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The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian

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BY Adam Nayman   May 16, 2008 12:05

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Starring Ben Barnes, Peter Dinklage. Written and directed by Andrew Adamson, based on the novel by C.S. Lewis. (PG) 144 min. Opens May 16.

With the possible exception of Cronenberg’s The Brood, I’ve never seen a film so filled with children murdering people as The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian. This sequel to 2005’s SNL-Digital Short-immortalized The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe features a body count comparable to Total Recall.

Most of the casualties are the swarthy, crossbow-wielding henchmen of a royal usurper (Sergio Castellito) with designs on Narnia’s throne; most of the killing is done by the Pevensie children, who have been re-summoned from 1940s London to fantasy land by the titular prince Capsian (Brit Ben Barnes, trying on a terrible faux-Sicilian accent) – the realm’s rightful ruler.  The Pevensies enlist various enchanted woodland denizens in the fight, but things go poorly until the inevitable appearance of Aslan, the furry, well-maned Christ manqué given sanctimonious voice by Liam Neeson.

The Christian underpinnings of Lewis’ source material are as blatant as ever, but the film is a failure of imagination rather than ideology. Once again, series director Andrew Adamson mistakes pandering signifiers of wonderment (swelling music, swirling camera movements, gape-mouthed actors) for the thing itself — and once again, he cribs the digital sweep ebb of the ensemble battle sequences from The Lord of the Rings.

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