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As I’ve mentioned before, I love love love Greek mythology, and so I couldn’t help but get a kick out of Percy Jackson‘s shout-outs to the gods, goddesses and various creatures of those excellent stories. I just wish that the pacing hadn’t been so off — there were too many boring spells over the course of two hours, none of which built up very smoothly to the bursts of action sequences.  And parents of younger kids, be forewarned, some of the monsters are SCARY — I wouldn’t recommend this one for children prone to nightmares. Overall, however, it’s good, clean, fun family entertainment — and if all of the series’ fans trek to theaters this weekend to see their boy wonder come to life on the big screen, then I don’t think this is the last we’ll be seeing of Percy Jackson.

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Movie Reviews: News sources

I have compiled a huge list of reviews for your viewing pleasure. The critics reviews are very mixed. I tried to list the reviews in order of ones that I found helpful. If you want to see the full review just click on the title. This list will be continually updated.

If you have a review that is not on here please leave a comment below or contact us.

Reviews


Chicago Sun-Times — Roger Ebert

Director Chris Columbus has fun with this goofy premise, but as always I am distracted by the practical aspects of the story. Does it bother the Greek gods that no one any longer knows or cares that they rule the world? What are the genetic implications of human/god interbreeding?

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redblog (Redbox)

As I’ve mentioned before, I love love love Greek mythology, and so I couldn’t help but get a kick out of Percy Jackson‘s shout-outs to the gods, goddesses and various creatures of those excellent stories. I just wish that the pacing hadn’t been so off — there were too many boring spells over the course of two hours, none of which built up very smoothly to the bursts of action sequences.  And parents of younger kids, be forewarned, some of the monsters are SCARY — I wouldn’t recommend this one for children prone to nightmares. Overall, however, it’s good, clean, fun family entertainment — and if all of the series’ fans trek to theaters this weekend to see their boy wonder come to life on the big screen, then I don’t think this is the last we’ll be seeing of Percy Jackson.

Read Full Review >

Dove — Edwin L. Carpenter

The film features some of the best special effects, i.e. CGI work, I have seen in a film. We see great battles and a character using the mythological flying shoes. Some of the sword fighting includes training by those who plan to defend what is right and moral. The lead character, Percy Jackson, is played by a charming young actor named Logan Lerman who brings determination, grit and loyalty to the role. When his mother is captured, he doggedly goes all the way to the underworld to do what he must to free her.

Dove Family-Approved — Recommended for ages 12 and over

San Francisco Chronicle — Amy Biancolli

A whole lot of plot ensues – an entertaining mix of buddy movie, road trip, “Clash of the Titans,” archetypal quest and a coming-of-age tale about misfits making their way despite, or because of, absent parents.

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Arizona Republic – Bill Goodykoontz

Percy Jackson isn’t a great movie, but it’s a good one, trotting out kernels of Greek mythology like so many Disney Channel references. For the most part, it works.

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The Hollywood Reporter – Ethan Alter

So has “Percy Jackson” successfully cracked the “Potter” code? In terms of overall quality, not even close. Still, the film’s carefully calibrated mixture of CGI-enhanced spectacle, diverting (and blood-free) action sequences and adolescent angst could make it a modest hit with the eight to 12-year-old set.

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St. Louis Post-Dispatch – Joe Williams

The CGI effects are a familiar sort and so is the heroic-quest motif. The principal virtue in this modest entertainment is that the young characters act like real teenagers.

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Miami Herald – Rene Rodriguez

May not be so deep or richly imagined as J.K. Rowling’s universe of magic and Muggles, but the film is populated by likable characters, great special effects and a neat premise.

Philadelphia Inquirer –  Carrie Rickey

A diverting action fantasy that modernizes the stories of demigods and monsters.

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Variety — Peter Debruge

Action movies of this scale often start off strong and wind down to forgettable finales, but “Percy Jackson” is the opposite, overcoming a clunky setup to deliver nearly all its thrills in the last half-hour.

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Empire – Helen O’Hara

Slavishly follows every rule of the kids’ fantasy franchise genre, but it’s a well-executed and imagined world. Bet the sequel’s darker.

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New York Daily News – Elizabeth Weitzman

You don’t even have to be familiar with the first book in Rick Riordan’s popular fantasy series to enjoy Chris Columbus’ energetic adaptation.

