6 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Absence of swordfights renders this animated travesty pointless in every sense, 16 December 2003
Author:
silverwhistle (docm@silverwhistle.free-online.co.uk) from Glasgow, Scotland
This 1988 Australian animation, available on VHS and DVD, has to rank with
the 1979 Peter Sellers version as a 'Prisoner of Zenda' too far. Under
another title, it might just have passed muster as an animated
comedy-adventure for a child with a low attention-span, but its
relationship
to the Hope novel is superficial. While some of the characters have the
same
names, they have been conflated or altered, and new, allegedly 'humorous'
ones added.
Trying hard to think of something positive to say, all I can think of is
the
fact that this is the only film version to date which has given us visibly
red-haired Rudolfs, and audibly German-accented Ruritanians. On the other
hand, the 1902 setting (the book came out in 1894, but, given the framing
device in the sequel 'Rupert of Hentzau', the setting is probably c 1876)
seems to have been chosen only to allow cars and *telephones* (which would
have made the original plot fall apart, if you think about it...). The old
King's widow is presented as the Queen (rather than his morganatic second
wife), and his rival sons as non-identical twins. Rudolf V is depicted as
the younger, more virtuous and more popular son - the direct opposite of
the
novel. Rassendyll, with an irritating comedy sidekick called Charlie, is
recruited at a diplomatic ball in London by Antoinette, who is here
referred
to as a princess - which I'm sure she'd have loved! Rupert of Hentzau, one
of the most memorable characters, has been excised completely.
I kept wondering, what is the intended audience for this film? 'The
Prisoner
of Zenda' was not written for young children: it has only become relegated
to the 'children's/young adult classics' bookshelf because of its lack of
explicit sex and fairly moderate violence. Besides, from early childhood,
I
was captivated by the 1937 and 1952 talkie versions (also U-rated) on TV.
A
cartoon in which the landscapes are more appealing than the crudely-drawn
characters (only the princesses have any charm), with no deaths (apart
from
old King Wilhelm at the beginning), no swordfights, and no tragically
thwarted romances, would no more have appealed to me 30 years ago than it
does now. Have children become so much less sophisticated?
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