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The film centers around a team of great literaturary heroes recruited by a mysterious caller to stop a villain intent on turning the nations of the world against one another. These heroes include Allan Quartermain, a Dracula vampiress, the Invisible Man, Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde, Tom Sawyer, Captain Nemo, and Dorian Gray.

LEAGUE OF EXTRAORDINARY GENTLEMEN
(2003) 
Film Review By MIKE FURCHES and MELINDA LEDMAN

This page was created on July 8, 2003
This page was last updated on January 8, 2005


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CREDITS
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Directed by Stephen Norrington
Comic books by Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill
Screenplay by James Robinson

Sean Connery .... Allan Quartermain
Naseeruddin Shah .... Captain Nemo
Peta Wilson .... Mina Harker
Tony Curran .... Rodney Skinner (The Invisible Man)
Stuart Townsend .... Dorian Gray
Shane West .... Tom Sawyer
Jason Flemyng .... Dr. Henry Jekyll aka Mr. Edward Hyde
Richard Roxburgh .... Mycroft Holmes (M)
Max Ryan .... Dante
Tom Goodman-Hill .... Sanderson Reed
David Hemmings .... Nigel
Terry O'Neill .... Ishmael
Rudolf Pellar .... Draper
Winter Ave Zoli .... Eva
Robert Willox .... Constable Dunning

Produced by
Trevor Albert .... producer
Rick Benattar .... associate producer
Sean Connery .... executive producer
Bruce Devan .... line producer: LA
Mark Gordon .... executive producer
Don Murphy .... producer

Original Music by Trevor Jones
Cinematography by Dan Laustsen
Film Editing by Paul Rubell


MPAA: Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of fantasy violence, language and innuendo.
For rating reasons, go to FILMRATINGS.COM, and MPAA.ORG.
Parents, please refer to PARENTALGUIDE.ORG

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BOOK  
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
by Alan Moore
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Vol. 1
by Alan Moore, Kevin O'Neill

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The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
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SYNOPSIS
Based on the Alan Moore/Kevin O'Neill graphic novel miniseries. Set in Victorian England, the film centers around a team of extraordinary figures culled from great adventure literature who are recruited by a mysterious caller to stop a villain intent on turning the nations of the world against one another. This remarkable coterie of heroes is led by Allan Quartermain (Connery) and comprises Dracula vampiress Mina Harker (Wilson), the Invisible Man (Curran), Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde (Flemyng), Tom Sawyer (West), Captain Nemo (Shah), and Dorian Gray (Townsend).
Review by MIKE FURCHES
mike@furches.org

Web sitewww.furches.org

Mike is the Senior Pastor at United at the Cross Community Church in Wichita Kansas. United at the Cross is a church made up of individuals not often accepted in other churches. The church consists of former gang members, drug addicts, prostitutes and others. Mike also speaks nationally on various topics and is a freelance writer. To learn more about Mike and his ministry link onto www.furches.org. In the arts Mike has worked with top music artists such as Steppenwolf, Marshall Tucker Band, Kansas and has an active interest in film. Mike is pictured with his music band "Route 66."
Click to enlargeOne of this summer's biggest anticipated movies is The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. You don't have to do much more than have Sean Connery in a film to be guaranteed a success. With all of the rumors of how well Connery and the director of the film, Stephen Norrington got along on set, many were wondering what this film was going to be like. Unfortunately, what this movie company will find out is that it may not have legs to endure the summer.

In a wonderful concept heroes and villains of the past come together to take on an enemy who not only has the ability to do extraordinary things but also an enemy that has the potential to destroy the world. Mix that in with the adventuresome attitudes and abilities of some of the worlds great literary characters with a little Sean Connery as Allan Quartermain and you are almost guaranteed a great adventure.

There are many opportunities in this movie for the plot and storyline to take off and soar but that never seems to happen. Instead, we have a movie that for many young viewers and a few others may be fun to watch, but will not draw them back to the theaters for a second or third viewing in what remains of the summer. That is a shame, especially when considering that this movie brings to life some of the great characters or associations of those characters in all of literature. For that reason the movie has purpose that is worthy of taking some young readers and viewers to.

Click to enlargeMycroft Holmes, also known as Agent M, recruits Allan Quartermain. We also find that he and an unlikely group of partners including, Captain Nemo (Naseeruddin Shah), Mina Harker, the bride of Dracula (Peta Wilson), Rodney Skinner an associate and thief of the formula from the Invisible Man, (Tony Curran), Dorian Gray, (Stuart Townsend), Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde, (Jason Fleming), and young upshot CIA Agent from America, the beloved Tom Sawyer, (Shane West). What proceeds is an old-fashioned mystery and adventure without much mystery or character development.

Unfortunately, the likelihood of conflict during the making of this film comes out in the final product. It comes out because this has to be one of Sean Connery's flattest performances in quite some time. Virtually all of the performances are a little flat and the direction seems to suffer from boredom as well. The movie seems to struggle at developing the characters of the film and outside of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Mina Parker little is done.

Click to enlargeThis raises another question that I and the 6 boys I took to this movie asked regarding the name of the movie. How can this be the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen when the story line and one of the hero's involves a woman? The character played by Mina Harker is a strong character in the movie. One of the reasons the plot suffers is that the characters in the movie are referred to as the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and this character is a strong enough character that in all likelihood you keep anticipating hearing her complain about that title. Yet she never does, you see that in some things she is weak and in others she is strong but few of those are consistent with the character.

