Jack And — The Giants Movie

Fans of high-fantasy CGI spectacle, those who don’t mind plot holes the size of a giant’s footprint, and anyone who wants to see Ewan McGregor deliver a Shakespearean speech while hanging off a vine.

In the glut of post- Lord of the Rings fairy tale adaptations, 2013’s Jack the Giant Slayer arrived with a curious mix of ambitions. Directed by Bryan Singer (of X-Men and The Usual Suspects fame), the film takes the humble English fable of “Jack and the Beanstalk” and blows it up to a $200 million, CGI-heavy, medieval war epic. The result is a cinematic contradiction: a film that is simultaneously breathtaking in its scale and surprisingly weightless in its execution. It is a giant-sized entertainment that, much like its titular characters, has big feet but not always a firm footing. jack and the giants movie

The film follows Jack (Nicholas Hoult), a young, impoverished farmhand living in the kingdom of Cloister. He’s dreamy but practical, until he inadvertently trades his horse for a handful of “magic” beans. Meanwhile, the headstrong Princess Isabelle (Eleanor Tomlinson) flees an arranged marriage and seeks refuge at Jack’s farm. A rainstorm, a dropped bean, and a cracked floor later, a colossal beanstalk erupts into the sky, carrying the princess’s house—and the princess herself—into the realm of the clouds. Fans of high-fantasy CGI spectacle, those who don’t

Jack the Giant Slayer is a classic example of a movie that is greater than the sum of its parts in some ways and far less in others. As a technical achievement in CGI and world-building, it is often stunning. As a piece of storytelling, it is functional at best. The result is a cinematic contradiction: a film

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