The Illusionist

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Critics' Reviews

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Metascore
®
68
Generally favorable reviews
out of 100
'Illusionist' Explains Too Much
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

Steven Millhauser's 1990 short-story collection, "The Barnum Museum," ends with "Eisenheim the Illusionist," the mysterious tale of a brilliant magician whose most successful stage illusions are left largely unexplained.

It's set in late 19th-century Vienna, where the reign of the Hapsburgs is collapsing, and theaters are filled with "ghostly apparitions and sudden vanishings, as if the tottering Empire were revealing through the medium of magicians its secret desire for annihilation."

Writer-director Neil Burger's movie version, its title shortened to "The Illusionist," suggests much the same thing — up to a point. But then Burger feels the need to explain Eisenheim and his apparently supernatural powers, while adding a love story and a murderous aristocrat into the mix.

The spell cast by the simplicity of the original story is broken. Worse, Burger never gets close to dramatizing Millhauser's theory that the Empire was inviting self-destruction and signalling its readiness by embracing stage magic. The second film by the creator of "Interview With the Assassin," an intriguing 2002 docudrama about the JFK murder, "The Illusionist" suggests sophomore-slump overreaching. There's a stillborn quality to much of the film, which drags when it should be exhilarating.

What keeps the movie watchable are the delightfully eccentric performances of Edward Norton, who plays the illusionist as a self-effacing enigma, and Paul Giamatti as Chief Inspector Uhl, a suspicious, ambitious, toadying policeman who means to trap Eisenheim. They are almost the only characters in Millhauser's story, and they remain the only people of interest in the film.

Burger's uninspired additions to the tale include Eisenheim's childhood sweetheart, the Duchess von Teschen (Jessica Biel), and her cruel fiance, the Crown Prince (Rufus Sewell), who beats women, abuses his power and plans to overthrow his father. While it's true that Burger needed something to expand a 22-page story into a 110-minute movie, neither the duchess nor the prince move it in a compelling direction.

Once they're introduced, the story descends into familiar melodrama.

Eisenheim and the duchess are supposed to be lifelong soulmates, but even an extended flashback sequence featuring younger actors fails to make their devotion believable.

In his first scene, Sewell's prince is so nasty and absurdly jealous that the actor has nowhere to go with the role. Biel is similarly limited. Not for a moment is the duchess given a reason to be attached to this monster.

This romantic triangle is so driven by contrivances that you may find yourself looking forward to a return to Eisenheim's stage tricks and apparitions. Accompanied by Philip Glass' dreamy music, imaginatively photographed by Dick Pope, these "magic shows," which include what appear to be visits with the dead, are probably what you'll remember most about "The Illusionist."

In Millhauser's story, Eisenheim's extraordinary final performance is "viewed by some as a triumph of the magician's art, by others as a fateful sign." In the movie, it's just an excuse to set up a twist ending that owes far too much to "The Usual Suspects." Giamatti is required to deliver a logic-defying exposition, and he just seems embarrassed.

More movies on MSNBC 

Steven Millhauser's 1990 short-story collection, "The Barnum Museum," ends with "Eisenheim the Illusionist," the mysterious tale of a brilliant magician whose most successful stage illusions are left largely unexplained.

It's set in late 19th-century Vienna, where the reign of the Hapsburgs is collapsing, and theaters are filled with "ghostly apparitions and sudden vanishings, as if the tottering Empire were revealing through the medium of magicians its secret desire for annihilation."

Writer-director Neil Burger's movie version, its title shortened to "The Illusionist," suggests much the same thing — up to a point. But then Burger feels the need to explain Eisenheim and his apparently supernatural powers, while adding a love story and a murderous aristocrat into the mix.

The spell cast by the simplicity of the original story is broken. Worse, Burger never gets close to dramatizing Millhauser's theory that the Empire was inviting self-destruction and signalling its readiness by embracing stage magic. The second film by the creator of "Interview With the Assassin," an intriguing 2002 docudrama about the JFK murder, "The Illusionist" suggests sophomore-slump overreaching. There's a stillborn quality to much of the film, which drags when it should be exhilarating.

What keeps the movie watchable are the delightfully eccentric performances of Edward Norton, who plays the illusionist as a self-effacing enigma, and Paul Giamatti as Chief Inspector Uhl, a suspicious, ambitious, toadying policeman who means to trap Eisenheim. They are almost the only characters in Millhauser's story, and they remain the only people of interest in the film.

Burger's uninspired additions to the tale include Eisenheim's childhood sweetheart, the Duchess von Teschen (Jessica Biel), and her cruel fiance, the Crown Prince (Rufus Sewell), who beats women, abuses his power and plans to overthrow his father. While it's true that Burger needed something to expand a 22-page story into a 110-minute movie, neither the duchess nor the prince move it in a compelling direction.

Once they're introduced, the story descends into familiar melodrama.

Eisenheim and the duchess are supposed to be lifelong soulmates, but even an extended flashback sequence featuring younger actors fails to make their devotion believable.

In his first scene, Sewell's prince is so nasty and absurdly jealous that the actor has nowhere to go with the role. Biel is similarly limited. Not for a moment is the duchess given a reason to be attached to this monster.

This romantic triangle is so driven by contrivances that you may find yourself looking forward to a return to Eisenheim's stage tricks and apparitions. Accompanied by Philip Glass' dreamy music, imaginatively photographed by Dick Pope, these "magic shows," which include what appear to be visits with the dead, are probably what you'll remember most about "The Illusionist."

In Millhauser's story, Eisenheim's extraordinary final performance is "viewed by some as a triumph of the magician's art, by others as a fateful sign." In the movie, it's just an excuse to set up a twist ending that owes far too much to "The Usual Suspects." Giamatti is required to deliver a logic-defying exposition, and he just seems embarrassed.

More movies on MSNBC 

90
Village Voice: Bill Gallo
Beautifully acted and handsomely mounted, this gorgeous period piece is an intelligent and intriguing exploration of "the dark arts" -- less dependent on mere hocus-pocus than on the convincing journey of the soul undertaken by its hero.Read Full Review »
88
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
The less said about the twists and turns The Illusionist takes, the better. Suffice to say, Eisenheim's masterful deceptions do not stop when he exits the stage.Read Full Review »
83
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
The Illusionist looks rigorously styled and measured, and every one of Norton's postures feels chosen. Yet the interesting actor has chosen so thoughtfully that we're riveted.Read Full Review »
80
The New York Times: Stephen Holden
This entertaining movie is content to be something a bit more modest: a pungent period folk tale that teases you until the very end.Read Full Review »
80
Time: Richard Corliss
By the end, the canniest viewers may not be fooled, but--and you can believe this--they may be mesmerized.Read Full Review »
80
Slate: Dana Stevens
It's an exquisitely crafted period picture that keeps promising more and more as it goes along--smarter ideas, richer themes, spookier plot twists--and keeps delivering on every promise, right up until the rug-pulling and overly hasty final sequence.Read Full Review »
75
USA Today: Claudia Puig
The Illusionist casts an exquisitely bewitching spell with its dreamy atmosphere and pervasive sense of suspense.Read Full Review »
75
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
Edward Norton is at his best here, chalking up another boundary-stretching performance this year in the wake of the unfairly overlooked "Down in the Valley."Read Full Review »
75
Boston Globe: Ty Burr
Illusionist is like an overupholstered wing chair in the corner of a men's club -- you settle in only to be startled by how ridiculously comfy you are.Read Full Review »
75
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
An infectious mix of romance, mystery, and magic.Read Full Review »
See all The Illusionist reviews at metacritic.com »