WATER FOR ELEPHANTS   (12A, 120 mins) 6.5/10

TWILIGHT pin-up Robert Pattinson puts a little  colour in his cheeks in Francis Lawrence’s  gorgeously framed adaptation of the novel by  Sara Gruen about a doomed love affair in a 1930s  circus troupe.

Water For Elephants is an important barometer of the  young actor’s appeal away from Stephenie Meyer’s  feuding vampires and werewolves, and an indication  of his potential longevity as a romantic male lead.

Pattinson acquits himself well, playing to his strengths  – angry-ridden glances straight into the camera – as  one point of a volatile love triangle that is destined to  end in tragedy.

He demonstrates impressive emotional range and  although screen chemistry with Oscar-winner Reese  Witherspoon doesn’t exactly set our hearts aflutter,  they are an attractive pairing.

The film opens in the present day with nonagenarian  Jacob Jankowski (Hal Holbrook) arriving at a circus  managed by Charlie (Paul Schneider) during a  downpour.

At first, Charlie thinks that the confused old man has  strayed from a care home, but it soon transpires that  Jacob spent his formative years with the infamous  Benzini Bros Circus.

“Got anything to drink around here that isn’t apple  juice?” asks Jacob as the two men sit down in the  office, drying off.

With a glass of liquor to hand, Jacob begins to recount  his incredible life story, stepping back in time seven  decades to his student days at Cornell University.

Poised to take his final veterinary exam, Jacob (now  played by Pattinson) learns that his parents have been  killed in a car accident and abandons his studies.

With debts to pay and no roof over his head, the  young man hitches a ride on a passing train, unaware  it belongs to the circus run by August Rosenbluth  (Christoph Waltz).

The tyrant physically and mentally abuses animals  and performers, including his beautiful wife Marlena  (Witherspoon) who rides the horses.

When Jacob falls under Marlena’s spell, he tries to  resist his feelings, working alongside the wife to win  the trust of a special elephant.

However, when August notices the way that the young  man stares at Marlena, he exacts a horrific revenge.

Water For Elephants casts a spell with its arresting  visuals and the cast looks ravishing through a  soft-focus lens.

Cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto, who previously shot  Brokeback Mountain and Biutiful, provides a  picturesque canvas for Richard LaGravenese’s  elegant, chronologically fractured screenplay.

Pattinson and Witherspoon’s dream romance  contrasts with another despicable villain from Waltz,  who won an Oscar for his blistering portrayal of a  sadistic Nazi officer in Inglourious Basterds.

Here, he orchestrates scenes of animal cruelty that  genuinely turn the stomach.

When the film’s big emotional kick arrives, it doesn’t  quite connect – we well up, but there are no tears  shed for the characters in their darkest hour.