by Tony Dayoub
At times it soars and other times it just kind of lays there, but all in all,
Snow White and the Huntsman is a great deal better than I had been led to believe. It comes down to whether you are the type of viewer who can forgive a film's flaws if its visuals are as stunning as this movie's are. This is the second film this year to update the Grimm fairy tale. But
Snow White and the Huntsman is a darker retelling than this year's kiddie-oriented
Mirror Mirror, a lot more frightful and intense. Cinematographer Greig Fraser (
Let Me In) and director Rupert Sanders (helming his first feature) run right at
Snow White's derivative script, embracing its influences. However, it is unlike other films which wear their homages proudly on their sleeve, like, say, last year's
Drive. That movie blatantly lifted from progenitors like
Thief and
The Driver to worse effect, highlighting its own inferiority if you will, while
Snow White and the Huntsman improves on many of the concepts which inspired its production design.