Current:Home > InvestIs it see-worthy? The new 'Little Mermaid' is not that bad ... but also not that good -Edge Finance Strategies
Is it see-worthy? The new 'Little Mermaid' is not that bad ... but also not that good
View
Date:2025-04-19 14:52:45
I haven't really been a fan of Disney's recent live-action remakes of its most beloved animated titles — a practice that may make commercial sense, but feels increasingly like an artistic dead end. Even so, I tried to keep an open mind when I heard that The Little Mermaid, one of my favorite movies in the Disney canon, was getting the do-over treatment.
This kind of retread may be unnecessary, but unnecessary doesn't have to mean unenjoyable. And with that brilliant Alan Menken score and those ingenious Howard Ashman lyrics — and yes, I can sing the whole thing from start to finish — really, how bad could it be?
The answer is: not that bad, but also not that good. Like a lot of its fellow Disney remakes, this Little Mermaid too often feels like a dutiful cover version rather than an inspired reimagining. The story hasn't changed much: The good King Triton, played here by Javier Bardem, has forbidden all mermaids and mermen from visiting the ocean's surface, warning them that humans are dangerous. But that hasn't stopped his youngest and most free-spirited daughter, Ariel, played by Halle Bailey, from becoming deeply fascinated with the human world, which she learns about by collecting artifacts from shipwrecks.
When Bailey's casting was announced last year, she received a torrent of abuse online, slamming her and Disney for recasting Ariel as a Black mermaid. It was a sad reminder of how angry some people get when a remake or reboot doesn't cater perfectly to their childhood memories, and also how easily some can couch their racism as nostalgia.
Speaking as someone with no small attachment to the original Little Mermaid myself, I'd say Bailey's casting is one of the few instances in which this new movie actually demonstrates some fresh thinking. Her singing voice is as lovely as the role demands, and while she's not always as vivid in her non-musical moments, she keeps you fully absorbed in Ariel's journey.
The other actors are more of a mixed bag. As Eric, the hunky human prince whom Ariel saves from drowning and falls in love with, Jonah Hauer-King toggles between dashing and drippy. Bardem is a great actor, but even he can't do much with the solemnly bearded King Triton, who's saddled with some of the movie's more fake-looking CGI. Melissa McCarthy puts a wickedly mischievous spin on Ursula, the many-tentacled sea witch who transforms Ariel into a human for a very steep price. Too often, though, she goes for easy laughs at the expense of real menace.
But the characters who fare the worst this time around are probably Ariel's faithful critter friends. In the role of Scuttle, the raucous seagull, a little of Awkwafina's goofball shtick goes a long way. And Daveed Diggs, of Hamilton fame, struggles to make an appealing sidekick out of Sebastian, the worrywart crab who tries to keep Ariel out of trouble. That has less to do with his acting and singing than with just how unappealing the character designs are. What made Sebastian and Ariel's fish friend Flounder so memorable in the original film was their glorious cartoonishness; here, they look creepy and dead-eyed.
The filmmaker Rob Marshall has lately become Disney's go-to director for musicals, for reasons I don't really understand. His film of Stephen Sondheim's Into the Woods struck me as one of the murkiest-looking movie musicals in recent memory, though I'd sooner sit through it again than his 2018 effort, the charmless Mary Poppins Returns.
The Little Mermaid, for its part, does have some charm. Its aquatic sequences are no match for Avatar: The Way of Water, though Sebastian's big "Under the Sea" number does achieve a nice level of Busby Berkeley-style calypso craziness. And the story fitfully surges to life above water, especially in a few freshly scripted scenes in which Ariel and Eric's romance takes center stage.
The movie could use more moments like that. The screenwriter, David Magee, does try to put some new riffs on old material. He fleshes out the long-standing tensions and misunderstandings between humans and merfolk, and he also tries to make Ariel a tougher, more confrontational heroine. Along similar lines, Prince Eric is now a more vulnerable, fully rounded character than before, as we can hear when he expresses his longings in a new song written by Alan Menken and Lin-Manuel Miranda. The song is a nice touch, but as with so much in this Little Mermaid, it isn't on a par with anything in the original. The movie is pleasant enough, but I wouldn't call it see-worthy.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Orbán blasts the European Union on the anniversary of Hungary’s 1956 anti-Soviet uprising
- Snoop Dogg gets birthday surprise from 'Step Brothers' Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly
- Orbán blasts the European Union on the anniversary of Hungary’s 1956 anti-Soviet uprising
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Chick-fil-A reportedly agrees to $4.4 million settlement over delivery price upcharges
- Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson says new wax figure in Paris needs 'improvements' after roasted online
- France completes withdrawal of troops from northern base in Niger as part of planned departure
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Are earthquakes happening more? What to know if you're worried and how to stay safe.
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Stranger Things' Joe Keary and Chase Sui Wonders Have Very Cheeky Outing
- Even with carbon emissions cuts, a key part of Antarctica is doomed to slow collapse, study says
- Clemson coach Dabo Swinney apologizes for mental-health joke after loss at Miami
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Authorities find car linked to suspect in Maryland judge's fatal shooting
- ‘SNL’ skewers Jim Jordan's losing vote with Donald Trump, Lauren Boebert, George Santos
- Authorities search for two boaters who went missing in Long Island Sound off Connecticut
Recommendation
Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
World’s oldest dog ever dies in Portugal, aged 31 (or about 217 in dog years)
Israeli boy marks 9th birthday in Hamas captivity as family faces agonizing wait
Trapped in Gaza for 2 weeks, hundreds of American citizens still not able to leave
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Drake is giving out free Dave's Hot Chicken sliders or tenders to celebrate 37th birthday
'Sleeping giant' no more: Ravens assert contender status with rout of Lions
Britney Spears' Full Audition for The Notebook Finally Revealed