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Film review: 'Where the Wild Things Are' comes to life on big screen
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I also appreciate the heads up on the age thing; I wouldn't have otherwise thought to be concerned about bringing our youngest to see it.
Now the wife and I might first need to prescreen it on date night, THEN bring the young 'uns. Sounds like seeing this one twice will be more than fine by me!
I'm sure the movie is good. I'm sure it adds its own interesting angle, but please tell me I'm not alone in wanting many things in life (particularly art) to simply be left alone.
I'm a huge Tintin fan, and I am DREADING Spielberg and Peter Jackson's upcoming movies on one of the most famous cartoon heroes. No version of Les Miserables will ever be done justice on the big screen. What, are they going to make the movie 40 hours long? Why can't our imaginations be simply left alone? Too much of society insists on spelling everything out for us, to the 't'.
I'm not sure if there is a single original bone in all of Hollywood's decrepit, immoral body.
Hollywood is full of losers.
The director of this film is responsible (along with screenwriter Charlie Kaufman) for two of the wildest, most original and most enjoyable films of the past ten years (though I wouldn't recommend them to most here, due to their R-rated material.) So I certainly wouldn't accuse him of a lack of imagination or creativity. And there definitely does have to be some imagination involved when turning a very short children's book into a full-length feature.
Actually, Raymond Bernard's 1934 adaptation of the novel is a great film that does do the novel justice. No it (obviously) does not contain every scene from the novel - but it doesn't have to.
The film is respectful to the themes of the novel, but also has enough directorial vision to make it its own original work. It is a great work of art in its own right.
If you are so crazy about you beloved books be left alone, don't see the movie. That will solve your problem.
If you are so upset about every detail not being exactly as you imagined it, then become a director.
I'm fairly certain everyone imagined some differences from the book and this movie. The movie looks gorgeous. I'm pretty sure it will be worth the price of admission. The movie is the movie and the book is the book. No movie could ever change what I'll imagine when I read the book. Especially since I grew up with this book like so many others. Enjoy both!
The irony, of course, is that Hollywood's been portraying nothing but suboptimal home situations for 40 years. Broken homes and alternative family structures is the cliche in Hollywood, not nuclear families. What would be truly envelope-pushing and daring would be a movie that portrays a happy, functional, nuclear family as 1) realistic, 2) successful, and 3) normal.
Heaven forbid that town full of losers attempt to portray anything other than the "perfect" life. Sheesh. Get over yourself.
When a movie is lame, it can taint and diminish the book as well in some people's eyes.
But as popular as the Harry Potter books were, I've been surprised at how many people have not read them, yet have seen the movies.
Seeing as not all readers watch movies, and not all movie-goers read much, there seems to be enough room in this town for the both of them I think.
I'd add a caveat though.
There is an oft quoted axiom that, in my experience, is usually true:
"The book is usually better than the movie."
If everyone understands that, and manages their expectations accordingly, then when a movie is well done, it only speaks even better of the movie. And when a movie is lame, hopefully movie-goers will still give the book a chance.
Although yes, even while reading the book you do tend to still flash on the imagery you experienced in the theater, and that's not so good. :-(
I guess it is a good thing, then, that movie attendance isn't mandatory.
I meant to write...
"... when a movie is well done, it only speaks even better of the BOOK."
In other words, good movies may and should signal the books are very worthwhile.
This notion must be out there, as book sales seem to re-surge whenever its movie is released.
At any rate, I now return you to your regularly scheduled discussion.
If you think Hollywood is so lame, don't pay attention to it. Don't see the movies and don't read the reviews.
If you'd rather keep only to books, do it!
If you want to see a movie, see it!
Everything is always better in your own little mind. Mine too.
Just chill, people. Move on.
So everyone just chill out and enjoy this great adaptation of an admittedly better book.
Will you see it?
You may complain about your favorite book being adapted to film, or complain that a movie has "bad" content, and buy an illegally edited copy from some chump in Orem, or whatever. The bottom line: You see it. Hollywood makes money. So they keep making them. If you have objections, don't see the movie. That's the only valid way that you can protest. Of course, the majority of people will disagree with you, and keep seeing the movies, and so Hollywood will keep making them.
On a lighter note, I can't wait to see this movie! I never cared much for the book, but the previews for the movie are very persuasive. Looks like fun.
