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Pathfinder [Blu-ray] [2007]

Pathfinder [Blu-ray] [2007]
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Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Starring: Karl Urban, Nathaniel Arcand, Clancy Brown, Russell Means, Ralf Moeller
Directed By: Marcus Nispel
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 1.0/5Average rating of 1.0/5Average rating of 1.0/5Average rating of 1.0/5Average rating of 1.0/5

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Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Audience Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Binding: Blu-ray
EAN: 5039036036313
Format: Anamorphic
Label: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Release Date: 2007-12-24
Running Time: 103
Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Theatrical Release Date: 2007

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Editorial Reviews: Karl Urban, Moon Bloodgood, Clancy Brown


Spotlight customer reviews:
Customer Rating: Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5
Summary: Pathfinder lost it's way
Comment: Agreed - on paper, this film should have been sooooo much better, and the fact that it isn't is solely the fault of the director. Everything that makes a film worthwhile, character and plot for instance, were excised to accommodate extra blood-letting and ludicrous action sequences. If it had been called something on the lines 'Conan the this-or-other' it might have made more sense, and been marketed as high fantasy rather than history, but it wasn't. And because the audience expects to see a reasonably acurate representation of 'real' people - it is deeply disappointing. The real tragedy being that any chance of a good remake of the original story is now out of the window!

Customer Rating: Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5
Summary: Pathloser
Comment: A brief history lesson -- the Vikings were the first Europeans to land in the Americas, almost five hundred years before Columbus. They even settled down to live there for awhile, though it didn't last.

There's a brilliant movie somewhere in that story -- an epic of exploration, discovery and struggle between two very different peoples. Too bad "Pathfinder" isn't that movie, with its mindless action, ridiculous characters, and a pompous stream of wretched dialogue and silly direction. It's a disaster, pure and simple.

An American Indian woman found a little boy abandoned in the ruin of a Viking ship, and brought him bck to her people, where he was renamed Ghost and brought up as one of them. But though Ghost (Karl Urban) becomes strong and well-liked, he's still haunted by his Viking past -- until the day he sees dragon boats coming to shore, and his village is brutally slaughtered.

Wounded and left for dead, Ghost is found by a hunting party that includes Starfire (Moon Bloodgood), the token love interest. When the Vikings find him again, he must outwit the small army of Vikings, protect his remaining people from them -- and finally settle his divided feelings about his own identity.

Yeah, it's all a cliche -- outcast hero raised among peaceful people, finds inner peace by kicking savage butts of his birth race. Even in the hands of a good director this would be staggeringly unexiting -- and it isn't in the hands of a good director. It's in Marcus "Texas Chainsaw Massacre Remake" Nispel's hands.

And Nispel has clearly decided that this is his magnum opus: creepy lighting, slow-motion, and pompous dramatic shots like swords being lifted from the snow (signaling that this is a Very Significant Moment). But there's nothing that even a good action movie should have -- there is no logic, cohesion, plot or good dialogue ("The prophecy... is coming to fulfilment!").

Instead, Nispel packs it with gore, swords and torture, to demonstrate that all the Vikings are PURE EVIL, lest you waste any sympathy on them. But his action scenes are more likely to inspire laughter than horror or cheap thrills, especially when Ghost starts fighting the Vikings... in a SLED CHASE. Really. It only gets campier and sillier as time goes on, until Ghost defeats the bad guys by triggering an avalanche... by yelling.

Karl Urban is a deeply talented actor with immense presence... and an unfortunate tendency to pick some really awful action movies. He does the best that anyone could do with such a flimsy character (come on, who really thinks Ghost would join the Vikings?), which isn't that much. Bloodgood is basically a token love interest, and not a very realistic one either.

As for the supporting characters, they might as well be played by paper dolls. The Indians are stereotypically peaceful, spiritual and very boring, with names like Starfire and Wind in Tree. And the Vikings are grunting, thick-skulled behemoths in bloodstained horned skull helmets, with no sign of higher brain function. These aren't Vikings, these are orcs.

A promising idea gets buried under a steaming, putrescent heap of mindless action, logic-free scripting, and characters so thin you could wrap Christmas presents in them. Stunningly wretched.



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