Reign of Fire

 Review

Common Sense Media says

Plodding sci-fi dragon disaster tale is OK for older kids.
greenON: Content is age-appropriate for kids this age.
yellowPAUSE: Know your child; some content
may not be right for some kids.
redOFF: Not age-appropriate for kids this age.
not for kidsNOT FOR KIDS: Not appropriate for kids any age.

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Quality
 
Sometimes media can be age appropriate but a real waste of time. Our star rating assesses the media's overall quality.

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Parents say

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Kids say

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What parents need to know

Parents need to know that violence in this monster flick includes the mother of a little boy being killed, non-graphically, by fire-breathing dragons. Deaths are not very bloody -- usually characters enveloped in CGI flames, eaten in one gulp by dragons, or falling. There is occasional swearing, smoking, and drinking.

  • Quinn overcomes his personal terrors (a childhood trauma in which he saw his mum killed) to return to the dragon's lair in London and triumph. Sub-theme about how a modern society might resemble a medieval one if some disaster causes civilization's collapse.
  • Quinn is evidently a reluctant leader, though he seems to have better ideas than his American visitors about how to handle the dragon crisis.
  • Non-explicit scenes of people killed by being engulfed in flames, falling from great heights, or snatched up in dragon jaws. One human-against-human fistfight. Dragons also shot at and killed.
  • Birds-and-bees talk about how dragons breed (about as explicit and realistic as claiming the stork is involved).
  • "A-hole," "wanker," "bitch," "hell."
  • Names of major news magazines.  A Reign of Fire video game exists. The plotline cleverly insinuates references to The Lion King and Star Wars, as today's movie blockbusters turn into the fairy tales of a movie-less future world.
  • Cigarette and cigar smoking, macho and celebratory drinking of liquor.

What's the story?

As every kid knows, in typical creature-feature there's usually the threat that if a particular giant lizard, monster spider, or ravenous alien isn't eliminated it will reproduce and destroy the world. REIGN OF FIRE is a rare monster movie that actually takes things to that conclusion: 21st-century mankind learned a hard lesson that flying, fire-breathing dragons are no myth but a voracious species that periodically emerges from hibernation, swarms, and scorches the whole planet (killing the dinosaurs was their doing), then goes back underground for thousands of years. Here, in what's left of England in 2020, huddled survivors are led by Quinn (Christian Bale), who, as a boy, witnessed the dragons re-emerge from a London cave. Unexpectedly, Quinn's stronghold gets visitors, American soldiers led by brawny Van Zant (Matthew McConaughey), who claims to have mastered the art of slaying dragons. Van Zant jeopardizes Quinn's colony by demanding they join his troops in a suicidal march on London against the chief "bull" dragon.


Is it any good?

 

Even with the non-standard approach to a monster-on-the-loose formula, this flick somehow falls flat. Maybe it's just the ultra-serious way thinly-drawn characters approach a comic-bookish premise, or the sense that we've missed the real story -- the rise of the dragons -- and are left with a plodding anticlimax -- an oh-please finale in which ragged characters with bows and arrows fight CGI beasts who withstood combined armies of humanity and nuclear weapons. Once one absorbs the basic story the plotline is largely predictable, though maybe kids will forgive that and the thudding solemnity. In the movie's favor: a short running time and some interesting touches in envisioning a world regressed by dragon-power to a drab, sooty, new Dark Ages. Not enough interesting touches, though.


Explore, discuss, enjoy

  • Families can talk about dragons, so often depicted in human cultures, running the gamut from good guys to baddies. Ask kids what they thought of the specimens in Reign of Fire?

  • Critics like to say that the original Godzilla was a cinematic metaphor for the atom bomb. Ask kids if Reign of Fire makes a good metaphor for global warming? For the WWII Blitz? For anything?

  • Talk about other movies in which civilization is wiped out -- by plague, by alien invasion, by Terminator robots, by the year 2012, by nuclear war, etc. What is the entertainment value of such global-catastrophe flicks?


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This review of Reign of Fire was written by
Studio:Touchstone Pictures
Director:Rob Bowman
Cast:Christian Bale, Gerard Butler, Matthew McConaughey
Genre:Science Fiction
Run time:101 minutes
Theatrical release date:July 12, 2002
DVD release date:November 19, 2002
MPAA rating:PG-13
MPAA explanation:intense action violence

This review of Reign of Fire was written by
 

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