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Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 07, 2013 4:58 pm
by Ithilwen
Whenever we make casting suggestions for upcoming Narnia movies, we typically look for a British actor/actress. Or, if they are not from the UK, the question we immediately ask is, "But can they fake a British accent?"

But what if they didn't even try to fake it? After all, though the children from our world come from England in the books, this can always be changed in a film adaptation. And when it comes to the Narnians themselves, technically they could have any accent you could think of, since Narnia is its own world and not a part of our own.


I'd love to see all of your opinions in the poll, but I'd also like to hear your more in-depth opinions in the comments below. Especially when it comes to the following questions:

- What other accents do you think should be used in future Narnia movies?

- Which characters would you like to see have a different accent?

- The Telmarines were given accents other than British ones in the Prince Caspian movie. Do you this worked well? Why or why not?



~Riella =:)

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 08, 2013 12:22 am
by coracle
I understand why the Telmarines had non-British accents in PC, but we know they were a mixture of accents Spain, Italy, Portugal etc. Perhaps to people from those countries the mix seemed odd.
I would want anyone playing an English character to give a convincing and appropriate accent for the character (including their social class and part of Britain). Caspian needs to stay upper class English (posh) and the Narnians should have a suitable mix of accents. The Earthmen and the Giants - all sorts of possibilities, but there's a need to be wise about not making them sound like any particular nationality - as they are the baddies!

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 08, 2013 4:52 am
by wild rose
Generally I prefer British accents, simply because I like the British accent. But I don't think that all the characters must needs have them. I do think that the main characters should have a British accents (either be British themselves, or be able to put on a good fake one) but for extras and minor characters, I wouldn't mind having other accents as well. Also, 'British accent' can have a very divers meaning. There are lots of different types of British accents. I always thought of the dwarves having a more rough northern type of accent, and for some reason I always thought of the giants as having a cockney accent, not quite sure why though :) From the first time I read the Chronicles of Narnia, I was sure that all the giants had a cockney accent.

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 08, 2013 11:10 am
by 220chrisTian
I said 'yes' to them all having British accents. They can have a variety based on geographical location and role, but anything non-British for "The Silver Chair" just doesn't make sense!

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 08, 2013 11:34 am
by fantasia
It is very important to me that all of the children from our world have English accents. After that, all I want is consistency.
I really liked the idea of the Telmarines in PC being Mediterranean, but their accents were all over the board and it drove me nuts.

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 09, 2013 8:19 am
by DamselJillPole
As long as Jill and Eustace have British accents it's fine and all good. As for other characters I like to hear some variety of accents.

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 09, 2013 3:33 pm
by icarus
I think they should only use non-British accents if it serves a purpose.

I liked the use of Mediterranean accents for the Telmarines because it hinted at their swarthy pirate ancestry. I even liked the somewhat American accent of Michael Madsen for Maugrim in LWW as it gave him a kind of 'American Gangster' type persona which I think complimented his character well.

The films How to Train Your Dragon and 300 both used Scottish accents well to give the audience a sense of the aggressive tribal cultures it was depicting (Vikings and Spartans respectively) by providing an accent that anyone who has seen Braveheart can relate to as being similarly tough and fearsome. Though the use of Irish accents for similar reasons in Oliver Stone's Alexander movie (it was supposed to indicate how the Macedonians were to the Greeks as the Irish are to the English) just came across as utterly ridiculous.

So to cut a long story short, as long as they have a valid artistic reason for using a particular accent, I think that is fine. Though the last thing you would want is to have characters popping up with entirely random modern day accents which don't fit the quasi-medieval fantasy world setting.

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 10, 2013 11:33 am
by 220chrisTian
I had no problem with the Telmarines' Mediterranean accents because they fit the story in PC and their characters. SC is different. I see the foreign parts, beyond Narnia, like Scotland or something. There's no room for the Mediterranean here, not even Scandinavia or Russia. I would allow the latter for the non-Narnia (non-English) characters only in desperation.

