A Wrinkle in Time movie review (2018) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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A Wrinkle in Time movie review (2018) | Roger Ebert (1)

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"A Wrinkle In Time," about three children and three magical beings trying to locate a missing physicist and stop evil from overwhelming the universe, is as dislocated from the current moviegoing moment as its human heroes are from their lives back on earth. It's a gentle fantasy, seemingly pitched at younger children, that would rather take people by the hand than punch them on the shoulder, and that's a good thing; in fact, it's the wellspring of the movie's best qualities. There's a lot here that feels insufficiently shaped or fitfully realized, but at the same time, there's a lot to like. It's the Platonic ideal of a mixed bag. The newness of the new parts counterbalances the ineffectiveness of the stuff that seemingly every fantasy blockbuster does, and that this one doesn't do well. "A Wrinkle in Time" has zero interest in seeming cool, and in its final third, it ramps up the sentiment into a zone that most big-budget movies don't dare enter in the era of irony and "grittiness."

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The story begins with Meg Murry (Storm Reid) and her six-year-old adopted brother Charles Wallace (Deric McCabe), and their scientist mother Kate (Gugu Mbatha-Raw)in a state of mourning over the disappearance of the family patriarch, Alex Murry (Chris Pine). The family was baffled by his sudden vanishing, but it turns out to be connected to his research (with Kate) into tesseracts, a phenomenon that allows for the folding of space and time. With help from three magical beings, the goofball Mrs. Whatsit (Reese Witherspoon), the regal Mrs. Which (Oprah Winfrey) and the wise Mrs. Who (Mindy Kaling), the kids leave their world to find Alex, bringing Meg's crush object, Levi Miller's Calvin O'Keefe, along with them. As they travel to a series of galactic locales to free Alex from the grip of dark forces, young Charles Wallace, a prodigy who at times evokes that little kid from "Looper" with the thundercloud eyes, undergoes a terrifying change.

The film's tone is so radically earnest at certain points—particularly when it's dealing with loss and disappointment—that the movie's logo could be a gigantic ear of corn. In its multicultural casting, its child-centric story, and its emphasis on the validity of feelings, it's so different from every other recent big-budget live-action fantasy (superhero films included) that its very existence amounts to a contrarian statement. Much of the emotional heavy lifting is done by the daughter-father team of Reid and Pine. Pine has stealthily become one of the most versatile leading men in American movies, and one of the few who can channel that old-fashioned, George-Bailey-having-a-breakdown-at-the-bar brand of emotionally vulnerable masculinity without seeming as if he's just doing a bit. Like the rest of the core cast, he's doing old-movie style, just-plant-your-feet-and-say-the-lines acting that seems to be pretending that the Method never happened. Reid in particular is quite good at this; some of the notes she strikes early on reminded me of Elizabeth Taylor in "National Velvet" in their near-theatricality, but in a scene with Pine near the end, the facade drops, and it's devastating. You think about how strong this girl had to pretend to be, how impervious to pain, and how it was all for show: a survival mechanism.

The problem is that the minute the film earns our trust and guides us into the story, what it has to show us isn't all that remarkable: mostly a lot of nondescript glittering/pulsing/stretching/bursting CGI, of the sort that you'd see in a substandard Marvel film (there's even a creature that looks like a flying cabbage leaf). This is made impressive more by the characters' reactions than to anything that's onscreen. It also suffers from trying to do too much in its relatively slight 109-minute running time (the source novel Madeline L'Engle has been considered un-adaptable since its first publication in 1962, so it's possible that even a miniseries might've had issues; the 2003 TV movie was a train wreck). And there are times when director Ava DuVernay ("Selma") and screenwriters Jennifer Lee and Jeff Stockwellhave trouble smoothly shifting between the film's various modes, which run the gamut from doomed love story to coming-of-age romance to knockabout comedy to high-minded philosophical odyssey. I wish that DuVernay had given Pine and Mbatha-Raw more scenes. And I wish she'd asked more of Winfrey, who's effortlessly regal but doesn't do much here besides make pronouncements; Kaling, a charming presence who's stuck in a part with dialogue consisting entirely of quotes by great poets and thinkers; and Witherspoon, who's agreeably dotty but never ascends to that Glinda, Good Witch of the North plane she could easily reach were she so inclined. But this is more a matter of wishing the film had done more of what it was doing already than wishing it had done something else.

