The New Zealand Herald

JOE CORNISH

- Adam Fresco (flicks.co.nz)

follows up his first feature, Attack the Block, with a kids’ fantasy adventure, updating the King Arthur story to the streets of modern London.

Where the Arthur of legend united a kingdom, the Britain of today is divided, and the fate of the state rests on 12-year-old Alex (played by Andy Serkis’ son, Louis).

Bullied at school and friended by few, Alex happens on a sword stuck in a concrete slab. His best mate, sword and sorcery fan Bedders (Dean Chaumoo), reckons it’s Excalibur, and before you can say “magic”, the ancient mage Merlin appears, a sneeze amidst a flurry of feathers heralding his alternate guises of an owl, an eccentric lanky teen (a kooky Angus Imrie), and a potty sorcerer (played by Patrick Stewart, having a blast, sporting a zany wig and a Led Zeppelin T-shirt).

Alex and a group of young companions are quickly pitched into a quest to defeat King Arthur’s wicked sister, Morgana (Rebecca Ferguson having a ball getting her bad on), and her skeleton guards.

Packed with movie nods to Disney’s 1960s version of Arthurian legend The Sword in the Stone, and Peter Jackson’s Tolkien trilogies, The

Kid Who Would Be King is an enjoyable family romp that never takes itself too seriously outside its core message of unity and how working together we can prevail over the dastardlie­st foes.

Taking a hint from Spielberg’s family films, Cornish fuses high oantasy and recognisab­le reality, sidesteppi­ng the scary, keeping the action light enough for a family audience in a magical adventure and providing just enough CGI, chills, spills, laughs and thrills to keep all ages entertaine­d.

The acting from the young cast is energetic enough to almost blind you to the flimsily written characters and clunky plot mechanics of the second act, but the climax delivers a delightful­ly over-the-top schoolbase­d battle, uniting the kids in bashing the bad and showing the grown-ups how it’s done.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand