The Little Prince (2015) Review

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Back to my university year, the subject was Prose 2 when I first read Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s timeless Le Petit Prince a.k.a. The Little Prince. As far as I recall, it was an in-depth discussion of anxiety in children literature and my lecturer posed a hypothesis stating that different perception of reality projected by children and grown-ups becomes the “core of the anxiety” as portrayed in the novella.

A handful of adaptations has been made since its initial release in 1943—from the most faithful one to some deviant one—but the common consent never changes. There’s always been a nod to contrast perception between children vs. adult. Mark Osborne’s adaptation is no different; it’s a modern imagining of the classic; it’s not in a completely faithful mode; but it still got the spirit. 

Osborne’s Little Prince is more like an expansion of the classics. It doesn’t introduce audience to the titular prince in the first place, but an unnamed little girl (Mackenzie Foy or Clara Poincaré, depends on your version) living with an obsessed single mother (Rachel Mc Adams or  Florence Foresti). They have just moved to a new house neighboring to a quirky house of a quirky old man, which happens to be the old-guy version of the Aviator from the book (Jeff Bridges or André Dussollier), who would finally befriend the girl and open a new world for her—a world that most grown-ups have forgotten.

To be honest, the well-crafted plot presented in this movie is basically enticing until the most fundamental question emerges: “Who is the target audience?” For children, this Little Prince might look obscure although some visual spectacles might be wooing. The blending-in and juxtaposition of the original classic presented in beautiful stop-motion arts and the present story (of a little girl and the old man) are splendidly interwoven to bring up the main idea: to grow up without being like those square grown-ups. However, it might not get any perplexing for younger audience nor it gets digestible in a straight viewing.

Compared to the stop-motion, the traditional 3D animation often plays big, although most of it is not really eye-catching. What caught most is still the underlying philosophy—an ageless one, and surprisingly, the special bond between the Aviator and the little girl to juxtapose his bond with the Little Prince in the book. It’s also interesting how every piece of details of the titular book fits every aspect of the modern story, it’s very likable without trying so hard to be so.

The Little Prince is not beautiful because of its visuals nor its simplicity, but rather its philosophical elements wrapped in its warmth.

The Little Prince (2015)

a.k.a. Le Petit Prince

Animation, Drama, Fantasy Directed by: Mark Osborne Written by: Irena BrignullBob Persichetti based on a novella by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry Voiced by: Rachel McAdamsJeff BridgesPaul RuddMackenzie FoyMarion Cotillard (English Version); André DussollierFlorence ForestiClara Poincaré (French Version) Runtime: 108 mins

IMDb

8 responses

  1. I might give this one a go. I read the book in 6th grade and have never seen adaptations of it. This seems the most accessible for me so far. Good review.

    1. Thanks! I only watched one adaptation before it and it was a live-action. This one is not a straight adaptation, but really worth your time if you’re a reader 🙂

  2. So I recently finished reading Exupery’s book for zillion times and am just floored at how lame the film is in comparison with the book.
    So disappointing. They seem to have gone very far out of their way to sanitize the book, to remove anything that might be too philosophical and complex. And adult version of the prince? Worst idea ever!

    1. I can see your point, but wasn’t that just an expanded allegory of child vs grown-up? That’s what I humbly thought

      1. I didn’t really understand the book when I read it for the first time, and what it symbolized then. I was in 3rd grade. But, when I was older, that I understood how important this book was, and how remarkable the character of The Prince was. Which is why this film, is such a disappointment. If I must be honest, it should never have been made, for in this film, the shining beacon that is The Prince has been grossly tarnished. He has now grown old, bitter, and naive.

        Yes, I understand that people change. We all do. I understand that a “real world” can be so cruel and change people’s innocence, but that’s not the point. The point is that The Prince is such an outstanding figure that it feels wrong somehow to blacken his image. No pun intended.

  3. Alena Avatar

    Oh I loved his stories. 🙂

    1. Glad you loved that, too 😉

  4. […] Robin reminds me of the twist that Mark Osborne has done to Antoine de Saint-Exupery’s The Little Prince in 2015. At some points, the story development also has similarities to Mr. Holmes. However, if […]

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