The Lovely Bones

Drama,Thriller

The most anticipated film out this week, but is it any good? Discuss this article

bones22210_1
© ITP Images

It may be the most anticipated film out this week, but that doesn’t mean it’s any good. Those hoping that Peter Jackson has returned to the more intimate territory of 1994’s Heavenly Creatures for his version of Alice Sebold’s novel must resign themselves to the fact that Jackson’s filmmaking DNA may have become irreversibly modified. The source material might be more down to earth than King Kong, but Jackson does everything in his power to ditch the real in favour of fantasy.

The book was narrated from the grave by Susie Salmon (Saoirse Ronan), a 14-year-old girl who is murdered near her home. From a vantage point between heaven and earth, Susie follows her parents (Mark Wahlberg, Rachel Weisz), her sister (Rose McIver) and her killer, Mr Harvey (Stanley Tucci), as she – and they – struggle to accept her fate. Not that we see anyone murdered in this Dhs360million, PG13 version: Jackson fatally softens the edges of the tragedy and its fallout.

The real let-down is the film’s reliance on overblown effects to represent Susie’s limbo. Coming across as if Dali was commissioned to paint Middle Earth for the New Zealand tourist board, the CGI scenes sideline the cast in favour of the magic of the animator’s hard drive. And it doesn’t help that Susan Sarandon plays Susie’s grandmother for comic effect just when you feel the film could do with some weight. And who’s telling this story? It should be Susie, and at points she narrates. But there’s no consistency. Is she a ghost? A narrator? A heroine? A victim? Her chocolate-box world suggests it’s a 14-year-old’s view of life. Yet there are entire sections when we forget Susie’s all-seeing eye and don’t know whether we’re immersed in a drama, a thriller or a horror.

Watch this confused, unhappy film and weep a little for Lynne Ramsay (Ratcatcher), the British director who was first commissioned to write and direct it before the project was swept away from her by higher powers.

By Dave Calhoun
Time Out Doha, 22 February 2010

Time Out reviews films anonymously and pays for meals. Of course, we cannot guarantee the accuracy or independence of user reviews.

Details

  • Duration: 135
  • Released: Thu, 25 Feb
  • Classification: PG15
  • Language: English
  • Website
  • Director: Peter Jackson
  • Stars: Mark Wahlberg, Rachel Weisz, Susan Sarandon, Stanley Tucci, Michael Imperioli, Saoirse Ronan

Add your review/feedback

Subscribe to weekender newsletter

Submit

Search

Explore by

Our favourite features