![]() a dark telling of classic tale, color palpate vaguely muted, etc.). I do remember seeing the first movie trailer for the movie all the way back in 2017 (towards the end of the year) and found it to be quite enchanting and somewhat reminiscent of Disney’s Into the Woods (i.e. This, of course, peaked my interest to see this movie as I do like both actresses, especially Mirren. I do remember vaguely hearing about Disney making a Nutcracker movie a year or two ago, with names like Keira Knightley and Helen Mirren being attached to the project. This brings me back to talking about The Nutcracker and the Four Realms, the latest cinematic live-action venture from Disney. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe and Prince Caspian) as well as Into the Woods (love the cast in that movie), but some of their other ones have failed, with A Wrinkle in Time being the latest one in that category. Of course, I loved Disney’s releases of The Chronicles of Narnia (i.e. Like I said above, while Disney is planning to release more live-action remakes from the animated catalogue (including Aladdin, The Lion King, and Dumbo), the studio has still maintained its foot hole in developing several non-Disney animated remakes for the live-action representation. Personally, I love Cinderella and Beauty and the Beast (more of the latter than the former), but both are still pretty good. Some are better than others (I think Maleficent was the worst), but I believe that the studio has sort of found a “winning formula” (much like how Marvel found it with the MCU blockbuster films) with their more recent live-action remakes providing a lot of cinematic entertainment and joyous fun to the proceedings. However, as Clara attempts to save the world, with Phillip by her side, she learns that not everything is as it appears, digging deeper into the land her mother once ruled and to restore peace amongst the Four Realms.īeing a fan of all things Disney, I have personally enjoyed majority of their recent endeavors of translating their classic animated features into live-action movies. Clara also learned the regent of the fourth realm, Mother Ginger (Helen Mirren) has been banished for started a war among the realms. Grant), the regent of the Realm of Snowflakes and Sugar Plum (Keira Knightley), the regent of the Realm of Sweets. Phillip takes Clara to the palace at the center realms, where she meets regents of the three of the realms: Hawthorne (Eugenio Derbez), the regent of the Realm of Flowers Shiver (Richard E. Once there, Clare meets a young Nutcracker solider named Captain Phillip Hoffman (Jayden Fowora-Knight), learning that her mother was once the queen of the land, which makes Clara a princess. On Christmas Eve, while attending an annual holiday at party at the home of her godfather, the inventor Drosselmeyer (Morgan Freeman), Clara follows a path laid out by both of her mother and Drosselmyer that leads her to a strange and mysterious parallel world called the Four Realms. Stahlbaum (Matthew Macfayden), over how both of them are dealing with the death of Clara’s mother, Marie (Anna Madeley). ![]() ![]() And Clara continuously butts head with her father, Mr. However, Clara feels out of place in her family, less concerned with fashion like her older sister Louise (Ellie Bamber), but not as filled with childish ways like her young brother Fritz (Tom Sweet). Does this movie find its “magic” in its enchanted worlds or is it a visual hodgepodge mess of better similar endeavors?Ĭlara Stahlbaum (Mackenzie Foy) is the middle child of an aristocratic family in the Victorian era of London, England. Now, Walt Disney Studios and directors Lasse Hallstrom and Joe Johnston embark upon the reimagined tale of the classic Nutcracker story with the movie The Nutcracker and the Four Realms. However, while Disney continues this “live-action” trend of reimaging its animated tales (with plenty more planned on the horizon), the studio has also continued to provide live-action non-animated Disney movies to its catalogue, including 2005’s The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, 2013’s Oz the Great and Powerful, 2014’s Into the Woods, and 2018’s A Wrinkle in Time. 2010’s Alice in Wonderland and 2014’s Maleficent), the “house of mouse” has mostly refined their cinematic tastes and nuances for high quality live-action movies along these lines, entertaining both critics and moviegoers with live-action films like 2015’s Cinderella, 2016’s The Jungle Book, and 2017’s Beauty and the Beast. While this staging might have had a sort of rocky start (i.e. ![]() It is a well-known fact that Disney has taken up the mantle of translating its legendary / timeless animated feature films into live-action remakes.
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