Live-action Aladdin a whole new world

Comparisons are inevitable between remake and 1992 animated classic

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Aladdin is just the latest in an ever-growing line of live-action remakes of animated Disney classics. As such, it earns the highest praise these things can possibly get, which is "much better than expected."

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Monthly Digital Subscription

$19 $0 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Continue

*No charge for 4 weeks then billed as $19 every four weeks (new subscribers and qualified returning subscribers only). Cancel anytime.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 22/05/2019 (1798 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Aladdin is just the latest in an ever-growing line of live-action remakes of animated Disney classics. As such, it earns the highest praise these things can possibly get, which is “much better than expected.”

Directed by Guy Ritchie, Aladdin is not a shot-for-shot remake, and it strikes a good balance between giving fans what they want (and expect) and doing its own thing. The general shape of the story is the same, with a few minor (and welcome) departures: Aladdin (Mena Massoud) is living on the streets of Agrabah and stealing to survive when he meets and falls in love with Princess Jasmine (Naomi Scott), who must marry a prince. When Aladdin ends up in the possession of a magic lamp and is granted three wishes by a genie, he asks to be transformed into a prince, and promises to use his last wish to set the genie free.

Mena Massoud (left) is perfectly cast as loveable scamp Aladdin, and Will Smith makes Genie his own. (Daniel Smith / Disney)
Mena Massoud (left) is perfectly cast as loveable scamp Aladdin, and Will Smith makes Genie his own. (Daniel Smith / Disney)

For those of us who grew up in the 1990s — this reviewer included — the animated original is a defining movie of our childhood. It’s also how many of us were introduced to the off-kilter comedic genius of Robin Williams, whose performance as Genie is iconic. Williams gave Genie so much more than his voice; he gave him his entire personality, and most of his ultra-quotable lines, too, which were famously ad-libbed. The larger-than-life character served as the perfect vessel for the comedian’s electric, elastic energy. Genie was like the inside of Robin Williams’ brain, animated.

So, yes, Will Smith had incredibly big curly shoes to fill. Those open-minded enough to accept a new Genie into their lives will find themselves charmed by Smith’s performance, which is perhaps less manic than Williams’ but thoroughly entertaining in its own right. He delivers a few of Williams’ most recognizable lines, but it feels more like homage than imitation. He does a truly commendable job making such a familiar and beloved character his own.

Though people who see this move will do it, comparing Genies is unfair, and highlights the fundamental problem with these remakes: humans simply can’t do what cartoons can do. Genie can’t quite be the slapstick shapeshifter he was in the animated version. The animals feel more like pets than sidekicks. While Aladdin’s monkey Abu is cheeky enough, Iago, the parrot informant of the Sultan’s double-crossing grand vizier Jafar, will make you long for the grating serenade of Gilbert Gottfried.

Nasim Pedrad (left) gets laughs as new character Dalia, while Jasmine (Naomi Scott) is more empowered than she was in the animated film. (Daniel Smith / Disney)
Nasim Pedrad (left) gets laughs as new character Dalia, while Jasmine (Naomi Scott) is more empowered than she was in the animated film. (Daniel Smith / Disney)

Massoud, however, is perfectly cast as loveable scamp Aladdin, right down to that toothy, mischevious grin. And Saturday Night Live alumna Nasim Pedrad is absolutely hilarious as a new character, Jasmine’s horndog handmaiden Dalia, who develops a thing for Genie. Marwan Kenzari is honestly too hot (and young) to be Jafar, but he’s a convincing villain nonetheless.

Princess Jasmine is more empowered — and less naked — this time out. Princess Jasmine 2.0. is ambitious and righteous, and has designs on becoming sultan one day. She’s also got a shiny new song, a rather on-the-nose empowerment anthem about how she refuses to be silenced. Her sexual enslavement by Jafar, Princess Leia-style, is thankfully omitted, as is the scene in which Jafar traps and tries to suffocate her in a rapidly filling hourglass. Despite the quasi-feminist rebrand, her character still feels disappointingly two-dimensional.

For those expecting “woke” Aladdin, this is not it. Diverse casting is admirable but it alone cannot solve the problem of Agrabah, the film’s generic, vaguely Middle Eastern-ish desert country that borrows elements from so many different cultures that it results in a confusing, Halloween-costume mishmash. And although there’s no shortage of vivid, eye-popping colours deployed in both costuming and set design, Agrabah is frequently gaudy when it should be sumptuous.

Marwan Kenzari is too young to be Jafar, but serves as a convincing villain. (Daniel Smith / Disney)
Marwan Kenzari is too young to be Jafar, but serves as a convincing villain. (Daniel Smith / Disney)

Where the film really shines is in its musical numbers. The eminently hummable songs of composer Alan Menken and lyricists Howard Ashman and Tim Rice are given lavish music video treatment, and the songs, as usual, soar.

To be sure, Aladdin is an entertaining magic carpet ride. Just don’t expect it to transport you to a whole new world.

jen.zoratti@freepress.mb.ca

Twitter: @JenZoratti

Jen Zoratti

Jen Zoratti
Columnist

Jen Zoratti is a Winnipeg Free Press columnist and author of the newsletter, NEXT, a weekly look towards a post-pandemic future.

Report Error Submit a Tip