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 10, 2013 2:53 pm
by waggawerewolf27
Oh pleeaase! Not the Scottish accent! :-o That one is barely understandable in real life! I should know. ;;) All those "yon's", "bonnie wee bairns" etc! It gets very tiresome to have to have a dictionary to translate every thing that is said even ordinary sorts of expressions from 'pass the bread' to 'that stag told me he was tough'. No wonder Puddleglum thought he was a 'Respectobiggle"!

I agree that King Caspian and even Prince Rilian would have at least a slightly "posh" accent, but what is wrong with a Universal English accent for everyone else? LOTGK could have a vaguely Northern Irish/Scottish/American accent. We are told in the book that LOTGK could "roll her R's" delightfully, which is something I am continually told native born Australians can't do.

I hope that the actor/actors who play earthmen such as the Warden of the Marches or Mullugutherum have that flat, hoarse "black" sort of voice that was done so effectively in the Family Radio Theatre version of Silver Chair. It was done far more effectively than was the BBC audio drama production.

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 17, 2013 11:30 am
by Lilygloves
People can fake British accents pretty well sometimes, but I find that I can often easily tell when someone is faking their accent. It makes me cringe when I hear a bad accent, so I'd rather hear the real thing. There's nothing worse than hearing an actor switch between dialects!

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 28, 2013 2:15 am
by coracle
Faking a British accent has more than one level - it may be easy to fake the accent to someone from another country, but to fool someone from UK (particularly who is from the part of UK that the accent is supposed to be) it will be much harder.
I know Americans often think they can fake a British accent, but usually they don't know what accent it needs to be.

In my own country - New Zealanders are often poor at faking an English accent, and I have cringed at amateur actors putting on a broad Yorkshire accent for a character in London!

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 28, 2013 6:29 am
by King_Erlian
If the children from our world don't talk British (which isn't just about the accent, but also using British forms of speech), then it's a deviation from the book which I find distracting and annoying. I was annoyed by the Americanisms in the dialogue of the Harry Potter films, even though the accents were still British ("bathroom" for "toilets" etc.)

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Oct 28, 2013 5:46 pm
by narnia fan 7
For me as long as the children from our world have British accents I'm good they are British in the books and I don't see any reason to change that.

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Nov 14, 2013 6:40 pm
by waggawerewolf27
King_Erlian wrote:If the children from our world don't talk British (which isn't just about the accent, but also using British forms of speech), then it's a deviation from the book which I find distracting and annoying. I was annoyed by the Americanisms in the dialogue of the Harry Potter films, even though the accents were still British ("bathroom" for "toilets" etc.)


However, in the last film, where Harry, Ron & Hermione reach the Room of Requirement, finding in it a girls' "bathroom", did they also include book Lavender Brown's remark that the girls would quite like to wash?

I didn't notice any Americanisms in either the HP films or the Narnia films, to be honest. But then, would anyone really notice what is Australian or New Zealand usage unless it was really overdone? Contrary to USA usage, we do have bathrooms but only if they contain baths and/or showers.

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Nov 14, 2013 7:19 pm
by coracle
I thought that the "bathroom" they were talking about was actually the dormitory bathroom - containing baths, showers, washbasins, and toilets. I have seen the second HP film and I believe that is what I saw in that scene.

Re: Do They Need To Be British?

PostPosted: Nov 15, 2013 5:28 am
by King_Erlian
I was thinking in particular of the first film, "Philosopher's/Sorcerer's Stone" (but let's not go there ;) ), and the scene during the Hallowe'en feast when a troll is let loose and Hermione is crying in the girls' lavatories. Although I haven't checked the text, I'm pretty sure the book used the word "toilets" (at least in the version published in Britain), whereas Harry and Ron repeatedly used "bathroom" in the film.

Apologies for the off-topic meandering. Still, coming back to the Narnia films, I think it's important that the children at least, if not the other characters, not only have British-sounding voices but also use the right words - not only British patterns of speech, but also correct for the period. For instance, having the Pevensies say "Awesome!" would be wrong on both counts.