Beautiful Creatures (2013) [Blu-ray]
Drama | Fantasy | Romance

Tagline: Is falling in love the beginning...or the end?

Dark secrets will come to light. A strange recurring dream haunts Ethan Wate in his sleep, but he prefers anything to his waking life. Trapped in a small, conservative Southern town with his withdrawn father, Ethan desperately wants to escape. Then the beautiful Lena Duchannes arrives at his school, and mysterious events begin to occur. Lena has a secret: she is a Caster with powers beyond her control. Worse, when she reaches her 16th birthday, she will be claimed by either the Light or the Dark... and there is no escaping her fate in this supernatural love story based on the best-selling book series.

Storyline: Teenager Ethan Wate is obsessed with his urge to finish high school and go on to college in order to leave behind the small town of Gatlin, South Carolina behind, until a mysterious girl begins to inhabit his dreams. When he meets Lena Duchannes, a newcomer who has just enrolled in his school, Ethan knows she is the girl in his dreams. Lena is rejected by the rest of her classmates for being the granddaughter of Macon Ravenwood, whom the town's superstitious residents consider to be a devil-worshiper. But Ethan gives her a ride anyway and they fall in love. Lena reveals to her new boyfriend that she is a witch, and that on her sixteenth birthday she will be claimed by either the forces of light or of darkness. She will remain in the light, but only if she does not remain in love with Ethan. To make matters worse, her evil mother, Sarafine, is casting spells to push Lena to the dark side. Ethan joins her in a search to find a magic spell to save their doomed love. Will the lovers ... Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Kenneth Brown on May 15, 2013 -- So begins -- and hopefully soon ends -- the post-Twilight age; an era sure to be defined by shameless pilfering, intense déjà vu, desperate market searches and hurried box office seizures, as studios and once-respectable filmmakers willingly sell their souls to score the next, big teen-driven supernatural mega-franchise. There's an Edward and Jacob-sized hole in adolescent cinema's still-racing heart, dear readers, and whoever manages to fill that hole will inherit a disturbingly literal fortune. Enter writer/director Richard LaGravenese's Beautiful Creatures, which might have been a contender... if, that is, it wasn't such an embarrassingly obvious grab at the Twilight coffers. With little to distinguish itself from the gathering genre crowd and even less to offer moviegoers looking for anything remotely fresh or unexpected, it flopped to the tune of $19 million in the States, $60 million worldwide. Hardly Stephenie Meyer numbers; hardly the series-generating cash cow Warner Bros. was looking for.

When young, lovelorn Ethan Lawson Wate (Alden Ehrenreich) saunters on screen, his slippery South Carolina drawwwwl as overripe as a sun-seared Georgia peach, it's all but inevitable that the gentlemanly teen dream will meet the love of his life within minutes. Sure enough, in glides Miss Lena Duchannes (Alice Englert), not only the girl of his dreams but the girl he keeps seeing in his dreams. Some of his more religious classmates aren't so happy to see her, and the vicious rumor being spread between fifth and sixth period is that the Duchannes family vacation at Lord Satan's summer cottage. (Cue hazy commentary on the evils of faith and the virtues of... faith. The movie isn't sure what it wants to say about religion, so "believe!" is about as agnostic or preachy as it gets.) Turns out the Salem Brigade is onto something, though. The Duchannes may not be witches, but they are "casters"... which are essentially witches, making the lengths to which they (and the filmmakers) go to re-brand their magical existence, even when secret, a rather odd exercise in PC hoop-jumping.

