Well, I said I’d review all the Cannon Movie Tales and here
I am to cover the next one. Honestly, I
think I’m going to change up the way I do these. As much as I liked the voting idea, it just
didn’t seem to be working out. After the
first poll, I at most got one vote most of the time. It also became a lot harder to do it once
Blogger got rid of the poll widget. If
anyone objects, let me know in the comments.
Then at least we’ll know who was the one voting. ;-)
So, anyway, the next one on my list is Snow White from
1987. The movie stars Nicola Stapleton
as young Snow White and Sarah Patterson as the grown-up Snow White. Our marquee star this time is Diana Rigg, best known as Emma Peel from The Avengers (British spy show, not superhero team playing the evil queen. One other face you might
recognize is Billy Barty, once again doing the fantasy dwarf thing that he was
practically an expert at by that point.
This
movie is interesting because there are some parts that really stand out to me
as interesting or well done. However,
there are other ideas that make me cringe.
There’s also one scene that is so bad and crazy it makes me practically laugh out
loud.
First, let’s start with the good parts.
One good part is that I really don’t have to tell you the
plot of this movie. That’s because it’s “Snow
White”. It’s probably more “Snow White”
than pretty much any adaptation of Snow White I have ever seen. I have very rarely seen a movie that paid so
much attention to the details of the text as it appeared in the Grimms’ book. For example, you know that scene at the
beginning of the fairy tale in which the queen drips some blood on the snowy
windowsill and wishes for a child as white as snow, red as blood and black as
ebony? That scene’s in there, albeit
with a musical number. Or remember how
the tale says that Snow White was only seven when her beauty started to surpass
the Evil Queen’s? Well, in this movie
she’s only seven when she first arrives at the Dwarfs’ cottage. She also stays there for ten years. Why the Evil Queen hadn’t been checking up on
who was the fairest for that decade, I don’t know (I suppose maybe for some
time in the middle there, Snow’s awkward teenage years might have sent the
Queen back to number one). It has the
poisoned apple that has a red half and a white half. It even has all three of the queen’s attempts
to end Snow White’s life. Though, there
is something about that which isn’t so good.
I’ll get to that later, though. There
are some things they leave out, but what they include is impressive enough that
it doesn’t matter. There are some other
bits that I like. I like that it starts
with the moment that the Prince finds Snow White in the glass coffin and the
rest of the story is related by one of the dwarfs telling the story. I like that they had a good reason for the
Huntsman to be charged with killing Snow White and why it didn’t seem
suspicious for him to be accompanying him.
Namely, that it was during a hunt.
I even liked that they changed the Queen’s punishment at the end. She isn’t made to dance to her death in red
hot iron shoes, but she does get her comeuppance in a way that is almost as
gruesome and which fits her crime a lot better.
But let’s move on to the stuff that’s not as good.
First of all, let’s remember that this is a musical. As a musical it should have good, catchy,
memorable songs. Well, it doesn’t. Most of the songs are pretty lame. Probably the best of them is a song I’m
assuming is titled “More Beautiful than Me” sung by the Diana Rigg as the Evil
Queen. However, this song isn’t even
listed in the credits. Here it is, by
the way.
Most of them are just awful.
Young Snow White sings this lyrically painful number about trying all the Dwarfs’ beds in the cottage that just makes you think “Why is she even singing
this?”. The sets and locations aren’t
the greatest. The castle’s okay. However, the Dwarfs’ cottage and mine look
really fake like they were built for a cash-strapped amusement park. The movie doesn’t do a great job disguising
its locations too. All the Cannon Movie
Tales were filmed in Israel, however I’m pretty sure we’re supposed to believe
that it’s a European location because of the sets and costumes and where the
tale was collected from. However, once
Snow White is out in the forest, you can tell that it’s not a European
forest. It’s especially the case when
they show the animals living in the forest.
I mean, there are monkeys, for goodness sake. Also, the Dwarfs don’t really stand out much
as individual characters. Here their
names are Iddy, Biddy, Kiddy, Diddy, Giddy, Fiddy and Liddy. Which one is which? I couldn’t tell you. However, that may have been by design,
considering they sing a song about how no one can keep that straight. The big one though is the Queen’s disguises
when she’s going to kill Snow White. The
last one in which she dresses as a peasant woman in order to give Snow White
the apple is fine. The other two are
not. They are rather racist, in
fact. First, when she gives Snow White
the bodice (not just a lace but a whole bodice), she dresses like a really cliché
Romani woman and speaks with an accent that’s pretty much unplaceable. The second time when she brings Snow White
the comb, she’s dressed in the most blatant example of yellow-face I’ve ever
seen. Only it’s not really yellow but
stark white. I don’t know if she was
supposed to look like a geisha or a giant porcelain doll or what. Anyway, it’s accompanied by an accent that
makes her sound like a cutesy Elmer Fudd.
I know she’s the bad guy, but it’s still wrong on a level that exceeds
that. I’m just going to put the clip
here. You know what you’ll see.
That’s about it. I
can’t think of anything else. Oh,
right. The laugh-out-loud crazy part.
Well, remember in the fairy tale when the Prince and his
servants are carrying away the lifeless body of Snow White (super creepy, but
not the point this time). Then one of
the servants trips which causes Snow White to cough up the pieceof apple caught
in her throat which allows her to return to the land of the living. Well, in this version her glass coffin is
being carted away through a blizzard. A
tree falls in front of the wagon causing the horses to rear and the glass
coffin to slide off the wagon. The jolt
then causes Snow White to cough up the most badly rendered apple core you’ve
ever seen, which doesn’t just fall but flies into the air, shoots toward the
palace and into the Queen’s window where it strikes the sleeping Queen on the head. I am not even kidding. I did a double-take when I first saw it. It’s in this clip. Give it a look.
So, while this is a flawed movie, it’s also an interesting
one. I’d suggest seeing it just to see
all the little details they stuck to as well as the ridiculous apple core
scene. You’re just going to have to sit
through some bad musical numbers along the way.
Until next time.
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