Mirror Mirror (2012)

Mirror Mirror Movie

Taglines: The Snow White legend comes alive.

After a beloved king vanishes, his ruthless wife seizes control of the kingdom and keeps her beautiful 18-year-old stepdaughter, Snow White, hidden away in the palace. But when the princess attracts the attention of a charming and wealthy visiting prince, the jealous Queen banishes the girl to a nearby forest.

Taken in by a band of rebellious but kindhearted dwarfs, Snow White blossoms into a brave young woman determined to save her country from the Queen. With the support of her new friends, she roars into action to reclaim her birthright and win back her prince in this magical adventure comedy that will capture the hearts and imaginations of audiences the world over.

Mirror Mirror is a 2012 American fantasy adventure film based on the fairy tale “Snow White” collected by the Brothers Grimm. It is directed by Tarsem Singh and produced by Ryan Kavanaugh, Bernie Goldmann, Brett Ratner and Kevin Misher. It was written by Marc Klein and Jason Keller, with music by Alan Menken. It stars Lily Collins, Julia Roberts, Armie Hammer, Nathan Lane, Mare Winningham, Michael Lerner, and Sean Bean. It was released theatrically by Relativity Media on March 30, 2012.

The film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Costume Design. The film received generally mixed reviews from critics and it earned $183 million on an $85 million budget. Mirror Mirror was released on DVD and Blu-ray by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment on June 26, 2012.

Mirror Mirror Movie

Film Review for Mirror Mirror

“Mirror Mirror” is a sumptuous fantasy for the eyes and a pinball game for the mind, as story elements collide and roll around bumping into each other. This is not a faithful retelling of the versions by the Brothers Grimm or Walt Disney, but neither is it a satire, nor much of a story in its own right. But it’s great to look at. If there’s a major difference from the earlier versions, it’s how this one has beefed-up roles for the seven dwarves, who here seem to be a merry band in search of Robin Hood. Nor do I recall earlier battles with a giant winged griffin.

The look of the film owes everything to the director, Tarsem Singh, an India-born former TV commercial maker, famous for two of the best-looking movies I’ve ever seen, “The Cell” (2000) and “The Fall” (2006). He’s in love with spectacular landscapes and architecture, and in all of his films (including the underwhelming “The Immortals” in 2011) the costumes of the late Japanese designer Eiko Ishioka dominate every scene they’re in and every character they’re worn by.

Julia Roberts seems particularly well-suited to wear them, and when first seen is wearing a magnificent orange gown and seated on a seashell throne which acts as a frame and a continuation of the costume. Roberts plays the Queen in a kingdom we’re introduced to by her opening narration — which uses animated dolls figures to fill us in on her early life, during which she was married to a King (Sean Bean) who promptly set off into the forest and was not seen again. That left her as the autocratic ruler of a kingdom with painfully high taxes, and the stepmother of Snow White (Lily Collins), who is a captive in the castle until she’s 18.

Mirror Mirror Movie - Lily Collins
Mirror Mirror Movie – Lily Collins

There is a financial crisis. Brighton (Nathan Lane), her aide and accountant, tells her she’s broke. That comes at an inconvenient time, because Prince Alcott (Armie Hammer) has wandered into the kingdom, and the Queen knows if she marries him, he can solve her finances. Problem is, she can’t even afford the royal ball at which she plans for them to fall in love.

The Prince has already met Snow White; they were both wandering in the woods when they encountered the seven dwarfs, jolly bandits with good hearts. It is Snow White and not the Prince in this version who bestows a life-changing kiss. It’s almost uncanny in some scenes here, how Lily Collins (daughter of Phil Collins) looks like Audrey Hepburn.

She’s all sweet, all innocent, but Julia Roberts steals the show with her imperious and autocratic Queen. She consults her own image in a mirror, located as only Tarsem would place it in a weird structure in the middle of a lake. She never asks who is the fairest of them all, and thus never has to hear the inevitable answer, but the Queen’s vanity and fear of aging give Roberts some plum scenes. Consider the one where she’s having a spa-style beauty makeover before the ball. Her lips become bee-stung with the help of real bees, she gets a manicure from disgusting wormy creatures, and her skin is refreshed with a preparation made up from parrot droppings. Yes, parrot droppings, and we see the parrots dropping them.

All of this is in place and looks great, but the dialogue is rather flat, the movie sort of boring, and there’s not much energy in the two places it should really be felt: Between the Queen and Snow White, and between Snow and the Prince. The story is a listless tale that moves at a stately pace through settings that could have supported fireworks. Indeed, the characters who seem to care the most about each other are the dwarfs.

Mirror Mirror Movie Poster

Mirror Mirror (2012)

Directed by: Tarsem Singh
Starring: Lily Collins, Julia Roberts, Armie Hammer, Nathan Lane, Jordan Prentice, Mark Povinelli, Joe Gnoffo, Danny Woodburn, Martin Klebba, Robert Emms, Mare Winningham, Michael Lerner
Screenplay by: Marc Klein, Jason Keller
Production Design by: Tom Foden
Cinematography by: Brendan Galvin
Film Editing by: Robert Duffy, Nick Moore
Costume Design by: Eiko Ishioka
Set Decoration by: Jille Azis, Daniel Hamelin, Martine Kazemirchuk, Alice Felton
Art Direction by: Nicolas Lepage, Jean-Pierre Paquet, Réal Proulx
Music by: Alan Menken
MPAA Rating: PG for some fantasy action and mild rude humor.
Distributed by: Relativity Media
Release Date: March 30, 2012

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