Casters are capable of creating illusions, enticing weak minds, shape-shifting, controlling the weather, spinning banquet tables at comical speeds, and other mystical, convenient-to-the-plot shenanigans, and, upon turning sixteen, either go "light" or "dark," the latter of which involves becoming evil incarnate. And guess who's about to celebrate her sweet sixteenth? Luckily for her, Ethan is determined to keep Lena on the side of the angels, which isn't made any easier by the arrival of Lena's mother, a powerful dark caster named Sarafine (Emma Thompson), and her sultry, nearly nude cousin, Ridley (Emmy Rossum), both of whom are up to no good. Can Ethan, Lena's uncle Macon (Jeremy Irons) and a caster bookkeeper (Viola Davis) prevent the poor girl from turning to the dark side? Do secrets buried since the Civil War hold the key to Ethan and Lena's future? Is there a way to break the curse that haunts the Duchannes ladies? Will Lena resist the Emperor and fight for the Republic or unleash her anger on Ethan in a fit of Force-wielding fury? The answers are as obvious as the film's clunky twists and turns are silly, and the teens' romance remains a snarky-turned-sappy fool's errand. Rest assured, love conquers all. Except enchanted Civil War-reenactment bullets. Love can't conquer those. Only plot holes can do that.

Need evidence that Beautiful Creatures is little more than thinly veiled Twilight counter-programming? Look no further than comments straight from the mouths of Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl, co-authors of the 2009 young adult novel of the same name: "The teens that we were writing for"... pause. Which teens? Twilight teens. Onward. "The teens that were were writing for wanted to hear not only a boy's voice," as opposed to Bella's, "but they wanted the girl to be the powerful supernatural and the boy to be the mortal." That's right. Writing, not by meticulous design or inspiration, but by demographic mandate. Before LaGravenese's film adaptation was even a sparkle in Warner's eye, its story and characters were a product of assembly-line manufacturing and simple supply and demand calculation. It parts ways with Twilight on various occasions, of course, and LaGravenese (by way of Garcia and Stohl) goes out of his way to try and differentiate the two by film's end. Unfortunately, no amount of personality quirks, briefly glimpsed magic, overacting or endgame re-shuffling is capable of hiding the fact that Creatures has Twilight's blood pumping through its veins.

If it wasn't so smolderingly serious, Beautiful Creatures might have even worked as a tongue-in-cheek riff on Twilight's pouty, sparkling vamp saga. Instead, it takes its built-in audience for granted, relies on teens and lovesick moms to accept its pillaging wholesale, and offers up an array of casters that fail to grab hold of the imagination or linger in the mind. Worse perhaps is that Creatures isn't unwatchable. Thompson, Irons and Rossum (who has shockingly few minutes of screentime) are clearly having a lot of blast, and there's a warm slice of fun available to anyone hungry for the actors' supernaturally charged Southern Gothic shtick. (Particularly Rossum, who catwalks from scene to scene with a devilish come-hither stare and a deadly kiss hanging on her lips.) Ehrenreich does his best with an aw-shucks charm that would be right at home in Mayberry, and I suppose Englert summons enough angst and anxiety to keep the drama alive. But the romantic leads lack that certain, indelible spark and rarely, if ever, upstage their more theatrical co-stars or salvage the plodding, predictable script. Not that I think a sudden influx of chemistry would suddenly amount to movie magic. Too many fundamental problems debuff Beautiful Creatures' every spell and make it increasingly difficult to fall in love with anything other than the end credits.

Beautiful Creatures pines for Twilight glory but comes up short, delivering a deformed clone with more superpowers but less heart or appeal. And considering the Twilight series had its own share of debilitating issues, Creatures is something of a mess, over-sold, overacted and overwhelmingly dull. Warner's Blu-ray release is a bit more satisfying, but it struggles with consistency with a decent but problematic video presentation, a solid DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround track and a dead-end supplemental package. All more than adequate, if that is you enjoy Beautiful Creatures. If not, nothing else on the disc will make the film any more palatable.

[CSW] -2.6- The story is interesting (with some very amusing elements), the acting is solid, and the production values impressive without being overwhelming. I wouldn't say I loved it but it was an enjoyable film to watch. If you are into the Twilight series, which I find so-so, you might really enjoy this.
[V3.5-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box.


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