There are classic illustrations of good overcoming evil in this film. The importance of joining together to rely on each others strengths are reminders of how many work together to accomplish much, much more than any individual can accomplish by themselves.
Click to enlargeI also appreciated the struggles with the inner self as was portrayed by Jason Fleming in his portrayal of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. This one character and his struggle almost make the movie worth seeing. The CGA special effects for this Hulk like character are done in a much more believable way than the recent release of The Hulk but that is still not enough to carry the movie.

Fictional characters from literature are great to read about. I hope that this movie will inspire some young or older readers to read about many of those characters that deal with real issues like acceptance of oneself, being given unique gifts and discovering ways to use those gifts and more. Individuals could also use the opportunity of discovering ways to tell stories about some of the great Biblical characters that really lived like King David, or Samson, or even comical stories like the talking Donkey or valley of Dry Bones. History is not a bad thing, finding ways to incorporate those stories to draw the interest of contemporary society is not a bad thing. If anything for that reason alone there was potential with this movie. Unfortunately, the makers of the movie didn't take those values seriously enough to make a movie that even came close to being as good as the advance trailers and previews.

On a scale of 1-10 for each member of the team minus one point for the lack of character development of the director and screenwriter and another point for one character that just really doesn't fit into the League a somewhat disappointing 5.
Click to go to BlogReview by
MELINDA LEDMAN BLOG

HJMLedman@yahoo.com.
 Melinda Ledman is a graduate of Baylor University with a Bachelor’s degree in English. During college, she worked on the film Letter From Waco (director Don Howard), which won the award for best documentary feature in the 1997 South by Southwest Film Festival. After she and her husband Rob had their first child in September 2002, she began free-lance writing full time. In addition to writing reviews, she most enjoys writing original screenplays. She gratefully serves God after 12 years of alcoholism, and appreciates grace and freedom on a whole new level.
Click to enlargeThe League of Extraordinary Gentlemen was not what I expected. I suppose in the back of my mind, I was envisioning Indiana Jones meets Ghost Ship. What I got was X-Men meets 007 in the year 1899. It was an odd mixture of past/present, comic/opera, technology/skill, reality/folklore and for that it gets at least ten points for originality. I didn’t absolutely love the movie, perhaps because it had too much range—it traveled over so much time and space, and connected too many unrelated events and characters. However, the themes were clear, the character development was good, and it was an enjoyable movie overall.

Click to enlargeThe overriding theme of the film (other than the dangers of world domination by an evil ruler) was that of character flaws. Each of the gentlemen (and the lady) had a flaw that the evil Fantom wished to duplicate and the character wished to eradicate. Hence we see that these unnatural occurrences are both a blessing and a curse to their bearers.

For Skinner, the invisibility allows him to stealthily perform his task as a “gentleman thief.” However, with the effect being irreversible, it makes it hard to carry on a normal life. The crew’s tendency to blame the ills of the endeavor on Skinner is a keen example of how easy it is to be misunderstood when you cannot be seen.

Click to enlargeAs a vampiress, Mina Harker has a degree of immortality, extraordinary strength, and an unusual ability to morph into a legion of bats. While this power has obviously transformed her character into a more formidable foe, it has stolen elements of life from her—namely her husband and her ability and desire to love again. She says to the young Sawyer, “You’re sweet, and young – neither of which I hold in high regard.”

Dorian Gray faces a similar conflict, the bitterness and cynicism of having lived too long. His immortality though effective in warfare seems to have driven him further into corruption, arrogance, and deception. In a moment of feigned honesty with Mina, he claims that he secretly wishes to face his character flaws and to undo his demons. However, we find out soon enough that his motives were elsewhere.

Allan Quartermain represents the good side of experience and time. His journeys provided more knowledge, skill, wisdom and self-assurance to his life. Yet the many losses of friends and the onset of old age have worn him out. Lacking any desire to get involved in another adventure, Quartermain agrees simply because the war has come home to Africa and he cannot escape it.

Sawyer, the American spy, has the opposite problem. His youth gives him a heart full of courage and adventure. However, the disadvantage of youth is a lack of experience, for which he needs the services and instruction of the experienced Quartermain.

Dr. Jekyl/ Mr. Hyde has the obvious advantage of great strength, but the conflict always rages within as to how best to control and manage that power. With the Hyde character’s passion for brutality, the Jekyl character must always work to keep him in check.

Captain Nemo’s extraordinary knack for invention gives him a strong military advantage. He rivals the adversary, the Fantom, in the arena of technology. However, his use of these same weapons for piracy in the past casts a dark shadow on his character. When he is discovered paying homage to his goddess, Mina asks if a man who worships the goddess of death can be trusted.

Interestingly, each character’s motive for joining the League is to return to a life that once was. The British agent, M, for Mystery, has promised them an opportunity to return to the state of contentment before their extraordinary powers/flaws entered their lives. However, as we see, that promise was a lie and an unattainable goal at best. It is an interesting reflection on man’s inability to remove his past flaws. Humanity’s only option is to move forward, either succumbing to weakness or using it for a greater good. Much like the characters in this film, the desire of most humans is to somehow improve life and return to a state of grace and peace we once knew. Fortunately, God seems to have the same goal. And His plan for our lives is to take the weaknesses of our past and use them to a greater good in the future. These dynamic individuals did learn to take their “extraordinary” characteristics to the next level and work together to defeat evil. They even left together at the end of the movie for more adventures, seeing themselves as a new team, a sort of new family they never expected.

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