People worn out from their workweek should go to The Legend of Zorro to catch some z's.
The Legend of Zorro (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:130
Fresh:33
Rotten:97
Average Rating:4.7/10
Consensus: Zorro can survive a lot of things, but it looks like he can't survive marriage.
Rated: PG [See Full Rating] for sequences of violence/peril and action, language and a couple of suggestive moments
Runtime: 2 hrs 10 mins
Genre: Action/Adventure
Theatrical Release:Oct 28, 2005 Wide
Box Office: $45,356,386
Synopsis: Catherine Zeta Jones captivated audiences and shot to stardom via her role as Elena in the 1998 take on the Zorro legend, MASK OF ZORRO. This sequel, set in 1850, finds her married to Alejandro,... Catherine Zeta Jones captivated audiences and shot to stardom via her role as Elena in the 1998 take on the Zorro legend, MASK OF ZORRO. This sequel, set in 1850, finds her married to Alejandro, aka Zorro (Antonio Banderas, also returning to reprise his character from MASK OF ZORRO), and demanding he stop all the derring-do and spend time with their smart-as-a-whip 10-year-old son, Joaquin (Adrian Alonso). The boy has some serious acrobatic skills, but is unaware of his father's secret identity. He can only look askance as his parents separate and Dad starts spending too much time with his hard-drinking horse, while Mom lets herself be wooed by the odious Count Armand (Rufus Sewell). It's up to little Zorro Joaquin to get to the bottom of things and get his folk-hero parents back into action. Jones is a stunning sight in her elaborate lace-and-linen ensembles, and there's some complex DA VINCI CODE-style secret society skullduggery, but otherwise this sequel has more in common with classic old Walt Disney comedies like THE APPLE DUMPLING GANG or Robert Rodiguez's SPY KIDS than with the 1998 movie. The swordfighting and death-defying action sequences are all totally bloodless, and director Martin Campbell--who also helmed the '98 film--keeps the dialogue very contemporary and child-friendly throughout. [More]
Starring: Antonio Banderas, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Rufus Sewell, Nick Chinlund
Starring: Antonio Banderas, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Rufus Sewell, Nick Chinlund, Lou Diamond Phillips
Director: Martin Campbell
Director: Martin Campbell
Screenwriter: Roberto Orci, Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio
Producer: Lloyd Phillips, Laurie MacDonald, Walter F. Parkes
Composer: James Horner
Screenwriter: Alex Kurtzman-Counter
Studio: Columbia Pictures
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Reviews for The Legend of Zorro
Are we watching a modern-day, Iraqi-oriented cautionary tale, disguised as family action fare?
The production is suffused by an almost desperate attempt to recapture the mood of its predecessor, but the tone is forced rather than natural, and the resultant production is bloated, contrived, and not very entertaining.
Banderas and Catherine Zeta-Jones still sizzle as the crime-fighter and his equally fearless wife, but their playful banter takes a back seat to the convoluted narrative, an unwieldy amalgam of swordplay, tiresome family drama.
If the question is whether passion, excitement and intrigue can be written into the narrative of marriage, the answer in The Legend of Zorro is an emphatic no.
Filmmaking this slack may be one reason why box-office receipts have been dropping.
No, the tongues aren't quite as firmly in cheek, the one-liners aren't as crisp, and the action flags more times than it should. But this Zorro does nothing to tarnish the Legend.
The Legend of Zorro is a sequel that arrives too late to benefit from any of its predecessor movie's residual warm fuzzies.
THERE'LL likely be more Z's in the audience than on the screen during The Legend of Zorro, a belated and belabored sequel to the delightful '98 hit that seems more like a cross between Wild Wild West and Spy Kids.
More a parody than a sequel, Martin Campbell's The Legend of Zorro reunites the director with the stars of 1998's The Mask of Zorro for two hours of ludicrous action, forced humor and self-conscious romance.
In this busy sequel to 1998's The Mask of Zorro, Antonio Banderas looks a little older, Catherine Zeta-Jones snares a bigger role, and the powerful charms of both are weighed down by an absurdly plot-heavy script.
This overproduced, sporadically entertaining sequel to The Mask of Zorro strives so hard to relate to contemporary audiences that it loses all sense of itself as a period piece.
Campbell's film has moments that capture this sensuality and stealth, but it's noisier and longer than it should be.
Now comes the long-deferred The Legend of Zorro, which, to put it bluntly, is a big bloated bore-o.
It may not be a great film, but it's better than a poke in the eye with a sword.
The film's propensity for silliness would be more forgivable if there wasn't a real nastiness to some of its violence.
As it turns out, Legend of Zorro is a spirited, though fairly generic, action movie about a guy who habitually abandons his gorgeous wife, puts on black clothes and carries a whip.
A dandy-looking adventure flick that embraces all demographics with only a few missteps could lure the public back to the 'plexes.
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