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"A Wrinkle in Time"arrives in theaters during the same week that U.S. viewers observed the 50th anniversary of the premiere of "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood,"a beloved series that was all about respecting the space, the wishes, and the feelings of others. There are many points in "A Wrinkle in Time"where the characters' journeys suggest a big-budget CGI version of that show's regular excursions into "The Neighborhood of Make-Believe," a world in which kindhearted children and adults havepoker-faced conversations about insecurity, loneliness, anger, and other mental states openly, amongst themselves and with sock puppets, then return to the "real" world and watch a musical performance or visit a harmonica factory.

In that spirit, Mrs. Whatsit just shows up in the family's house, less like a real-life neighbor than a scatterbrained wood sprite from a Disney Channel cartoon, and the mom is the only character who seems shocked. Mrs. Which is a 40-foot tall shimmering apparition looming over a backyard during her first appearance, and the onlookers seem more intrigued than terrified by her, as if this kind of thing happens a lot. Meg asks her new maybe-beau Calvin to join her in her time-space journey, and he agrees as readily as if she'd asked him to join her on a walk to the local 7-Eleven. It's the kind of movie where you decide to do something and just go do it, and where no questions are off limits because everyone's so thoughtful. I bet Mister Rogers would have enjoyed it.

If you laughed derisively at that line, you shouldn't see "A Wrinkle in Time." If it made you smile, go.

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Film Credits

A Wrinkle in Time movie review (2018) | Roger Ebert (9)

A Wrinkle in Time (2018)

Rated PGfor thematic elements and some peril.

109 minutes

Cast

Oprah Winfreyas Mrs. Which

Reese Witherspoonas Mrs. Whatsit

Mindy Kalingas Mrs. Who

Storm Reidas Margaret "Meg" Murry

Zach Galifianakisas The Happy Medium

Chris Pineas Dr. Alexander "Alex" Murry

Gugu Mbatha-Rawas Dr. Katherine "Kate" Murry

Michael Peñaas The Man with Red Eyes

Levi Milleras Calvin O'Keefe

Deric McCabeas Charles Wallace Murry

André Hollandas Principal Jenkins

Director

  • Ava DuVernay

Writer (based upon the novel by)

  • Madeleine L'Engle

Writer

  • Jennifer Lee

Writer

  • Jeff Stockwell

Cinematographer

  • Tobias A. Schliessler

Editor

  • Spencer Averick

Composer

  • Ramin Djawadi

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A Wrinkle in Time movie review (2018) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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A Wrinkle in Time movie review (2018) | Roger Ebert? ›

There's a lot here that feels insufficiently shaped or fitfully realized, but at the same time, there's a lot to like. It's the Platonic ideal of a mixed bag. The newness of the new parts counterbalances the ineffectiveness of the stuff that seemingly every fantasy blockbuster does, and that this one doesn't do well.

What is the message of the movie A Wrinkle in Time? ›

Meg is guided by a trio of guardian angels collectively called “the Mrs.” The book, and the movie, is about what it means to be a source of light in a world in which darkness seems only to proliferate. It also makes the case for thinking independently when conformity is the norm.

Is A Wrinkle in Time a good movie? ›

A Wrinkle in Time is visually gorgeous, big-hearted, and occasionally quite moving; unfortunately, it's also wildly ambitious to a fault, and often less than the sum of its classic parts.

Were Siskel and Ebert friends? ›

After Siskel's death, Ebert reminisced about their close relationship saying: Gene Siskel and I were like tuning forks, Strike one, and the other would pick up the same frequency. When we were in a group together, we were always intensely aware of one another.

How accurate is A Wrinkle in Time movie to the book? ›

Ava DuVernay's new movie adaptation of A Wrinkle in Time is largely faithful to the book, sometimes in delightful ways only super fans will notice — Meg's bedroom is still in the attic, for example, and the kids meet Mrs. Whatsit on a "dark and stormy night," in a nod to the book's opening sentence.

