as he manages
to carry the titular role quite successfully. Gemma Arterton matches
Gyllenhaal with her feisty yet feminine performance as Princess
Tamina. Ben Kingsley seems destined to be the bad guy by default
and does an amicable job, while Alfred Molina brings some good humour
to the piece as a pirate. “Prince of Persia: The Sands Of
Time” is a beautifully shot, and entertaining piece of popcorn
which is worth parking your brain at the door for a few hours for.
THE
BAD:
The problem with films like this is that the inevitable clichés
come out. Mike Newell manages to keep them at bay for the most part,
but they are still present, largely because this is still at its
core a mass-produced piece of entertainment. The romance angle for
example is clumsily set up and just there for effect and the female
audience; the characters are quite two dimensional as written, and
it is only the cast that really makes them worth watching. Another
problem is the way this film is edited; the emphasis is too much
on moving on to the next action scene and creating as much noise
as possible. If the filmmakers had taken the time to install a sense
of rhythm, and even a few moments of quiet, this film would have
been more dramatic and become a proper film rather than as the previously
mentioned mass-produced piece of entertainment. The elements were
there to make this film more than what it ultimately is, but perhaps
Jerry Bruckheimer does not care as at the end of the day, this film
has been designed, and will no likely doubt, appeal to the young
male audience who will go and see it again and again.