
Over the last decade or so, Hollywood movies have cannibalized just about every aspect of video games, whether it’s free-roaming cameras, huge boss-battle set-pieces or over-amped, bombastic action sequences, but formulaic action flick Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time manages to jack something you wouldn’t think a movie would ever touch: The tutorial.
Tutorial levels in games are a necessary evil, of use to those few people who have literally never played a game before and don’t know you look around with the right stick and move with the left. Prince of Persia treats its audience as if it has never seen a movie before, and must be led through the watching process slowly and laboriously.
Example: The scene where Jake Gylenhaal discovers the power of the Sands of Time of the title. He’s carrying a stolen dagger with a prominent red button on the top, (it looks a little like a PlayStation Move controller, actually). In the middle of a fight, Jake/Dastan presses the button, and, wham: Time goes backwards a few seconds. The audience buys this conceit instantly. It’s not complicated. But that isn’t enough for PoP director Mike Newell. He repeats the sequence of events again. Fine. Good. We get it. Then, Jake Gylenhall explains the powers of the dagger. “Did you just see that?” he asks. “I hit this button, and Time went backwards!” Then he repeats the thought. “Time totally went backwards! Whoa!” I expected him to turn to the audience and lecture us: “Does everyone get it? I hit the button and time goes backwards.”
The time-travel-dagger itself is an interesting game mechanic in Ubisoft’s 2003 Sands of Time game, but as the Macguffin at the center of a film, it doesn’t work that well. A device that can erase events makes for a fun game when you fall off a ledge and can reverse the mistake before you hit the lava, but in a movie, it makes an already light-weight plot utterly weightless. Who cares if someone dies when characters can just hit the mystical rewind button and bring them back?
Plotwise, it’s standard issue, dumb-summer movie story time: The Prince and his Brothers rule an empire, but are suckered by the most transparent political ploy in film history. The king's brother, a shaved and goateed Ben Kingsley as Nizam, plants some weapons to cause an invasion of an innocent, spiritual city. I’m honestly not sure if the revelation of Nizam's betrayal is meant to be a surprise or not: It’s telegraphed so blatantly by the movie’s earlier scenes – Kingsley practically twirls his mustache and cackles -- that when he turns out to be evil, everyone knew it was coming, even people who didn’t understand how the dagger works. Even people in other theaters, seeing different movies. Pro-tip for leaders of empires: Don’t trust royal advisors who look like Ming the Merciless from Flash Gordon.
Anyway, the Persians sack the peaceful city. Gemma Arterton meets Jake Gyllenhaal. The two handsome royals hate each other, fight over the magic dagger, begin to fall in love, lose the dagger, find the dagger again and otherwise move through a threadbare adventure plot toward a workaday showdown between Dastan and Nizam.
The plot only vaguely makes sense and the characters barely exist. In a game, you can get away with plot holes and stock characters, but here, since we’re not controlling the main character, we expect a little more than avatars moving from digital set piece to digital set piece.
The acting is fine -- Jake Gylenhall tries, and Ben Kingsley chews scenery -- but the characters are so empty, there’s nothing to grab onto here. Even the expensive special effects aren’t that special. They’re spotty. In some scenes, huge, sweeping vistas are created that seem utterly real, but in other scenes, simple animal effects look cheesy and fake.
Other than the tutorial, this movie takes little from the video game. The main character’s skill at jumping around is intact, as is the setting, but Prince of Persia is more heavily indebted to the adventure epics of the 1950s than the video game. The film works, fleetingly, when it takes the anything-goes vibe of those old sword and sandal flicks and mixes in the joy of the Prince’s Persian Parkour, but the movie is so dumbed down and over-explained, that even the nutty joy that might be derived from the Prince’s frantic motion is quickly deadened by an over-reliance on digital effects, stupid and shallow characters and a boring plot.
Gamers: This is not the video game movie you are looking for. While it does nothing to actively destroy the Prince of Persia game franchise, even as mindless summer time fare, Prince of Persia: Sands of Time is a failure. It's a little like The Mummy, without the heart and soul.




