This skewed version of Disney's "Not your normal princess" trope is another high quality Hulu original from 20th Century Studios that should have gone to ...
That it’s arriving courtesy of a once-independent studio now trapped in a tower by Walt Disney makes its existence a grim irony. Yes, The Predator was a bomb in 2018, but it cost too much ($88 million) so its $159 million global gross made it a failure compared to Predators ($127 million on a $40 million budget in 2010). While I’m not going to argue that The Princess is “the movie we need right now,” there's an undercurrent of rage and despair over how a society that devalues women leads to circumstances of this nature. Debuting today on Hulu, 20th Century Studio’s The Princess is such a winning concept (“Die Hard, with a princess trapped in a tower”) that I am somewhat shocked it took until 2022 to exist as a movie. Yes, it’s 1.5 hours of “Joey King plays a morally justified princess who kills bad guys in violent and creative ways,” but it works as sold like gangbusters. As with Mera in Brave, King’s protagonist (Joey King) comes to blows with her parents over refusing to wed a power-hungry suitor (Domenic Cooper), but this film doesn’t try to “both sides” the notion of forced marriage.
The action here, directed by Le-Van Kiet, is reasonably entertaining, but everything that's hung on that skeleton feels remarkably thin.
Kiet makes a drastic structural mistake in “The Princess” by intercutting between his title character’s bloody rampage and flashbacks to how she got there, including training in the martial arts and swordfighting. If only this film was confident enough to really give her one. The King, Queen, and most of the citizens of the Kingdom are being held captive by Julius, his partner Moira ( Olga Kurylenko), and their incredibly incompetent soldiers. A script like this needs to either set things up with rich, detailed characters or ignore that altogether and focus only on action. That’s the basic theme of Hulu’s “The Princess” spoken aloud by its villain, a monstrous figure named Julius ( Dominic Cooper). The script here by Ben Lustig and Jake Thornton has a habit of speaking its own themes aloud with blunt dialogue that’s often so on-the-nose that it verges on parody. (I did wonder if there's a more pure version that isn't written by two men and directed by another.) The action here, directed by Le-Van Kiet, is reasonably entertaining, but everything that’s hung on that skeleton feels remarkably thin.
Joey King stars as fantasy-adventure royalty so fun in combat she rises above the hyper-simplicities of her fight. NOW STREAMING: ...
And don’t forget the principal duo of King’s Princess and her mentor Linh ( Veronica Ngo, steely and formidable). For the latter, Linh is a great follow up after her turn as Da 5 Bloods’ Hanoi Hannah; not only does she get to flaunt more of her dramatic chops in English (on top of literal chops), she’s also the answer to why The Princess is the person she is right now. What spares the film from diminishing returns is director Le-Van Kiet’s deft command of action; as seen in his 2019 Vovinam-driven Hai Phượng (Furie), he understands that the genre works because of how bodies in the frame can move, more than how often the editor can zip to different angles. This structure, which plants milestones in each fighting arena, is very video game-like in design, complementary to the “vessel for action” formula of John Wick and xXx (of which executive producers Derek Kolstad and Neal H. Moritz were respectively a part). As a result, the film won’t tax you much, if at all, on The Princess’ path to becoming a skillful butt-kicker. Sometimes the geography changes drastically, for The Princess shall Ghost Protocol her way to a window or Villainess herself to another floor. Much like the real world, The Princess’ lilac-hued fantasy kingdom, which doesn’t elaborate on its whereabouts (despite hints of bagpipes, hurdy-gurdys and kattajaq in composer Natalie Holt’s rousing score), a woman’s words and pleas are destined for deaf ears.
Its fairy-tale tropes could make it look like a Disney film from a distance — and the fact that Disney acquired it, and is releasing it on Disney Plus outside ...