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Entertainment Weekly – Adam Markovitz

Has all the CGI sorcery of a Harry Potter pic, but none of the magic.

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New York Post — Lou Lumenick

Played by Logan Lerman — the Zac Efron look-alike who was young George Hamilton in “My One and Only” — Percy is a Manhattan high-schooler who learns he is a demigod.

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The Globe and Mail (Toronto) – Rick Groen

All dull thunder without a spark of illumination.

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Washington Post – Michael O’Sullivan

The movie suffers by taking itself a little too seriously. It’s not just that it’s a lot less funny than the book. It’s also a lot less fun.

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Salon.com – Mary Elizabeth Williams

The overblown and overlong version of Percy’s adventures largely fails to capture the quirky allure of Riordan’s books.

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Chicago Tribune – Michael Phillips

Suggests that this could be the start of something adequate. Something big would’ve been nicer, though the movie’s limitations are less a matter of scale than of imagination.

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Orlando Sentinel — Roger Moore

For what it is and for whom it is intended, it’s not a bad movie, just an indifferent one.

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Boston Globe – Wesley Morris

Very little of it is as persuasive or enveloping as its beloved English counterpart. But it works very hard to distract 11-year-olds from thinking about the November arrival of “The Deathly Hallows.’’

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The New York Times — Stephen Holden

For all the earth shaking that goes on, “Percy Jackson” is agreeably tame and unthreatening.

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The Onion (A.V. Club) – Tasha Robinson

In Columbus’ hands, it once again all breaks down into a series of rushed, breathless special-effects setpieces, in a thrill ride that isn’t headed anywhere new.

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Los Angeles Times — Kenneth Turan

This is generic filmmaking at its most banal, a simple-minded simplification of a not overwhelmingly complex book.

Time Out New York – David Jenkins

Mirthless, episodic fantasy saga.

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Slate David — Plotz

The Lightning Thief is loud, scary, oversexed, and really unfun. All that would have been fine if my daughter liked it, but instead it left her and her friend stunned.

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Premiere – Nick Starkey

Chris Columbus, true to his namesake, has chartered new waters of lazy hackdom with this “Clash of the Titans” remade as a CW tween soap.

NPR – Scott Tobias

The film becomes particularly risible when family matters come into play. Since the young demigods, by nature, are raised in single-parent homes, their encounters with the gods are characterized less by wonder than by the therapy-speak of wounded kids with daddy issues.

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Kevin McKidd hopes lightning strikes for ‘Percy Jackson’: LA times

Kevin McKidd portrait If you want to know what it’s like to be a television star, walk down a Los Angeles sidewalk with Kevin McKidd, who “Grey’s Anatomy” fans instantly recognize as the tortured trauma surgeon Owen Hunt. If you want to know what it’s like to be a movie star, listen to McKidd describe a solitary stroll he took on a New York street during the filming of “Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lighting Thief.”

“There’s a shot where I arrive in the city and walk up out of the ocean,” says McKidd, who portrays Poseidon in the modern-day adventure with gods of Greek myth. “It was one of those moments as an actor where you say, ‘Wow, I am making a big movie.’ There was a huge crane for this one big, long shot of me and the city skyline as I’m walking toward the Empire State building. The preliminary work was, like, two or three weeks getting the lighting just right on all of these buildings.”

McKidd, with a wink and a sly smile, said it’s a day at the office he won’t soon forget. “I felt pretty special after that shot.”

The 36-year-old McKidd has high hopes that “Percy Jackson,” which opened Friday, might become a franchise just like the bestselling bookshelf series of the same name by author Rick Riordan. The film chronicles the adventures of a young boy who might remind some moviegoers of Harry Potter – both are young outsiders who discover they have a supernatural heritage and then get an education at a magical sanctuary while battling mysterious forces with the help of young friends.

Instead of a boy-wizard, young Percy (played by teen heartthrob Logan Lerman) is a demi-god, the son of mortal woman (Catherine Keener) and Poseidon, the god of the seas. If the movie does click and becomes a trilogy as hoped, it would mark another new chapter in McKidd’s peripatetic career, which began with a memorable turn as a member of the hard-luck junkie crew in “Trainspotting” and reached its zenith, as least in the eyes of critics, with his lead performance as Lucius Vorenus on the HBO series “Rome.”

