Christophe Gans’s telling of Beauty and the Beast abounds in impersonal and unsatisfying sumptuousness.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Consequence of Sound by Clint Worthington
The chief appeal of Gans’ Beauty and the Beast is its sumptuous, ornate production and costume design, and the flamboyant glee with which Gans’ camera captures it all.
Los Angeles Times by Gary Goldstein
The film is most acceptable when it sticks to its beauty-and-beast dynamic. Even then it’s too dizzying and grandiose and the chemistry between the lead characters is pretty much nil.
There’s digital wizardry galore in this Beauty and the Beast, but precious little magic.
The A.V. Club by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
Without a poignant note or undercurrent of suggestion, it amounts to a world of effects, rather than a world of magic.
The choking pictorialism of the sets and CG backgrounds, coupled with the barely-there performances, contribute to an inescapable sense of lifelessness and sterility.
The Hollywood Reporter by Jordan Mintzer
Whenever the camera settles down to record a simple conversation between two characters, things suddenly feel stilted, as if the filmmakers cannot build the drama without flinging a hundred different things in front of the lens at the same time.
Gans isn’t especially concerned with the outcome this coupling, instead reveling in overwrought and often bloated storytelling, lush details and some of the year’s most unnerving CGI.
RogerEbert.com by Peter Sobczynski
The end result is a sturdy and frequently dazzling version of the material that should leave audiences swooning with delight.
Austin Chronicle by Steve Davis
Cassel’s feline visage, covered in a velvety layer of fur for most of the movie, doesn’t fare much better. At times, he resembles an angry cast member from Cats rather than the tormented fiend trying to find his human self once again. It’s beastly.