By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 16 January 2020)
It’s rarely
wise to watch a sequel without having first seen the original film. But I did
it in any case when I decided to see ‘Maleficent 2: Mistress of Evil’.
It was an
easy decision to make since Angelina Jolie is a favorite of mine. She never
lets me down with her ever-edgy choices of films either to be in or to make
herself.
The original
‘Maleficent’ came out in 2014, but I wasn’t into seeing what was billed as a
‘dark fantasy’ at the time. But since then, I acquired a taste for Marvel comic
fantasies, so I’m more inclined to watching fanciful action films like ‘Maleficent
2’.
At the
outset, Jolie’s horned and winged witch looks like she is going to be seriously
wicked throughout the film, malevolent in fact. What’s more, she’s autocratic
in the way she treats her adopted child, the sweet and innocent Aurora (Elle
Fanning) whom she clearly adored.
Aurora has
fallen for a fellow human being, Prince Philip who is keen to wed the lovely
‘Queen of the Moors’ as Aurora has been named by her ‘mum’. Aurora is just as
enthusiastic about Phil, so she agrees to essentially defy Maleficent and go
meet his mother, Queen Ingrid (Michelle Pfeiffer) at their Disney-like castle.
Aurora
doesn’t really want to disobey her mum so she persuades Maleficent to come with
her to the castle and meet Ingrid. But that’s when the scene gets dark and
dicey as these two women are both intent on going to war and defeating one
another.
At this
point, I had to pause the film and decide if I could stand watching two wicked
women at war, even if it was ‘just a film’! It took me a moment to suspend my
disbelief in the fantasy and realize I was watching three generations of great
women actors performing all together. This made Maleficent 2 a film I could not
afford to turn off.
True, Michelle
and Angelina both play villains. But then, Queen Ingrid looks like her evil is
more potent than Maleficent’s. She manages to wound this not-so-wicked witch
whose vulnerability now elicits our sympathy.
Ingrid’s
long- and short-term goal is nothing short of power and she is ruthless about
getting it. She’s gotten rid of her husband, the King, and plans to do the same
to Aurora’s friends, the fairies who live harmoniously with her in the moors.
Ingrid has
even commissioned a pixie to create a toxic gas that can literally decimate all
the fairies.
Fortunately,
Maleficent is humbled and nursed back to health by a renegade band of
winged-and horned warriors who want to help Maleficent defeat the evil queen.
By the time
the final battle begins, Aurora and Philip have discovered just how sinister
Ingrid is. The special effects are fabulous although Ingrid nearly succeeds in
gassing all the fairies including Maleficent.
Let me not
be the spoiler who gives away the grand finale. Just go see this fantasy-drama yourself.
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