The Scotsman said he has a sort of compartmentalized celebrity now. Women know him from “Grey’s,” men for “Rome” and youngsters, he suspects, will soon be referring to him as “Percy’s father.” With two children of his own, ages 7 and 9, he’s finding that the tour of duty holding the trident has a lot of traction with the elementary- and middle-school crowd.

Kevin McKidd in Percy Jackson

“My son has read all of the books and he is immersed in it, like a lot of kids,” McKidd said. “It’s going to be interesting to see how the film does.the hope it will be a trilogy.”

Poseidon is an absentee father to Jackson in the film and that strained relationship is the defining theme in the movie, which finds Percy and his friends caught in the middle of impending war between the gods, who never left earth even though they keep a far lower profile. McKidd said that young Lerman, who was also in “3:10 to Yuma,” is a star in making — the elder actor was impressed that the teenager spoke up about a pivotal scene where his character and Poseidon were supposed to embrace for the first time.

“It’s this ‘Kramer vs. Kramer’ moment and Logan said, ‘I don’t think at this point my character would do that, I think he would just go as far a shaking hands, this is the start of their relationship’ and I was impressed that someone of his age would recognize that and not just go along with what on the script page,” McKidd said. “At that age, I would have said, ‘The script says hug, let’s hug.’ His instincts for his age are amazing. I was so uncomfortable at that age in front of a camera. He’s very grown up in his choices.”

Director Chris Columbus, who also directed the first two “Potter” films, said that McKidd brought a “quiet power” to the role fo the sea god and that his experience in historical roles gave him the gravity needed to be a Greek statue come to life. Still, Mckidd said he Sean Bean, who plays Zeus, had a rough time during one scene keeping a straight face despite their years of experience.

“There’s a scene where we meet and we glare each other and the music is going and the lightning and I walk up and say, ‘Zeus,’ and he greets me, ‘Poseidon,’ and and after a couple of takes we started chatting just about how silly it all is,” McKidd said. “Now Sean is a real giggler. Once he starts he can’t stop. He’s this intense actor, right, but when he starts giggling…and that happens and this not a cheap scene, this is expensive. And there we are laughing…”

Kevin McKidd at Roosevelt

McKidd moved stateside almost three years ago to take on the lead role in “Journeyman,” the short-lived NBC time-travel series. That opportunity sprung from his acclaimed work in “Rome,” but it was “Grey’s,” where he plays a former battlefield doctor, that he connected with his largest audience. His character is dealing with post-traumatic stress and relationship challenges with his girlfriend, Cristina Yang, played by, Sandra Oh. McKidd arrived on the show in 2008 and has found it a life-changing role.

“I’m really just like acting I’m not always aware of what is hip and what is popular and what is zeitgeist,” McKidd said. “But ‘Grey’s’ is just a machine. I wasn’t really prepared for the epic nature of how popular the show is. I’ve never been involved in anything with that kind of reach. It’s worldwide now.It’s weird.”

In person, McKidd has a strong accent from his native Elgin, a city on the River Lossie, and he modulates it for his different roles. It’s a bit of a challenge for any actor playing a role of antiquity to pick a voice to speak in, but instead of obsessing about it, he said, the most successful approach is to “keep the regional sound in each actor’s voice” but add a certain formality in the cadence.

Trainspotting“You don’t want to sound like some posh British guy but you do want this heightened, slightly classical form,” McKidd said, who was also in sword-swinging territory with his roles in “The Last Legion” and Ridley Scott’sKingdom of Heaven.” “You can’t just walk around acting like you’re in ’Trainspotting.’ It’s about tone and tonality but if the actors hold on to some of their own regional background it sounds more natural to the audience over the course the movie.”

McKidd left drama school in 1994 and, right away, found himself in the vile and sublime heroin epic “Trainspotting,” based on the Irvine Welsh novel, which was directed by Danny Boyle and featured an Oscar-nominated script by John Hodge. Mckidd played Tommy, a jock who goes into a needle spiral after his girlfriend ditches him for losing a sex tape.

