Friday, May 26, 2023

The Little Mermaid

Last night my sister Marilyn and I took our nephew Sean, our niece Tashena, and her boyfriend Tucker (they are in town for Sean's graduation) to see the new live action version of The Little Mermaid.  Marilyn and I absolutely loved it!  Everyone else?  Not so much!  A mermaid named Ariel (Halle Bailey) doesn't think that all humans are as evil as her father King Tritan (Javier Bardem) believes them to be and she is fascinated by them.  After she saves Prince Eric (Jonah Hauer-King) during a storm which sinks his ship, Triton destroys her collection of human objects and forbids her from going to the surface again.  Ariel defies her father and accepts a deal with her aunt, a sea witch named Ursula (Melissa McCarthy), to trade her voice for a pair of legs.  She must get Eric to give her true love's kiss within three days so a crab named Sebastian (Daveed Diggs), a fish named Flounder (Jacob Tremblay), and a seabird named Scuttle (Awkwafina) attempt to help her.  Can Ariel get Eric to fall in love with her and, more importantly, can she convince Tritan that not all humans are bad?  Bailey is phenomenal in the role and her version of "Part of Your World" gave me goosebumps.  Her wide-eyed innocence is so charming and the chemistry between her and Hauer-King is palpable (especially in the star-gazing scene).  I also really enjoyed McCarthy and Diggs because their characterizations of Ursula and Sebastian are so much fun.  The new songs by Lin-Manuel Miranda, including "Wild Uncharted Waters" by Eric, "For the First Time" by Ariel, and "The Scuttlebutt" by Sebastian and Scuttle (this is my favorite because I loved hearing Diggs of Hamilton fame rap again) are fantastic and really add to the narrative.  I also really appreciated some subtle changes to the story such as making the sisters more diverse as representatives of the seven seas and the addition of the character of Queen Selina (Norma Dumezweni) to emphasize the humans' fear of the ocean in juxtaposition to Tritan's fear of humans (this gives Ariel and Eric a better motivation to fall in love, in my opinion, because they recognize that they are both fighting against parental control and for more understanding).  Sean, Tashena, and Tucker criticized the visual effects and they do have a point because the underwater sequences look really unnatural, especially, rather ironically, in "Under the Sea." I also found the hyper-realistic portrayal of the animals to be somewhat jarring but it wasn't as bad as I was expecting (definitely not as bad as the live-action version of The Lion King) and it didn't detract from my enjoyment.  I loved it in spite of these flaws and Marilyn and I are making plans to see it again (without the others).

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