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Eragon
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Directed by Stefen Fangmeier.
Industrial Light and Magic special-effects wizard Stefen Fangmeier makes the leap into the director's chair with this coming-of-age fantasy concerning a young boy whose discovery of a mysterious dragon egg leads him on a predestined journey to become a Dragon Rider and defend his peaceful world against an evil king. Based on the best-selling novel by Christopher Paolini, Eragon tells the tale of the titular character (Ed Speleers), a humble farm boy living in the land of Alagaësia, whose life is forever changed when he discovers that he has been chosen to fight the most powerful enemy his world has ever known. Jeremy Irons, John Malkovich, and Djimon Hounsou co-star in a film produced by Davis Entertainment and adapted from the novel by screenwriters Peter Buchman, Larry Konner, and Mark Rosenthal. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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JJ79JJ79 Eragon (2006)
by JJ79 in JJ79 Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Released: December 15, 2006Director: Stefan Fangmeier*****It is appropriate, looking at the movie version of Christopher Paolini's Eragon, to know the original novel was started when the author was only 15 years old (it was published in 2003). The film, all 104-minutes, seem ripped from other fantasy epics far better and adventurous than anything on the screen. An egg is stolen from evil King Galbatorix (John Malkovich) and put in the care of a young farmboy, Eragon (Edward Speleers). When the egg hatches, a baby dragon is born, the last such creature in the world. It instantly bonds with Eragon. Together, picking up allies along the way, the Saphira the dragon and Eragon find their way to the rebel base in an attempt to stop Galbatorix once and for all.If movies were made in a vacuum, Eragon would undoubtedly be a hit. Fantasy creatures, a far off world, action, a little bit of romance, armies fighting each other...the problem is we've seen all this before done 100% better. ... " [More]
MSWallackMSWallack Review: Eragon
by MSWallack in MSWallack Blog
is neutral about it.
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"I've heard that the book Eragon is very good. I've heard that its sequel Eldest is not. Unforutnately, the movie falls into the latter category. Eragon (the movie) wasn't actually bad; it just wasn't good. Everything felt like something that I'd seen before. The worst part of the movie is that I'm not sure that I want to keep the novel on my reading list. I was disappointed when I missed Eragon in the theater. Thankfully, I saved myself some money and only had to be disappointed at the cost of a Blockbuster rental. " [More]
JakeStevensJakeStevens Mediocre, At Best
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
disliked it.
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"The Lord of the Rings Trilogy raised the bar so high for fantasy films that any film in that particular genre has a lot to live up to. So it's no surprise that Eragon felt rushed and a bit shallow to me, like Diet Lord of the Rings. There's scant character development and less than scintillating visual effects. It all felt so generic and derivative, and neither Jeremy Irons or Robert Carlyle could save this one. I was deeply disappointed with much of the acting, and the plot was Star Wars meets The Neverending Story. If, by the end, you don't realize this film is aimed squarely at 13-16 year olds, the Avril Lavigne song uncomfortably pasted on at the end should give it away. This is a very mediocre film, indeed. " [More]
BillShroyerBillShroyer Excruciatingly predictable
by BillShroyer in BillShroyer Blog
disliked it.
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"I must've seen this movie at least 20 times - during the 1990's. The visual effects were fantastic, but the story itself was so excruciatingly unoriginal that I couldn't bear to watch it all the way through - "wise old cynical teacher", "eager young man too big for his own britches", "dark king with predictably freakish-looking attendant" - the list just goes on and on and on and on. I've never read the book, but I hope it's very different from the movie. It was like watching "Lord of the Rings" combined with "Oprah on Queludes". A perfect waste of time - though the actors aren't to blame for that. They acted their parts fairly well, it's just that the parts, _themselves_, should never have seen the light of day. Again. " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Eragon
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski Regardless of your feelings about the fantasy genre, there’s one thing everyone can agree on: Elves should not be 5-foot-6. But in Eragon, key elf Arya (Sienna Guillory) stands tall next to her fellow characters; she even has human ears. (Whoops!) This sloppiness is indicative of director Stefen Fangmeier and scripter Peter Buchman’s butchering of Christopher Paolini’s popular novel of the same name. The book, which the now-23-year-old Paolini began writing at 15, is full of magic and lore, yet it hardly gets the intensive Harry Potter treatment. Instead, its 544 pages are crushed into a 104-minute film, with characters dropped and plots manipulated. And at the center of it all is a talking dragon, Saphira, voiced by Rachel Weisz. (Perhaps another universal opinion: Fierce, fire-breathing dragons should not drop one-liners, especially Buchman’s.) When she shuts up and races across the sky, Saphira is the biggest wow factor in the film, b ... " [More]
amp-bicamp-bic What Happened?
by amp-bic in amp-bic Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Well right off the bat im just gunna say this movie (like most book-based films) was absolutly off plot line. I have been a huge Eragon fan since i read the book about 2 years ago and i heard rumors this film was coming out so I wanted to see if it was gunna match up to it... Boy was I diasappointed... It was a "visually entertaining" movie but pissed me off. When i pictured Farthen Dur i pictured a magnificant city with a figgin castle in the middle of it but i got three slave huts and a not very impressive building. And the Urgals were protrayed in the book to essentially be like the LOTR Orcs, not fat white guys with face paint on. Im sure many other book fans see my point when i say What Happened? PS: Read the book... you'll find out what im talking about " [More]
AmateurXAmateurX Good, but seemed rushed
by AmateurX in AmateurX Blog
is neutral about it.
