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Tristan & Isolde

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Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
49
Mixed or Average Reviews
out of 100
'Tristan & Isolde' Lacks Passion
John Hartl

By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

Our rating: 

Political intrigue trumps forbidden passion every time in Kevin Reynolds' curiously uninvolving fifth century love story, "Tristan & Isolde."

Based on the Celtic legend that inspired Richard Wagner's 1865 opera, the movie is most effective when it focuses on Rufus Sewell's intense performance as Lord Marke, a man who would be king of post-Roman Britain. Sewell plays Marke as a forerunner of King Arthur, trying to pull the tribes together while being undermined by treacherous allies and an adulterous wife.

When Irish troops massacre Marke's family and orphans the child Tristan (Thomas Sangster), the two bond for life. As Tristan grows up, proving himself as a master swordsman and a natural leader, he gradually takes over the role of second in command.

Unfortunately, when the adult Tristan (James Franco) is left for dead and nursed back to health by the Irish beauty, Isolde (Sophia Myles), Reynolds and his screenwriter, Dean Georgaris, run into an insurmountable problem: title characters who lack romantic chemistry.

Tristan and Isolde are supposed to fall in love, then take turns sacrificing that love for the good of their countries. Thanks to a series of nightmarish plot twists, they literally can't stay away from each other. Their secret passion, which has a ruinous, moth-to-the-flame quality, is supposed to drive the story, yet for the most part it's invisible.

Franco, who brought self-deprecating wit to the TV series "Freaks and Geeks" and deservedly won a Golden Globe for playing the title role in the TV biography, "James Dean," is seriously miscast. He's mopey and inexpressive as Tristan: an American actor who seems out of place in a cast dominated by Brits. The vulnerability he brought to his impersonation of Dean is missing.

Myles, best known for the horror films "Underworld" and "From Hell," is somewhat more animated as Isolde, but she often seems to be play-acting in a children's film. It's hard to take her seriously when she doesn't appear to take the story seriously. But then that's a problem she shares with the screenwriter.

Georgaris, who co-wrote the remake of "The Manchurian Candidate," never satisfactorily establishes why Tristan and Isolde's grand passion should be accepted as such. He hints that their bond is so secure that it will outlast the grave, but he doesn't provide a single scene that demonstrates why the lovers should be regarded as anything more than pretty and infatuated youngsters.

What's needed is a larger-than-life operatic quality, and Anne Dudley's timid score can't fill in for Wagner. Neither can Reynolds' direction. He's given the movie a grimy, gritty look, similar to "King Arthur" and his own "Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves," but the surface attempt at Dark Ages authenticity can only take him so far.

We need to believe in someone here, and because Tristan and Isolde are emotionally unavailable, Sewell's relentlessly idealistic Lord Marke fills the vacuum. Confused by betrayal, growing in dignity as he attempts to hold his precarious kingdom together, he becomes a legitimate tragic figure by film's end.

More movies on MSNBC 

By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

Our rating: 

Political intrigue trumps forbidden passion every time in Kevin Reynolds' curiously uninvolving fifth century love story, "Tristan & Isolde."

Based on the Celtic legend that inspired Richard Wagner's 1865 opera, the movie is most effective when it focuses on Rufus Sewell's intense performance as Lord Marke, a man who would be king of post-Roman Britain. Sewell plays Marke as a forerunner of King Arthur, trying to pull the tribes together while being undermined by treacherous allies and an adulterous wife.

When Irish troops massacre Marke's family and orphans the child Tristan (Thomas Sangster), the two bond for life. As Tristan grows up, proving himself as a master swordsman and a natural leader, he gradually takes over the role of second in command.

Unfortunately, when the adult Tristan (James Franco) is left for dead and nursed back to health by the Irish beauty, Isolde (Sophia Myles), Reynolds and his screenwriter, Dean Georgaris, run into an insurmountable problem: title characters who lack romantic chemistry.