Both of those characters are worlds more nuanced and interesting than the headstrong princess who doesn’t want an arranged marriage, but they’re relegated to background roles. Why does he need the princess to marry him, when he has the power to just seize the throne? It’s intrinsically satisfying to see a fantasy princess in a ripped, bloody wedding dress, stabbing the men who seek to control her. She doesn’t hesitate to plunge her sword into her assailants, and she doesn’t mull over whether killing makes her just as bad as her captors. As revenge, Julius captured the royal family and locked the princess in the tower to force her to marry him so he can take over the throne. But it’s actually a 20th Century Studios title, an R-rated killer-combat film that lets the unnamed princess at its center do serious, bloody damage.
Bloody Hulu original "The Princess" rejects the idea that medieval heroines need a man to rescue them, kicking back at the Disney formula.
By the end of the first scene, King’s as bloody as Bruce Willis was in “Die Hard,” which is this by-no-means-dainty movie’s way of saying that she sustains damage but doesn’t let that slow her down. But now that his kingdom has been invaded by the brutal Lord Julius (a dastardly Dominic Cooper) and whip-wielding right-hand woman Moira (Kurylenko), he will be glad the princess took “Atomic Blonde” lessons instead, learning how to dispatch a stairway full of goons in a single take. She’s kicking back at the entire medieval patriarchy, such that the movie’s idea of a happy ending isn’t a royal wedding but a gigantic funeral. A smarter script would’ve found ways to work a historical critique (or some “Shrek”-like satire, at least) into its relatively brainless string of set-pieces. Played by “The Kissing Booth” star Joey King as an anything-but-passive heroine, the movie’s anonymous eponymous protagonist isn’t a proper character so much as a one-dimensional empowerment symbol: “The Princess” represents the antithesis of every fairy-tale damsel who sat around waiting to be whisked away or married off. The rickety old Brit could barely throw a punch, and half the time, when Moore was supposed to be sky jumping or skiing, he was clearly pantomiming against a rear-projection screen.
This week sees the premiere of The Princess, the “Rapunzel meets The Raid” action film starring Joey King on Hulu, as well as the streaming premiere of ...
On a moral level, however — and this is very much a morality play in the guise of a contained, pressure-cooker thriller — it’s about weighing your responsibility to yourself and your family against your responsibility to society. The film follow three distinct eras of Jane’s life as an unexpected turn of events sets her on a journey to become a writer. Re-edited for television in the 1960s by Roger Corman, and infamously riffed on in an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000, this new version of the original film has been restored in 4K from the original 35mm negative. Akin to Edgar Wright’s 2013 film The World’s End, Blasted appears to tackle similar subject matter with regard to its themes of lifelong friendship, maturity, and arrested development. This is certainly Edgar Wright at his Edgar Wright-iest, but even as he’s arguing against celebrating the past in Last Night in Soho, he’s celebrating it himself, in ways that are hard to escape, and at times, harder still to enjoy. Joey King (The Kissing Booth) stars in Le-Van Kiet’s “Rapunzel meets The Raid” action movie as a strong-willed princess who, after refusing to marry the cruel suitor to whom she is betrothed, is abducted and locked away in a remote tower of her father’s castle.
Joey King is credible and compelling as a vengeful would-be princess bride in this over-the-top action fantasy tale.
Long takes highlight both King’s gumption (as when she somersaults back and forth over a card table to dispatch a trio of goons) and the admirably creative fight choreography by Stanimir Stamatov and Samuel Kefi Abrikh, which emphasizes quick-thinking defensive moves that make use of found objects — hairpins, pearls, heads of lettuce — to parry swords, axes, chains, whips and helmets with sharp horns. Her highness must fight her way downstairs to defeat her naysayer, including a tyrannical fiancé (Dominic Cooper), his cruel consort (Olga Kurylenko) and the princess’s own father (Ed Stoppard), a hapless weakling who believes he can combat fascism with calm and sensible reason. Clearly, the classic genre that galvanizes Kiet and the screenwriters Ben Lustig and Jake Thornton doesn’t hark back to ye olde European fairy tales but rather to the feminist revenge thrillers of the 1970s: works of exploitation and wuxia cinema where warrior women stuck it to the man.
