Artemis Fowl

2020

Action / Adventure / Family / Fantasy / Sci-Fi

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Colin Farrell Photo
Colin Farrell as Artemis Fowl Sr
Judi Dench Photo
Judi Dench as Commander Root
William Moseley Photo
William Moseley as Italian Man
Miranda Raison Photo
Miranda Raison as Angeline Fowl
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
860.74 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
PG
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
P/S 3 / 20
1.73 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
PG
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
P/S 0 / 32

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by jhalcollege2 / 10

You don't even want to know how bad this movie is

Fans of the books will be immensely disappointed as this movie changes everything, and not in a good way (think a wrinkle in time, percy jackson, or mortal engines). If you're going to rewrite the plot, it should at least be entertaining and make sense.

However, not only is this a bad adaptation, it is also a bad movie in general. You're not going to attract any new fans by pumping 90% of your budget into CGI, and then glossing over your characters and screenplay. Absolutely no one is going to say "I liked this movie, now let me check out the books."

It used to mean something when you saw the disney castle at the beginning of a movie. Now it just means the movie you are about to see is going to be a disaster.

Reviewed by TheLittleSongbird2 / 10

Artemis Fail

It's actually been a long time since reading the book series, but from retrospect they were certainly better than this film version. Love Disney and Disney+ has been a godsend recently and watched regularly actually, one of many reasons as to why my reviewing here has slowed down. Kenneth Branagh is a gifted director, absolutely love his Shakespeare adaptations with 'Much Ado About Nothing' being a personal favourite (though others will prefer the also great 'Hamlet' and 'Henry V'). Love Judi Dench as an actress too.

'Artemis Fowl' was a real disappointment. As an adaptation it's an abomination, one of the worst book to film adaptations there is in existence. Am not kidding here. It fares even worse on its own terms, despite what those that have defended the film say some that have hated the film have not read the books and saw it as fans of Branagh and Dench, my parents being among those people. Almost nothing works and Branagh has never been this uninterested in his directing in what is easily his worst film (those that disliked 'Murder on the Orient Express', didn't care for that myself while not hating it, will appreciate that film better after seeing this).

The least bad asset is actually the music score, which is actually beautiful to listen to, authentically Irish and lilting. Sadly it was one of those scores that were pleasant enough on their own but failed to fit within the film, this score sounded like it belonged somewhere else. The scenery also wasn't bad in parts but the photography generally is rushed looking and some of the images thanks to some very disjointed editing and garish lighting are quite ugly so that was wasted too. Any special effects are afterthought-looking.

Moving on further onto the criticisms, the acting is really not good. Ferdia Shaw is monotone and charisma-free throughout. Lara McDonnell has more perkiness but the character is very underwritten and bland on the whole. Colin Farrell is completely wasted. Josh Gad tries too hard is gets very annoying after a while, actually thought he didn't blend very well with everything else. You know something is wrong when Dench gives the least bad performance and still manages to give one of her worst performances, that affected accent and voice was not needed and she doesn't look engaged at times. At least she showed some signs of having command over her meagre material.

Branagh was clearly not interested in the material, as his direction throughout is uncharacteristically indifferent and phoned in. One would not think that he is a great Shakespearean director, and he did prove with his wonderful 'Cinderella' that he could do non-Shakespeare too, as this is quite inept. The target audience also felt confused, my mother was very unsure at who 'Artemis Fowl' was aimed at, children will find it hard to follow and it is too dull for adults. Even teens, the main target audience of the book series, will question the target audience.

Script is stilted and is too exposition-heavy (apparent right from the beginning with an over-explanatory narration),a lot of the film screeching to a deadening halt in the more talky sections and there are a lot of those. The storytelling is incredibly thin and not does it feel like a hodge podge of cobbled togther ideas it is all executed in a dull fashion and with little coherence, literally only one event happens. There is one action show-piece pretty much with a troll very late on but even that doesn't thrill and even the troll doesn't look that good. There is no character development whatsoever, nobody is given time to breathe, the villain is a non-entity and Artemis himself is practically useless. What little there is of the action is sluggish, incoherently edited and the sense of danger just isn't there. To cap it all off, the ending was a completely abrupt anti-climax.

In summary, very poor. 2/10

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle5 / 10

arrogant lead and flat magic

The media circus descends upon Fowl Manor in Ireland. Mulch Diggums (Josh Gad) gets arrested and interrogated by MI6. He recounts the story of the Aculos. There is magic in the world and Artemis Fowl is his name. His father (Colin Farrell) has been kidnapped as evil forces search for the Aculos. There is a secret underworld of magical creatures. A fairy police officer named Holly Short is trying to clear her father's name who stole the Aculous. Her superior officer Commander Julius Root (Judi Dench) heads the effort to retrieve the powerful magical artifact.

The lead kid is too arrogant and too annoying to be the rooting interest. I like Holly Short better and her opening scene with Josh Gad is actually fun. The magical underworld is a cross between near futurism and steam punk. I like the premise but some of the execution is less than magical. From the MIB suits to the derivative take on Irish magic, this movie lacks the imagination needed to elevate it. At the very least, someone should explain the Aculous at the beginning. All in all, this seems to be a fine fantasy premise but director Kenneth Branagh fails to pull a compelling movie out of the material.

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