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The Golden Compass Review - It's Siver

In Which Direction Does This Movie Go?

LaRae Meadows
Set in an alternate universe where souls live outside the body as demons, The Golden Compass is no children's movie. Graphic violence, beautiful special effects and dark, rich plot lines are far too dark for a child.

Lyra Belacqua (Dakota Blue Richards) is sent off by her uncle to a boarding school. While she is there she runs amuck, lying and creating general mischief with her friend Roger (Ben Walker), until he is kidnapped. Her uncle, Lord Asriel (Daniel Craig) raises eyebrows when he bucks the Magisterium, the religious authority in their world, and sets off to study a forbidden substance, Dust. So enraged by the fact that he would commit serious acts of heresy, the Magisterium sends Marisa Coulter (Nicole Kidman) to collect Lyra and keep an eye on her while they hunt her uncle. What the Magisterium doesn't know is Lyra has the last Alethiometer, a truth telling device. Lyra meets an ice bear named Iorek Byrnison (Ian McKellen) and an aeronaut Lee Scoresby (Sam Elliott).

A myriad of "A" list celebrities speckle the cast. Rich and powerful voices like Ian McKellen give characters like a giant ice bear breath and humanity. Nicole Kidman gives her character brooding intensity. Sam Elliot brings his typical rough and tumble attitude to his character. Daniel Craig, whose role is fairly minimal, is tough but intelligent. Even new comer Ben Walker is downright adorable.

The only actor whose performance doesn't add to the believability and sparkle is Dakota Blue Richards. I realize her character is supposed to be extremely, well, extreme but the acting doesn't have to so obvious. She is a child, a cute one granted, but when you cast the main character, they have to be strong, even if it is a child's role. Richards does not make me want to slice my eyes open with a butter knife but her acting couldn't be considered a hot knife through butter either.

The animated scenes range from dull right on through to jaw dropping beauty. Lyra's demon is a magical character whose shape transitions from creature to creature, reflecting the emotion and tension of the moment. The scenery is outstanding. The ice bear loafs and fights wonderfully. There is one glaring exception to the beauty of The Golden Compass, Marisa Coulter's demon. Watch for him to disappoint you.

The Golden Compass is less a smooth linear storyline and more a collection of stories and adventures that get the audience where they are supposed to be. Reminiscent of old fashioned adventure movie storytelling, The Golden Compass is a far choppier experience than I enjoy.

The Golden Compass has serious graphic violence. None of the violence is bloody but it is shocking. There was a scene, I won't ruin for you, that left the entire audience eyebrows furrowed, mouth open and pressed up against the back of their seat. The themes of the movie are far too complex for a small child to understand. I would recommend you don't bring any child younger than twelve years old to see this movie and if they are around that age, make sure they are mature enough to handle the violence in a medieval war movie without blood.

The meat of The Golden Compass is the power of the truth against the power of an established greed, and how children seem more able to see the truth. The Magisterium tries everything it can to keep power, even as far as to kill innocent children. They try to close institutions of learning. Their reach is long and their grasp tight but like any greedy person who tries to hold the sand of power too tightly, the sand slips between their fingers and free thinkers pop out.

I did love the message of the movie. It made eyes sparkle with righteous pride. As a devout free-thinking atheist, any movie that shows the downright power hungry nature of established religion gets extra bonus points from me.

My feelings are mixed when it comes to The Golden Compass. I love the themes, most of the graphics and the acting in general. It's the rough edges, fragmented storytelling and awkward ending that chaffed my skin. Even though a small amount of Vaseline could be necessary, The Golden Compass won't rub you raw.

Published by LaRae Meadows

Writing has always been a passion for me. I have written legislation, legislative opinion papers, comedy, movie reviews and editorials.  View profile

9 Comments

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  • KMD12/19/2007

    I read the books and saw the movie. I thought both were great. (Sounds like you guys got some sort of flame war going, so I'll say 'Good Bye.)

  • LaRae Meadows12/13/2007

    Your real problem is that you loved the movie; I did not. So instead of attacking the substance of my arguments or complaints, you pick at trivial things like "daemon" and choice of words. I think it would show a great deal of wisdom to never come here and say I didn't see a movie or attempt impugne my credibility. I won't review movies I haven't seen and I have the readership to back up my review quality.

  • LaRae Meadows12/13/2007

    Steven, Why would I even think to look it up? Do you look up the word elephant or do you think when you hear elephant e-l-e-p-h-a-n-t? I think not. I thought they were saying demon and there is on reason why I would've thought otherwise. Please, please, explain how I would've know differently? It isn't a character name, it is a classification, which I didn't know existed. So, I don't feel badly. And you are all full of rude comments in that comment. My comment about your hard on had nothing to do with the fact you have a penis, it is an expression. Sorry you took it the wrong way. I don't mind you filling me in, in fact, if I get something wrong, I like it when people tell me, respectfully. I think it is beyond silly to think that a reviewers credibility rests on getting something as trivial as daemon and demon right and that everyone should know it's daemon, not demon. Surely everyone has read the book? As I stated before, I don't tell everything in the movie and the "pro

  • Steven Bryan12/10/2007

    And the only comment I originally made that can be considered rude is doubting that you actually saw the film. Your reference to male genitalia was especially uncalled for.

  • Steven Bryan12/10/2007

    It is the responsibility of every reviewer to check facts, especially the spelling of character names. Anything less takes away from the credibility of the review and the reviwer; resources are available online or from the publicity office of the studio. And for the record, Lord Asriel is the master of Jordan College, which is decidely not a boarding school in the strict British sense of the term. Lyra lives there primarily because of a prophecy made about her and the Golden Compass and for other reasons that should not be revealed here.

  • layra12/10/2007

    wheres the pitchres of pam

  • LaRae Meadows12/8/2007

    To my readers: I apologize for the misspelling of daemon as demon. Thank you for continuing to read my reviews.

  • LaRae Meadows12/8/2007

    Steven,

    Thank you for helping me out with spelling. That is a challenge for me. That being said the demon/daemon thing is more a spellign error than an error of fact. When I screened the movie they didn't spell daemon for me.

    Additionally, a boarding school is a school where someone lives and I choose not to give all the details to my readers so they can experience things for the first time when they see the movie. Again this is not an error of fact, just a different way of explaining.

    I read your review and you had exactly the opposite feeling as I did. I think your problem rests with the fact I didn't have the same hard on for this movie you did.

  • Steven Bryan12/8/2007

    LaRae: Did we see the same movie? I screened this one twice and many of the facts you have in your review are incorrect. The correct spelling of the animal spirits is "daemon", not demon. Lyra is at Jordan College, not a boarding school. Did you actually see the film?

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