whitewords whitewords whitewords LeVeque Tower
Home | About WCBE | Arts | Corporate Support | Events | Listener Support | NewsRoom | Program Guide
Search Arts
 WCBE Features
 Services

Movie Reviews
The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep



The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep
The right balance . . .

Grade: B
Director: Jay Russell (Tuck Everlasting)
Screenplay: Robert Nelson Jacobs (The Shipping News) based on Dick King-Smith book
Cast: Ben Chaplin (The New World), Brian Cox (Zodiac)
Rating: PG

by John DeSando, WCBE’s It’s Movie Time

CGI—of course: You can't depict the Loch Ness monster with just the putative photo of the famous myth. But after you accept the clever graphics, The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep is just plain ol' good story telling, fit for pre-adolescent kids and their young-at-heart parents.

Narrator Brian Cox (his character is not identified) tells of WWII era in Scotland at the famous loch, where young Angus MacMorrow finds an egg at the shore and nurtures the loveable monster until he has to go to the loch to survive. The Scottish regiment occupying the home and the new handyman, Lewis Mowbray (Ben Chaplin), complicate life and endanger the elusive monster. Although the usual clueless mom (Emily Watson) and dangerous thugs are here to further the fantasy genre staples, the challenges Angus faces are instructive about the collision of reality and fantasy for an adolescent.

WWII looms large, a fitting embodiment of the challenges the unknown and potentially dangerous can be to the stability of the world. The fantasy world, centered on the monster, who becomes his best friend, collides with the reality of people who want to destroy the monster and the boy's imaginative life.

Mix in all this with the father who has been away to war, never to return, and you have a child's romance with the right balance of love and hate, certainty and uncertainty, illusion and reality. It's all much less sophisticated than Shrek, and more like Whale Rider, also filmed in New Zealand. In the latter, a girl rides a whale as an embodiment of the country's hope; in Water Horse, the boy rides the monster to expunge his own fear of water and elude the malignant forces of the adult world. Pretty heady stuff, that.


email article

print article

rss feed

tag this article


December 3, 2008
email this story to a friend
 From WCBE
 Arts Headlines
 On TV
Monarchy: The Royal Family at Work
Made in Spain
Bill Moyers Journal
Washington Week
NOW
Frontline
 On Radio
Putumayo World Music Hour
World Cafe
(Monday - Thursday at 9pm)
News & Notes
(Monday - Thursday at 7pm)
Marketplace
(Weekdays at 6:30pm)
Fresh Air
(Weekdays at 3pm)
All Things Considered
(Monday - Friday at 4pm)
Morning Edition
(Weekdays 5 - 9am)
This American Life
Car Talk Puzzler
(Saturday at 10am)
Studio 360
Global Hit
Geo Quiz
Riverwalk Jazz
Etown
Echoes
(Monday - Thursday at 10pm)
Whad'Ya Know?
(Saturday at 11am )
To The Best Of Our Knowledge
Fair Game
(Monday - Thursday at 8pm)

© 2008 WCBE  |  Contact Us |  EEO Report |  Home |  Privacy |  Sitemap
Web Hosting provided by Iwaynet | Internet Security provided by Owl River