“It was an amazing thing to be part of,” McKidd said. “It was so low-budget, nobody knew it would be that big, not even Danny Boyle. It was a great early gig for an actor… I saw Danny the night he won the Oscar for ‘Slumdog Millionaire ’ and we had a good laugh and I told him, ‘Do you remember, we had no money at all?’ I was so happy for him. He’s one of the best directors. He was offered a lot of the big franchises but he turned them down so he could do what he wants to do.”

Walking the career line between commercial success and critical satisfaction is an interesting topic.

The early reviews for “Percy” have not been especially kind and there has been a backlash for major plot changes and eliminated characters. “It’s not just that it’s a lot less funny than the book,” Michael O’ Sullivan wrote in the Washington Post, “It’s also a lot less fun.” Kenneth Turan, in the Los Angeles Times, dismissed the film as “generic filmmaking at its most banal.”

McKidd (who was interviewed before the film was screened) said his personal goal is to put together a career that keeps him energized by its surprises. That’s clear with his next big screen appearance: McKidd is also part of the cast of Guy Moshe’sBunraku,” a film that melds live-action and animation for a surreal noir tale. The $30 million movie, to be released later this year, takes its name from a Japanese form of puppetry. The cast includes Josh Harnett, Woody Harrelson, Ron Perlman and Demi Moore.

Rome“It’s a very, very strange film,” McKidd said. “It’s a hybrid of a western and a martial arts film. It was also shot in Bucharest on green-screen stages. The world it’s set in is almost circus-like in the feel of it, and it’s all origami. The whole universe is constantly folding paper to create a cityscape or interiors of rooms or the sunrise…. I play a very effeminate master killer who’s almost like a Fred Astaire tap-dancing his way through the movie. It’s so different than anything I’ve done.”

More than anything, McKidd aspires to return to his “Rome” character. The series, which lasted only 22 episodes, was created by Bruno Heller, John Milius and William J. MacDonald and set in the roiling days when Rome was transitioning from a republic to an empire. Heller, the architect behind the CBS hit “The Mentalist,” has a film project in mind that would carry on the tale of the noble, duty-bound solider Vorenus and his friend Titus Pullo (Ray Stevenson), who has more of a pirate’s soul.

“I spoke to Bruno a few days ago and it’s looking good, but the problem is money’s tight in the independent film world right now,” McKidd said. “I hope it will happen, though. If things work, ‘Percy Jackson’ will do well, and then I can do a second one and the ‘Rome’ movie, too. If the gods are willing….”

– Geoff Boucher

Source: LA Times

Will ‘Percy Jackson’ fans embrace Hollywood’s older version of the boy hero? LA Times

It’s a question, in a way, for the ages: What happens when Hollywood makes a bookshelf boy hero into a young man?

To the devoted fans of the “Percy Jackson” books, the bestselling series is largely defined by the fact that it is a 12-year-old peer at the center of the sword-swinging adventure – so how will they feel by the decision to “age up” the title character in the Hollywood adaptation that arrives in theaters on Friday?

Logan Lerman, 18, is the star of “Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lightning Thief,” and don’t think that a lot of a thought didn’t go into the decision to pick an actor in the shaving-cream consumer demographic. Director Chris Columbus, who has a lot of experience with child actors after directing the first two “Harry Potter” films and the first two ”Home Alone” movies, said the choice was made so the film could match the action on the pages of the series by author Rick Riordan.

“For me, it was a matter of reality, and some of the intensity of some of the scenes in the book. I was really thinking how they would play out in visual terms.” Columbus said. ”I felt we would just add a little more weight to the entire cast, by casting Percy up a little bit.”

It’s one thing to read about a 12-year-old battling mythological creatures and another to actually see it, Columbus suggested. For instance: Percy hits Las Vegas for an nightclub sequence that might not sit well with moviegoers if the hero was more Nickelodeon in age than MTV.

Columbus added that he was ”enamored” with Lerman, who comes off somewhat like an earthier, more authentic Zac Efron. Lerman also has proved himself in the face of menacing power before –  he held his own opposite Christian Bale and Russell Crowe in the western “3:10 to Yuma,“ after all.

In fact, Columbus said that Lerman is far older than his own birth certificate, which may suit someone playing the son of a Greek god: ”His screen test was one of the best screen tests I’ve had the pleasure of seeing. He’s like this 45-year-old guy trapped in a teenager’s body. He’s wise beyond his years.”

– Rachel Abramowitz

Source: LA Times