The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

‘Lion King’ visually stunning, innovative Key

- By Rafer Guzmn

Cuttingedg­e technology tells a story of primal power in Disney’s new version of “The Lion King.” It’s the studio’s third reworking of an animated classic this year, following an overstuffe­d “Aladdin” and a weighed down “Dumbo,” but get ready: “The Lion King” is a whole different animal. It may not capture hearts like the 1994 original, or even the stillrunni­ng Broadway play, but this extraordin­ary movie is so visually stunning and technicall­y innovative that it could mark another “Avatar” level event.

Using computer animation and virtualrea­lity techniques rather than ink and paint, “The Lion King” creates an African savanna of breathtaki­ng photoreali­sm.

It isn’t just the gorgeous backdrops that trick the eye but the wildlife, from lions with rippling ribs to rhinoceros beetles with whirring wings. Some mental readjustme­nt is required when the animals, as regal and impassive as anything in a National Geographic documentar­y, start talking.

The unseen voice actors do almost as much heavy lifting as the effects team, though with less consistent results. Simba, the young lion exiled from his kingdom, is played as a cub by an excellent JD McCrary, but as an adult by a somewhat toocasual Donald Glover. His betrothed, Nala (Beyonce Knowles Carter), still has only a few lines, despite a slightly expanded role. Comic relief comes from Billy Eichner as the sassy meerkat Timon and Seth Rogen as his warthog sidekick, Pumbaa; you’ll hear Keegan Michael and John Oliver, too.

The realism of the animals’ faces, though, make them inexpressi­ve. Even the best actors— including James Earl Jones, returning as Simba’s father, Mufasa— can sound merely overlaid onto the footage. Only the booming voice of Chiwetel Ejiofor, as the sinister lion Scar, seems to come straight from the character’s throat. Scar is also one of the film’s best visual creations, a bony shouldered villain with a ratty gray coat.

Director Jon Favreau

(whose 2016 remake of “The Jungle Book” nowlooks like a trial run) follows the original film nearly shot for shot, taking little libertiesw­here needed. The Elton JohnTim Ricemusica­l numbers still sparkle, particular­ly the fan favorite “HakunaMata­ta”; anOKnewson­g, “NeverToo Late,” accompanie­s the closing credits. What consistent­ly dazzles are the effects, from the smallest twitch of an ear to the awesome sight of stampeding wildebeest. Caleb Deschanel’s cinematogr­aphy, computerge­nerated though it may be, is positively­majestic.

It might have been more impressive to see all this effort go into a new, original story rather than a remake. Still, it’s hard to blame Disney for recycling a beloved classic into the kind of familyfrie­ndly, eyepopping spectacle that’s missing from theaters right now. Audiences are likely to eat it up. Andthat’s the circle of life.

 ?? Disney / Associated Press ?? Nala, voiced by Beyoncé KnowlesCar­ter, left, and Simba, voiced by Donald Glover, in a scene from “The Lion King.” The film opens Thursday.
Disney / Associated Press Nala, voiced by Beyoncé KnowlesCar­ter, left, and Simba, voiced by Donald Glover, in a scene from “The Lion King.” The film opens Thursday.
 ?? Disney / Associated Press ?? From left, young Simba, voiced by JD McCrary; Timon, voiced by Billy Eichner, and Pumbaa, voiced by Seth Rogen, in a scene from “The Lion King.”
Disney / Associated Press From left, young Simba, voiced by JD McCrary; Timon, voiced by Billy Eichner, and Pumbaa, voiced by Seth Rogen, in a scene from “The Lion King.”

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