The Secret Garden is a cloying, off-the-mark
adaptation of a great novel: Review
By Maureen
Lee Lenker August 05, 2020 at 03:00 AM EDT
https://ew.com/movies/movie-reviews/the-secret-garden-review/
The 1911 novel The Secret Garden by Frances
Hodgson Burnett is a rite of passage for many children, an engrossing and
magical story that captures the imagination. It’s served as fodder for
countless screen adaptations in its century-plus of existence, but its latest
iteration directed by Marc Munden and adapted by Jack Thorne (Harry Potter and
the Cursed Child) saps the story of its magic.
It follows orphaned Mary Lennox (a petulant
Dixie Egerickx), a child who is sent to live with her uncle Archibald Craven
(Colin Firth) in England when her parents die during a cholera epidemic in
India. Craven is a pitiful figure, a man haunted by grief after the death of
his wife, who has forced his son Colin (Edan Hayhurst) into living the life of
an invalid out of a misguided sense of overprotectiveness.
This adaptation takes great liberties with the
storytelling, converting Craven’s wife’s accidental death into a malingering
illness and making the titular garden a literally magical place where plants
bloom and wither in the blink of an eye. The gardens are lush and inviting,
more mystical wonderland than the manicured English garden. But they rely too
heavily on CGI instead of actual natural wonder to convey their secrets.
The Secret Garden is a tale about grief: a
catalog of how it twists and wounds us, and how with the right tending and
care, we can bloom back to vibrant life. The only person in the film keyed into
that here is Firth as Craven, who lends his always reliable air of sensitivity
interpreted as arrogance to the role. With little dialogue and only a handful
of scenes, he offers audiences the deep wells of Craven’s grief with only his
eyes and a muttered word through a clenched jaw.
But this adaptation leans heavily on clichés the story doesn’t need. The garden is not figuratively magic, it’s literally so, with the power to heal dogs and Colin. This robs the storytelling of its power, by chalking Mary and Colin’s growth up to some unseen spectral force guided by spirits. The novel’s power lies in Mary and Colin’s affection for each other, how they bloom under their mutual care (and the interest of kindly servants). The film doubles down on these choices by adding an unnecessarily fiery climax into the film, seeking to inject some dramatic action where none is required. Ironically, the result is to turn a genuinely moving tale into one that is profoundly dull.
Like the garden at its heart, The Secret
Garden has always found its beauty in its quietude, a small story of hearts
broken and healed through nature, attentive care, and true connection. But this
adaptation doesn’t understand that, instead drowning the film in showy set
pieces and magical realism rather than understanding the inherent magic in all
things. They should’ve never underestimated the peace that can be found in
simplicity and quiet. C
'The Secret Garden' yields a less appealing
version of the children's classic
Brian Lowry
byline
Review by
Brian Lowry, CNN
Updated 1427 GMT (2227 HKT) August 7, 2020
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/08/07/entertainment/the-secret-garden-review/index.html
The new film boasts an impressive pedigree --
it's billed as coming from the makers of the Harry Potter series, mostly
notably producer David Heyman -- and a cast that includes Colin Firth and Julie
Walters. The story, however, develops slowly, shifts the 1911 book into a
post-World War II timeframe without much reason and makes a significant change
in the final act that the project could have surely done without.
At its
core, there's still the uplifting tale of an orphaned young girl, Mary Lennox
(Dixie Egerickx), and the healing power she brings to the insulated estate to
which she is sent. After a fleeting introduction, Mary is forced to go live
with her distant, sullen uncle by marriage (Firth), still bearing emotionally
scars over the death of his wife, her mother's sister.
Banging
around the giant manor, Mary encounters Colin (Edan Hayhurst), her uncle's son,
who is bedridden, fragile, spoiled, and as surly as she is. Gradually, she
coaxes him to venture out into the grounds with her to explore the untended,
neglected garden she has discovered, joined by another boy, Dickon (Amir
Wilson), who has a way with animals and admirable patience with his two more
privileged companions.
Directed by
Marc Munden, this latest "Garden" is, inevitably, still lovely to
look at with all those vibrant colors, perhaps especially in its celebration of
nature at a time when people have been cooped up. But it's not as magical as it
should be, which might stem in from feeling more Disney-fied in its trappings,
including a stray dog and darting birds. There are also flashbacks to Mary's
parents, which actually serves to make them -- and her experience -- less
interesting, and the film more conspicuously manipulative.
Granted,
movie companies don't really need much excuse to remake a beloved classic every
generation or so, and the latest iteration isn't bad for parents looking to
introduce "The Secret Garden" to their kids.
Still, the
tradeoff of that includes the inevitable comparisons to what's been done
before, and by that standard, this "Secret Garden" can remain
overlooked, while hoping for more from the next incarnation, if history is any
guide, probably destined for some time during the 2040s.
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