Review: 'The Nutcracker and the Four Realms' Is a Delightful Film for this Holiday Season

Toni Gangi ’21 / Emertainment Monthly Staff Writer
Missing the worlds of Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland and the Narnia series? Love beautiful music, incredible sets, and gorgeous costumes? Disney’s new feature The Nutcracker and the Four Realms is a wonderfully fun film to kick off the holiday season, combining elements of fantasy and girl power in the best ways. The film incorporates all the iconic aspects of the original story and ballet an audience could ask for, portraying them beautifully while still managing to interpret them in a fresh way.
The film’s heroine is Clara Stahlbaum (Mackenzie Foy), a young girl attending her godfather Drosselmeyer’s (Morgan Freeman) Christmas Eve party along with her father (Matthew Macfadyen) and siblings. They are all feeling out of sorts and not quite in the Christmas spirit since Clara’s mother (Anna Madeley) has just recently passed away. Just before the party, Clara’s father gives each of his three children one last gift from their mother. Clara receives an intricately decorated silver egg but it is locked and there is no key to go with it.
Upon entering the world, Clara’s key is stolen by a small mouse who quickly runs away with it. While in pursuit of the mouse and her key, she meets a nutcracker named Captain Philip Hoffman (Jayden Fowora-Knight) who has vowed to protect the realms and, as she is a princess, will help Clara in whatever she needs. The mouse has run into a grim-looking land and Clara wants to follow but Philip is wary, saying it is a dangerous area. Still, they go and encounter the frightening Mouse King (Lil Buck) as well as the even more fearsome Mother Ginger (Helen Mirren).
Sugar Plum takes Clara under her wing as she adjusts to being the princess of this strange new land. She dolls her up (no pun intended) in a dress and hairdo fit for a queen before they attend a ballet performed by a Ballerina Princess (Misty Copeland) that, according to Sugar Plum, tells the story of the Four Realms. It begins with the wonders that Marie created and ends with the fear Mother Ginger instilled. Sugar Plum shows Clara her mother’s invention but it is not working. Clara realizes that it is powered by the same key as her silver egg. She dons a nutcracker-esque military uniform and takes on the role of the princess by commanding a small army through the Fourth Realm to confront Mother Ginger and take back her mother’s key. Not everything is at it seems, however, and Clara must figure out who is trustworthy, who is not, and which course of action her mother would’ve wanted her to take.
Each character is wonderfully interesting, if sometimes underused, especially in the cases of Mother Ginger and Philip. Clara is an excellent character for younger girls of today to look up to and watch and Foy plays her very well. She is allowed to be inventive, clever, angry, apologetic, naive, and curious. She apologizes when she is wrong, is open to advice from friends, and takes charge without question when she knows she must do so. Keira Knightley as Sugar Plum is charming, funny, and compelling in a role unlike anything she’s ever done before and Helen Mirren somehow embodies both motherly-ness and fierceness in Mother Ginger. Characters like Philip, Hawthorne, Shiver, and, to an extent, even Mother Ginger fall by the wayside in the story but they still serve to add to the sense of the world of the Four Realms.
Overall, the praises outweigh the complaints. Though it may not be completely perfect, it is still a holiday-themed, whimsical new film that all fantasy-lovers should see this winter. (And make sure to stay through the credits to see more of Misty Copeland!)
Overall Grade: A-
Watch The Trailer:
[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXfxLIuNJvw[/embedyt]