![]() ![]() ![]() That makes the new film feel less like an underdog story than a superhero tale, which reduces the tension. McQueen's take was less self-sacrificing, less shiny his rebellion was wisely not directly in his captors' faces, unlike Hunnam's. There's vulnerability in his long stretches of solitary confinement, but not that much. ![]() But the remake goes farther with the friendship, and Hunnam's take on Henri is more like Captain America than the Cooler King (McQueen's iconic Great Escapecharacter). So was the original, with both films exaggerating a less-significant relationship from the book to craft that relationship. The remake is about two things: Papillon's unbreakable will, and his friendship with Louis. Yet, while it steps up the bloody violence from the original, the new film also feels sanitized in a way. Danish director Michael Noer vividly conveys the movie's time and place and wisely casts charismatic collaborator Roland Moller in a key role as a fellow prisoner. Hunnam delivers his best performance to date as the titular Papillon, the indomitable prisoner with a superhuman will to survive. While it may fall under the category of "remakes no one was clamoring for," this new film is solidly made - while feeling simultaneously more brutal and more scrubbed. ![]()
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