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"Before seeing this movie, I had never heard about the story. I thought the idea was pretty cool, but it was missing something. You could tell that there was a lot of content that the director wanted to get through, but didn't have the time. Every scene seemed to lack detail & development - as if they were rushing through. Watching the movie sparked my interest in the book(s), really only because I could tell there was a ton of stuff missing. " [More]
ackioackio Had Potential...
by ackio in ackio Blog
is neutral about it.
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"I've heard rampant rumors that Eragon is nothing more then Star Wars set with dragons. I'll be honest I have seen every Star Wars movie and thought little about them. Yes I said it, stone me if you must. I only bring this up to prove a point, I don't know every similarity between the two movies because I just don't care enough about Star Wars to sit there and pick apart its mythos. Also, if you sit there and tell me Eragon is nothing more then Star Wars I will just turn around and tell you to give me one day and I will find twenty different myths that Star Wars was derived from. It doesn't bother me to say "this movie was a lot like this movie but only different in said ways" because ultimately that’s the only thing we can produce. Don't believe me? Run down to your local library and look up Joseph Campbell's "A Hero With a Thousand Faces". Now granted I'm not saying originality is dead, because we can use these mythos as bl ... " [More]
yrfunnyvalentineyrfunnyvalentine Upcoming films and midnight shows
by yrfunnyvalentine in yrfunnyvalentine Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"I found out yesterday that I have to work 5 to close on Thursday May 3rd, which means I have to work for the midnight showings of Spiderman 3. I'm kind of disappointed, because I wanted to see it at midnight, but at the same time, I LOVE working midnight shows of movies that people are really excited to see. I remember last year I worked for the midnight shows of Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, and it was an awesomely fun time. Sure, the theater was busy as all-get-out, but the people who came to see the film were really into it all and some were dressed up and whatnot, so that was really great. However, working midnights for movies that nobody really wants to see right at midnight (Eragon and Casino Royale) are a real drag, especially since it means being at the theater until around 3 am. Oh! Speaking of Pirates of the Caribbean, the theater I work at already has tickets on sale for the midnight show of At World's End, as well as tickets for opening wee ... " [More]
urtown2urtown2 Did anyone read the book first?!
by urtown2 in urtown2 Blog
lost interest.
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"As with the first Harry Potter movies, Rent and several other recent adaptations, I feel that the creator of this movie just didn't get it. The first Harry Potter films neglected the playful humor of the books, leading the magical world of wizardry to be portrayed a lot darker a lot earlier on than in the novels. In addition Rent, a completely musical work about New York life of poor artists in the mid nineties was totally ruined once again by another Christopher Columbus interpretation. For one, they were no longer young artists, but decade conflicted middle aged stage performers struggling to adapt their original roles to the spoken lines and new 80’s surroundings. In addition, all of New York was ON FIRE- I could go on. But for this movie, which was Columbus free, the simple question that enraged my mind as a viewer remained. Did anyone take the time to read the book? Did anyone really read it for what it was, not as its potential for a new blockbuster. Did anyone sit ... " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Starting with December 2001, viewers were treated to lush, big-budget fantasy movies in four out of five holiday seasons, as The Chronicles of Narnia followed the Lord of the Rings trilogy. So in 2006, along came Eragon, a calculated attempt to fill the void and wrangle in the same audience. It was a sorry disappointment. Earning barely $70 million at the domestic box office, Eragon proved that devoted followings are not won simply by serving up heroic young warriors and ogre-like villains. Without offering a beloved mythology for viewers to embrace, the film is bland and kiddie-oriented, suited only for the most forgiving geeks. Eragon is derivative in ways beyond its title -- which is a homophone of Viggo Mortensen's Rings character, Aragorn -- but at least it had a chance at freshness by focusing on dragons. The fire-breathing creatures appeared in the 2002 actioner Reign of Fire, but hadn't headlined a fantasy epic since Dragonheart (1996). While their character design is competent enough, it's not what you'd expect from a film helmed by a special effects guru (Stefen Fangmeier), who clearly didn't have the CG budget enjoyed by Peter Jackson. But the main problem with Saphira, the central dragon, is that she's been given a decidedly earthbound voice, that of Rachel Weisz. Regardless of how benevolent she's supposed to be, she needs an impressive growl to maintain her grandeur -- if she needs a voice at all. The general drabness of the sets and landscape extends to the actors. Ed Speleers is a really poor man's Orlando Bloom, gawky and uncharismatic. And the supposed prestige casting of Jeremy Irons and John Malkovich just makes them look like lazy opportunists, hoping that if the film became a phenomenon, they'd get swept along. Instead, Eragon just got swept under the rug. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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mavens
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slonroberta
slonroberta
loved it.
drama_geek_777
drama_geek_777
loved it.
pinklion922
pinklion922
loved it.
PammyK
PammyK
is not interested.
The_American_Dream
The_American_Dream
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SkyPilot
SkyPilot
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