Time to map out a plan for Villa's future
- Says blogger Matthew Turvey
The Chronicles Of Narnia: Prince Caspian
Monday 21st July 2008, 12:04PM BST.
The second book of C.S.Lewis’s epic fantasy series reunites the creative talents of The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe for a titanic battle between the gentle Narnians and race of human usurpers called the Telmarines.
In every respect, Prince Caspian is a bigger and more ambitious adventure, introducing colourful new characters from the enchanted realm amidst breathtaking battle sequences laden with computer-generated special effects.
The similarities to The Lord Of The Rings trilogy are even more pronounced here – both series are filmed on the North and South Islands of New Zealand – including a tour-de-force denouement that strongly resembles JRR Tolkein’s siege at Helm’s Deep.
Director and co-writer Andrew Adamson draws heavily on earlier successes – Shrek and its sequel – to populate this rollicking romp with a menagerie of comical, larger than life creatures who are sure to delight younger audiences.
In particular, a dapper sword-wielding mouse called Reepicheep (drolly voiced by Eddie Izzard) is a mere cut and parry away from Puss In Boots.
Like the first film, the majestic lion Aslan (Liam Neeson) is the mane attraction of an action-packed second half, plus a fleeting return for another dominant character from The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe.
Prince Caspian begins at a canter – literally – with the titular heir to the Telmarine throne (Ben Barnes) fleeing his ancestral home on horseback in the dead of night to escape an assassination attempt orchestrated by despicable uncle Miraz (Sergio Castellitto).
The four Pevensie children – Peter (William Moseley), Susan (Anna Popplewell), Edmund (Skandar Keynes) and Lucy (Georgie Hensley) – are summoned back to the magical kingdom from World War II London and quickly become embroiled in the battle to overthrow the despot.
The Chronicles Of Narnia: Prince Caspian confidently trumps its predecessor for thrills and intrigue, although it does lack a strong, boo-hiss villain like Tilda Swinton’s Witch, despite some passionate glowering from Castellitto’s power-monger.
Moseley, Popplewell, Keynes and Hensley snuggle back into their familiar roles, with hints of a romantic subplot for Lucy and Caspian, which can never come to fruition because as Lucy ruefully explains, ‘I am 1300 years older than you.’ Dashing newcomer Barnes is an attractive addition to the forces of good, capturing the internal conflict of his vengeance-seeking orphan, despite a shaky accent to align himself with his predominantly Spanish-speaking Telmarine co-stars.
Peter Dinklage brings a comic tinge to proceedings, affronted when Lucy refers to him as her DLF (Dear Little Friend).
‘That’s not at all patronising,’ he mumbles.
Pacing rarely slackens so 144 minutes pass without any noticeable longueurs, building to a rousing finale that relies too heavily on the power of the visual effects teams’ hard drives rather than characters’ emotions.
Keep a tissue to hand for tearful farewells that set the scene for The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader in summer 2010.
- Release Date: Thursday 26 June 2008
- Certificate: PG
- Runtime: 144mins
More Pictures



Business Awards
Read the full story here
Full coverage of awards celebrating the region's best businesses.
Lifestyle
Interactive Dining Out map
Hundreds of reviews by the Express & Star and Shropshire Star's teams to help you decide where to eat.
LIVE traffic updates
Road, rail and airport - latest
Our new, live traffic and travel updates service - check before you set out.
OUR NEW APP
Get the new E&S app
Download the Express & Star’s new app to your iPad or iPhone to get one week of access to our digital newspapers absolutely FREE.
I just wanna point out that it’s Susan, not Lucy, who is paired up with Caspian in the new Narnia flick.
Just wanted to clear that one out.
Report abuse