Labyrinth
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Author: David Litton
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Posted to Movie Eye: 3/26/2003
Film Release Date: 6/27/1986
Rated: PG
Length: 101 minutes
Produced by: Eric Rattray
Directed by: Jim Henson
Cast: David Bowie, Jennifer Connelly, Toby Froud, Shelley Thompson, Christopher Malcom
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Distributor: TriStar Pictures

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Critic's Grade: D-



With "Labyrinth," Jim Henson takes us back into the previously-explored territory of "The Dark Crystal" with an equally stunning array of vivid creature creations saddled with a lame, sub-par plot and weak characterization that falls flat on its face every step of the way. The story begins with an imaginative young girl named Sarah (a young Jennifer Connelly), who spends her afternoons daydreaming and wishing for a life filled with fantasy and adventure. She gets her wish when one night, she becomes fed up with her infant brother and pleads with the supposedly-imaginary goblins to take him away; soon after, Jareth (David Bowie), the king of a world infested with mystical beings and places, kidnaps the child, and Sarah must follow him back to his labyrinth and solve its mysteries before her brother becomes one of Jareth's goblins.

The story is pretty ho-hum, even for the standards of the fantasy genre; we've seen better before, in films like Wolfgang Petersen's "The Neverending Story," or Ron Howard's "Willow," released two years later in 1988. Again, Henson's craft is put to good use here on a visual level, with such inventive settings as the Bog of Eternal Stench, or the numerous goblins and animals that Sarah encounters on her journey. But we never really care for the characters, especially Sarah: in fact, she quickly becomes annoying and shrill, and Connelly buries the whole coming-of-age concept in an unconvincing performance that is forced and painful. And why, why oh why, does David Bowie have to sing as well? Is he not weird enough, people? I'm sure there are those out there with fond memories of "Labyrinth;" I'll be lucky if I don't suffer from constant nightmares for the rest of my waning days.

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