Tristan and Isolde are supposed to fall in love, then take turns sacrificing that love for the good of their countries. Thanks to a series of nightmarish plot twists, they literally can't stay away from each other. Their secret passion, which has a ruinous, moth-to-the-flame quality, is supposed to drive the story, yet for the most part it's invisible.

Franco, who brought self-deprecating wit to the TV series "Freaks and Geeks" and deservedly won a Golden Globe for playing the title role in the TV biography, "James Dean," is seriously miscast. He's mopey and inexpressive as Tristan: an American actor who seems out of place in a cast dominated by Brits. The vulnerability he brought to his impersonation of Dean is missing.

Myles, best known for the horror films "Underworld" and "From Hell," is somewhat more animated as Isolde, but she often seems to be play-acting in a children's film. It's hard to take her seriously when she doesn't appear to take the story seriously. But then that's a problem she shares with the screenwriter.

Georgaris, who co-wrote the remake of "The Manchurian Candidate," never satisfactorily establishes why Tristan and Isolde's grand passion should be accepted as such. He hints that their bond is so secure that it will outlast the grave, but he doesn't provide a single scene that demonstrates why the lovers should be regarded as anything more than pretty and infatuated youngsters.

What's needed is a larger-than-life operatic quality, and Anne Dudley's timid score can't fill in for Wagner. Neither can Reynolds' direction. He's given the movie a grimy, gritty look, similar to "King Arthur" and his own "Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves," but the surface attempt at Dark Ages authenticity can only take him so far.

We need to believe in someone here, and because Tristan and Isolde are emotionally unavailable, Sewell's relentlessly idealistic Lord Marke fills the vacuum. Confused by betrayal, growing in dignity as he attempts to hold his precarious kingdom together, he becomes a legitimate tragic figure by film's end.

More movies on MSNBC 

75
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
There's something beautiful about a well-made tragic love story. It may not be as uplifting as one with a happy ending, but it's more cathartic.Read Full Review »
75
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
By removing elements of magic and operatic excess from the story, the brothers Scott focus on what is, underneath, a story as tragic (and less contrived) as the one cited in the ads, "Romeo and Juliet."Read Full Review »
70
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kenneth Turan
This "Tristan" has its slightly silly moments, but rather like those fondly remembered epics of Hollywood past, its energy and entertainment value carry the day.Read Full Review »
67
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
Working with an explanatory script by Dean Georgaris, Reynolds is much more confident in scenes of realistic battle, or even muddy marketplace dailiness, than he is with scenes of desire.Read Full Review »
63
Philadelphia Inquirer: Carrie Rickey
Franco, the hollow-cheeked, pouty-lipped actor best known as Spider-Man's nemesis Harry Osborn, plays Tristan like a biker boy with a broadsword.Read Full Review »
63
USA Today: Claudia Puig
James Franco is a gorgeous, smoldering lover in Tristan & Isolde, but you can't help being reminded of Ben Stiller's "Zoolander" character.Read Full Review »
60
The New York Times: Manohla Dargis
Just as there is something undeniably pleasant about an entertainment like Tristan & Isolde that delivers exactly what it promises, no less, no more.Read Full Review »
50
Washington Post: Ann Hornaday
If I had to sum up Tristan & Isolde for a term paper, I'd say it's like "Braveheart" without the face paint, "Shrek," except the Lord Farquaad character is a sweetheart, and "Freaks and Geeks" because James Franco is so hot, even in Orlando Bloom-y ringlets.Read Full Review »
38
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
Franco can be exhilarating in movies -- tremulous, unhinged, a little wild. Here his jaw never stops quivering and his eyes stay welled up, advertising a breakdown that never comes. Not that Myles has a presence a man would fall apart over. She's too professional to drive anybody crazy.Read Full Review »
30
Village Voice: Peter L'Official
Myles deserves better, but acquits herself as admirably as one can mired in medieval muck.Read Full Review »
See all Tristan & Isolde reviews at metacritic.com »