This review of the Hulu film The Princess (2022) does not contain spoilers. Joey King is a young actress with a built-in audience, and for the most part,
(Like most of these films that lock away women, they make sure to lock her away with only the best views the kingdom has to offer). From there, it is a chase to escape the clutches of the evil heir and save her family. This is a function of the writing that I like to classify as a videogame script. With the approval of her mother, the Queen (Alex Reid), the Princess refuses to marry Julius, which causes him to lock her at the top of the remote tower. Her trainer is Linh (Ngô Thanh Vân), who teaches her how to fight with a sword and her mind. King plays The Princess, an unbreakable young woman who is trying desperately to fall hardbitten to male toxicity. Her hair is matted, she is sweaty and bleeding, and according to a simple Google search, she did 85% to 90% of her stunts.
This dumb elevator pitch gag of a Hulu movie — starring Joey King and Dominic Cooper — has the aura of an intrusive thought.
Or, in the case of The Princess, it can be turned into an affirmation of the current order, which is apparently perfectly fine aside from the need for a lady royal atop the throne of whatever theme park monarchy the movie’s barely managed to come up with. The Princess would clearly like to be seen in the bruising recent tradition of David Leitch-adjacent movies like the John Wicks, Atomic Blonde, and Nobody, but is more slapdash in its construction, striving for longer takes while pulling its punches in combat. Our attachment to this increasingly vague concept, fueled heavily by Disney’s branding and the eternal appeal of a flouncy frock, has landed us in the empowerment dead-end of The Princess, whose main character attempts to prove that women are just as deserving as men when it comes to inheriting power due entirely to the circumstances of their birth.
Joey King stars as The Princess in Hulu's new action film about a nameless heroine that has to fight her way out of a dangerous situation.
Maybe The Princess could have been the battle cry that people need right now to fight against patriarchal oppression, but alas it has no idea how to shed the narrow-minded ideas of how to flip the script on all of these tropes. If you’re looking for a shallow action film with some vague notion that it’s a historical fantasy, that sees a nameless heroine behead toxic masculinity incarnate, then The Princess is the film for you. Despite the shallow chaos that serves as a plot, Joey King delivers a solid performance with what little she is given to work with. Every character in the film is given a name, except for its supposed heroine who is just “The Princess.” Many well-meaning writers presume that by opting not to name their female protagonists, they are somehow calling attention to and underscoring the importance of a name. Ultimately this misplaced white knighting of the female empowerment fantasy is likely due to The Princess being penned by two men and directed by a third, Le-Van Keit. It’s frustrating that the screenwriters seem convinced that this is the answer to a long line of badass Disney princesses that weren’t badass enough in their minds. After decades of moviegoers begging studios to create female characters that were afforded the same well-rounded storytelling as their masculine counterparts, Hollywood finally answered the call by creating the caricature of personality that is now known as a “strong female character.” These characters don’t necessarily seek to defy the binary in any meaningful way; they still actively lean into the stereotypes that have grated on nerves for years.
Hulu's 'The Princess' Follows a “Badass” Version of Rapunzel on a Quest for Vengeance · Joey King plays a “beautiful, strong-willed princess” with a plight ...
In a recent interview with Screen Rant, Ben and Jake explained that they were inspired by the idea of Rapunzel as an action star. Turns out, Joey King’s character in the film, simply called The Princess, is inspired by a fairytale character, not a real-life figure. The new movie is a royal mess, critics say.
When Princess Diana attended a special performance at the Melbourne Concert Hall in 1983, it all went to plan for organisers — except for one thing.
It was about Melbourne having a venue — and a bathroom — fit for royalty, something the city didn't have previously. For Ms Funder, the story of Princess Diana and the bathroom "symbolises so much more" than just bathroom business. "They took her back to the public foyers to use the public toilet, and cleared out the audience in there," she said. "The toilet was made specifically for Princess Diana to enjoy," Ms Whitby said. "It was a venue Melbourne never had before in the tradition of Broadway and the West End." "I was in the Melbourne youth choir and we were singing with Marcia Hynes," she said.