What is the controversy over A Wrinkle in Time? ›

The reasons A Wrinkle in Time has been banned are generally focused primarily on its religious elements. Many objected to a scene where Jesus, Ghandi, Einstein, and Buddha are described as leaders who have been fighting the Black Thing. Many Christians felt the scene equated Jesus to the others.

What is the main lesson of A Wrinkle in Time? ›

The moral lesson of A Wrinkle in Time is that good can triumph over evil. The novel urges courageous action in the face of difficult situations, giving the example of Meg, who recognizes her own flaws and insecurities but acts anyway to save her brother Charles Wallace.

What is the main problem in A Wrinkle in Time? ›

One of the major conflicts in A Wrinkle in Time is the conflict between good vs. evil. This conflict is illustrated when Charles Wallace becomes entranced and under the control of IT.

Why did Wrinkle in Time flop? ›

The movie made $33.3 million on a $103 million budget, which means it will probably break even at best. The poor box office result may be because of problems with the movie itself, marketing, and difficulty with fantasy films. Regardless, the movie is an incredible achievement — even if it doesn't entirely work.

What grade level is A Wrinkle in Time? ›

This book's Lexile measure is 740L and is frequently taught in the 6th to 8th grade. Students in these grades should be reading texts that have reading demand of 925L through 1185L to be college and career ready by the end of Grade 12.

How old was Siskel when he died? ›

Siskel died at a hospital in Evanston, Illinois, on February 20, 1999, nine months after his diagnosis and surgery; he was 53 years old.

How old was Ebert when he died? ›

On April 4, 2013, one of America's best-known and most influential movie critics, Roger Ebert, who reviewed movies for the Chicago Sun-Times for 46 years and on TV for 31 years, dies at age 70 after battling cancer.

What happened to Ebert and Siskel? ›

The two remained a powerhouse pairing until Siskel died of brain cancer in 1999. He was just 53-years-old at the time. Ebert continued the show with guests hosts, and eventually fellow Sun-Times critic Richard Roeper. He continued to write movie reviews until his death of complications with cancer in 2013 at age 70.

What is the black thing in the wrinkle in time movie? ›

The Black Thing is the overarching antagonist of the Time Quintet series, appearing in the novel A Wrinkle in Time and the 2018 film of the same name. Nothing is known about the Black Thing, other than it is a cosmic force as well as the incarnation of evil, and is insinuated to be It's master.

Why was A Wrinkle in Time rejected? ›

Publication history

Upon completion in 1960, the novel was rejected by at least 26 publishers, because it was, in L'Engle's words, "too different," and "because it deals overtly with the problem of evil, and it was really difficult for children, and was it a children's or an adults' book, anyhow?"

Is A Wrinkle in Time hard to understand? ›

Neither characters nor readers ever know everything about what's going on, like why Meg has to be the one to confront IT and why exactly her powerful friends can't help her out or be straight with her. So A Wrinkle in Time is also part mystery, a difficult book for and about difficult children.

What is the main idea of the wrinkle in time? ›

Themes in A Wrinkle in Time

Meg and her friends discover their special skills and traits. They use them as their greatest assets to combat evil. With that, the moral of the story is to cherish individuality and embrace one's unique identity and abilities.

What is the true meaning of A Wrinkle in Time? ›

The tesseract, a method of traveling rapidly through time and space by creating a “wrinkle” in time, represents freedom, discovery, and the joys and dangers of the unknown.

What is the point of view of A Wrinkle in Time? ›

A Wrinkle in Time is written in the third person point of view with a narrator who is not one of the main characters. However, the narrator sticks close to Meg Murry in the story, so the reader always knows what Meg is doing and thinking.

What is a simple summary of A Wrinkle in Time? ›

Combining theology, fantasy, and science, it is the story of travel through space and time to battle a cosmic evil. With their neighbour Calvin O'Keefe, young Meg Murry and her brother Charles Wallace embark on a cosmic journey to find their lost father, a scientist studying time travel.

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