- Actors: Eddie Marsan, Tinatin Dalakishvili
- Director: Aleksandr Boguslavskiy
- Disc Format: Dolby, Subtitled, Surround Sound, Widescreen
- Language: English (DTS 5.1)
- Subtitles: English
- Region: Region A/1
- Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: NR
- Studio: Well Go Usa
- Blu-ray Release Date: March 17, 2020
- Run Time: 110 minutes
Abigail
is clearly an attempt by Russian filmmakers to create a film with transnational
appeal, which makes sense considering the production company, KinoDanz (KD
Studios), cast Antonio Banderas in a previous release. In making Abigail, they seem to have had the
actors say their lines in English, which must not have sounded good enough for
North American distribution on its own, because there is English dubbing laid
over the English-speaking Russian actors’ voices. The result is a film that
looks like a major Hollywood studio release (the film is distributed by 20th
Century Fox CIS), but comes off as poor imitation once the characters begin
speaking. Unfortunately, good special effects with sloppy character/plot
development are fast becoming the trademark of Hollywood, and in that sense, Abigail isn’t a terrible imitation.
The one thing
this steampunk fantasy film does right is world building, creating a unique
vision that blends past and future into a unique vision. Unfortunately, much of
this has already been done before, and once revealed, the plot feels more
derivative than anything else. It feels like the leftover scraps of narrative
from a dozen poorly conceived YA fantasy films from the past decade, with the
rise of both superhero films and tween book adaptations like Harry Potter and Twilight. Even that would not be terrible to watch if polished
enough, and there are certain elements of filmmaking that hit it out of the
park. Unfortunately, the other elements are such a massive failure that any
positive elements of filmmaking are easy to look past.
When our
protagonist and title character is a young girl, the town she lives in begins
to suffer a mysterious illness. Unfortunately, before anyone can figure out
what the illness is, the town is quarantined by the government officials, with
all infected being removed. Ten years later, Abigail (Tinatin Dalakishvili)
lives in a world controlled by security forces which she is understandably
suspicious of, having lost her father to its strict regime. When Abigail
discovers that her long-lost father (played by British actor, Eddie Marsan) may
be still alive through clues that he left her, she pairs up with the rebellious
figures in town to try and find a way past the quarantine walls.
Within the plot
description on the back of the Blu-ray release, it is made clear that beyond the
walls is a magical world that has remained hidden from most within the
quarantine, though the plot takes a painfully long time to actually get to that
point. This is the type of film that doesn’t progress the story very quickly,
mostly preoccupied with the presentation of spectacle. And even that has some
emptiness to it, because while the action scenes are filled with breathtaking
cinematography and extremely competent visual effects, the acting feels like it
was done by models. They may look pretty when standing still, but any attempt
at dialogue or action choreography is stiff and unconvincing. In other words,
the emperor has no clothes.
Even with some
unconvincing casting choices which seem only interested in the surface-level
appearances, Abigail had potential in
the production design. This may have still been a film entertaining to at least
captivate the YA audiences, if it weren’t for the disastrous decision to dub
the actors. Clearly attempting to capitalize on western audiences, the
filmmakers of Abigail instead made a
film that feels like it is for nobody. I’m sure Russian audiences would likely
rather see the film in their own language (and not just dubbed with it), and
American audiences haven’t accepted dubbing since the days of bad kung-fu and
spaghetti western releases. I’m afraid the filmmakers over-estimated the
ignorance of American audiences, particularly in a year when a foreign film won
the highest prize (and many others) at the Academy Awards.
The visual
effects used to show the magical abilities of its characters are actually quite
effective, and this is only enhanced by the Blu-ray disc’s high definition presentation.
Unfortunately, that is the only thing the disc has to offer. There are no
extras, on or off the discs. I would have liked even a simple featurette to
better understand what the filmmakers were thinking when they made these decisions.
Entertainment Value:
4/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 5/10
Historical
Significance: 3/10
Special Features: 0/10
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