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Hazerdhat
I dont think G4 likes any movies. I love you G4 but I think if a movie is not aimed towards a nerdy audience then you automaticly declare it bad. It is a summer movie that is aimed towards everyone and wont be inclined towards that audience. So I will listen to you guys on video games because that is what you specialize in, but nothing else since you guys probably have no idea what you are talking about. I swear if you guys like the "world of warcraft" movie then that is proof.
bigbluectc
Big surprise here. A negative review of a movie. honestly c'mon stephen johnson why do you and all other movie critics have to pick out every little flaw and belittle movies and actors. It's worse than video games! I mean just because movies have been around forever does that mean people are better critics when reviewing a movie because videogames do not get this much crap. I might seem simple, but I rarely find a movie bad. I loved Terminator: Salvation and Transformers 2 and GI Joe because they entertained me. Yes I saw the flaws in them (especially GI Joe the 2nd time) but I still really enjoyed them. If I take movies too seriousely, like most critics do, then yes, I would be able to- WANT TO-weed out all of the negatives. Why can't the industry just say "Yes this was fun to watch for two hours."??? You can call me a simpleton, but I just want to be entertained and don't care about if you become attatched to the characters or has "heart and soul" (Seriousely Stevy, The Mummy?) Movies in which I truly LOVE have those things, but they're are extremely rare and I'm picky. For example I love Armegeddon, but I'd really like to see Prince of Persia because it looks cool and a good review should simply state (after all of the goods and bads) whether it was fun to watch. There you go. I just felt that this movie was awesome when I saw it and question the critics when they say otherwise and talk about minor faults. By the way I HATE Roger Ebert! he's too old to review movies like Fired Up. Ugh this world. Why can't the industry tone it down a noch. It seems like they're starting to get annoyed with how "bad" some things are. Loosen up because you should enjoy everything. BTW I do value your side of the argument and agree that this is not one sided and that I'm not hands down right. You do have the right to dislike things.
gambit1023
sorry for the double post
gambit1023
Come on...what did you expect?..first it's got jake gyllenhall as the hero playing a persian with what sounds like an english accent, second it's a jerry bruckheimer produced summer film. Were you really expecting a story and good preformances. Third it's a mike newell film...didn't anybody see how he butchered Goblet of Fire. It's movies like this that make me thank god for demonoid and a little frightened when they announce the Red Dead Redemption movie.
gambit1023
Come on...what did you expect?..first it's got jake gyllenhall as the hero playing a persian with what sounds like an english accent, second it's a jerry bruckheimer produced summer film. Were you really expecting a story and good preformances. Third it's a mike newell film...didn't anybody see how he butchered Goblet of Fire. It's movies like this that make me thank god for demonoid.
Swal
I don't know about you guys, but I never played a PoP game for the story in the first place.
prboi64
People are always expecting game movies to fail. 90 percent of people have extremely low expectations for game movies that they cloud there thoughts & they just pick out the bad instead of the good. This is the flaw with gaming sites reviewing game movies, they're always biased. Doom was an awesome movie, one of my favorites yet I saw bad review after bad review from game sites saying "it didn't stay true to the series." Please G4, don't be like everyone else, actually give some different perspectives. You must know that game movies can't be targeted especially at gamers, it has to broaden it's viewers in order to make more money.
Sinalve
If Disney is doing this then I expect the next Kingdom Hearts to have a Prince of Persia world in it.
masterfenix
Aww man, and to think this one was gonna actually be good, now I am gonna be stuck with having to see it friday cause I got my family interested in the movie
JMason1984
Meh, I'm just angered with the whitewashing in this film and "The Last Airbender" but besides that I wasn't expecting much from the movie. The movie seemed to be all about spectacle in the trailer with no substance or care about plot.
GatsuBlackSword
Can't be worse than Transformers 2.
KeithJ
The Mummy had heart and soul?
stiborge
To be honest I predicted this when I saw a commercial for Prince of Persia on one of my step-brother's Disney shows but I thought "we'll see." I'm probably still gonna see it, definitely not in the theater though.
Sage_Sakyia
I still wanna see it, it's one of those movies that's good as an action movie, but not so much as a game-to-movie..movie.
Stellerman7
Well...looks like the prince of persia series wasn't the one to end the streak of suck. Let's see who else attempts to claim the mantle.
NarutoTheSage
wow i knew they might say the movie might be bad screw yall if disney making the movie then i might watch it then looks good to me so shut up
DriveShaft48
I know it's not surprising, but a part of me was really hoping that this one would turn the tides of video game movies. :( oh well, I'm still gonna see it.
nmcdanel
If you want a video game buy a video game, but if you want to see a movie go see a movie. Give this a chance and pretend that you have never heard of the game. Stupid nerds!
Muggy
Prince Of Persia was a bad movie? Gasp, what a shocker!
BigDogW
Donnie Darko as Persian = Epic Fail
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