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Pan’s Labyrinth (2006)

Written by Nick Da Costa | Thursday, March 6, 2008 |

Pan’s LabyrinthFawntastic. Oh dear it does happen. You get caught up in the magic of cinema and instead of heading your review with some clever and subtle line that will effortlessly lead the reader in, you instead blunder in with a pun. A kick to the balls bad one.

But it’s not difficult to be lost for words when caught up in such a wonderful film. Easily Guillermo Del Toro’s best film since The Devil’s Backbone, Pan’s Labyrinth envelops the audience in a similar realm of innocence and magic that the Japanese maestro Miyazaki has perfected.

It’s a welcomingly strange mix of simplistic, questing fairytale and dark, era drama as a little girl discovers wondrous things going on in the woods and ruins surrounding the home she now shares with her pregnant mother, and new father, a Captain in the fascist Franco army.

“I have a sort of a fetish for insects, clockwork, monsters, dark places, and unborn things.”

It’s an interesting quote by Del Toro, and shows perfectly the fascinations bled into the making of Pan’s Labyrinth. From the moment we meet our little protagonist, Sofia, brilliantly played by the precociously talented Ivana Baquero, there are these fetishist qualities at work on the path she walks, in the wind that blows through the trees and the first puzzle block she carefully places, starting her and us on this film’s dark road. It perfectly balances mirrored storylines that, almost like Alice and her looking glass, seem to co-exist and yet possibly not at all. Is the girl conjuring up the enigmatic faun that lurks in the labyrinth behind her new home? Are these quests she’s sent on an attempt to escape from the horrors she finds in the real world; preferring to face the new ones from her picture books?

Pan’s Labyrinth

You could say that as Sofia’s fantasy progresses the reality we see around her flexes in response. The villainous evil of her stepfather, Captain Vidal (Sergi Lopez), the kindness and courage of Mercedes (Maribel Verdu), the housekeeper and the beloved, yet doomed mother (Ariadna Gil); each mimicking fairytale archetypes. And just as Sofia wants to rebel against the oppression of young adulthood, the magic she realises is lost in her own mother, Mercedes and the rebels in the forest wish to rebel against the oppression of fascism. In fact, though Pan and his followers seem bestial, this is simply the wood limbed primacy of nature, the fecundity and grotesqueness of childbirth. This is not the bestiality seen in Captain Vidal, a man swallowed up by a malignant ideology. It’s a fine performance by Lopez; gripping in his intensity and a perfect balance to the wide-eyed innocence of Baquero.

With the help of production designer Eugenio Caballero and the superb cinematographer Guillermo Navarro, del Toro uses puppets, prosthetics and CGI to conjure up a living, breathing world of dark, eldritch magic where Sofia encounters the familiar bilious yellows of the Giant Toad and the spasming evil of the child-eating ‘Pale Man’. It is only in this world that she can finally exert some control and conjure up a little bit of hope for us all.

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