Don't see the movie, it will still gross millions and millions because there is an audience for it. Myself included. This was my first book 35 years ago by the way. Please stick to the 32 pages of AMAZING illustrations and 16 sentences that make up the book. The book is a work of art visually. Why can't we, as fans, have a look at might have happened when the 'Wild Rumpus' began?
Next thing you know, we're going to have the comments page for Toy Story 3 turn into a discussion about how terrible it is that Buzz Lightyear espouses evil liberal views, or that Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head aren't portraying marriage in a proper enough light.
I think that suggesting someone actually see a movie before laying waste to it isn't asking for too much. Yes the debate about whether Hollywood has an "unhealthy preoccupation with broken, screwed up families and lifestyles" or if those just make more entertaining and thus more profitable movies than ones about perfect glowing families IS an interesting discussion... But claiming this movie is glorifying a broken family without seeing it is just ignorant.
Firstly, I have no plans of seeing the movie; I see (in the theaters) about 1 or 2 movies a year for the very reasons I mentioned earlier. So, yes, I'm without hypocrisy in this matter.
Secondly, despite my intentions of not seeing the movie, I'm sure the movie may very well be fun and interesting (as I also said quite plainly earlier). That's not even close to my point.
My point is simply for some sacred, beautiful things to be left alone. What's next, an epic movie about Shel Silverstein's "The Giving Tree"? Please tell me you don't see how utterly ridiculous that would be. Of course, I would've said the same a few years ago regarding "Where the Wild Things Are" until they did make it. But you people seriously can't see what the art of the book is? The art is IN the simpleness of it. It's IN the imagination! I mean, that's the THEME OF THE ENTIRE BOOK!
You can tell Jonze approached the project with a lot of love and respect for the source material - plus the fact that Maurice Sendak requested Jonze do the adaptation and is credited as a producer means the movie hasn't strayed too far from the spirit of the book.
Furthermore, sometimes I think the little "rated for"s are maybe a bit overly cautious out of respect for the Utah audience Jeff writes for. Though some of the temper-tantrum scenes are a little intense, there's really nothing else concerning about the movie. The "body fluids" are simply saliva and nothing more. Stop extrapolating the worst from the end-of-review warnings.
the movie most of you have interesting, bordering on judgemental,
thoughts about this movie. Take it from someone who HAS seen it; THIS
IS THE BEST FILM OF THE YEAR!
This is a kids book and I didn't like seeing it extropolated into a psycholical analysis of a child's angst. It spends so much time ruminating about the relationships of the monsters. The comment from my 10 year old, who loves the book: "that was weird." I wish they had done the movie for kids and kept it lighter, rather than playing to some emotionlly handicapped adults.
you picked a fitting screen name if you truly think that thus film was spending too much time" focusing on the relationships of the Wild Things". You really didn't get this movie if you really think it was about the Wild Things. This was a beautiful story about feelings, thoughts, memories, and fears of a little boy and how he plays them out in his mind and concludes right from wrong. Spike Jonze is a bloody genius!! Remember, this is an Adaptation of a book. Were you offended during Horton Hears a Who?.......probably.
We don't expect to go to see a movie and always get something out of it. But, this movie just didn't have anything worth viewing. Even though the costumes were fabulous, this is not enough to want to recommend it to someone. It was basically a total downer. We rarely go to the movies, and were disappointed greatly by going to see this one. If we could get our money back we would. We will not be taking our 8 and 11 yr olds to this movie. It would give them nightmares. We believe that Hollywood has continued to demonstrate its lack of values. (I've worked in the Social Work field for over 20 yrs.)
The movie is not at all a delightful adaptation of a beloved children’s book. It provides absolutely no entertainment for children or adults. Its seeming claims to educational value are far from viable. It embodies a perfect recipient of the complaint relegated to poor films: “That’s two hours of my life I’ll never get back!”
I also agree that it leans towards PG-13 simply because of the intense violence and I felt bad for a lot of the little traumatized 3 and 4 year olds in the audience.
Not just our children but our whole family was rather freaked out when a certain character lost an appendage. How inconsistent and insulting it was for the filmmakers to conveniently gloss over any expected pain and replace it with a joke during that scene, yet clearly demonstrate suffering in another character who was wounded with a dirt clod!
Max's terrible behavior in the film, far worse than that in the book, made the resolution infuriatingly shallow, incomplete, and one-sided.
This film was made for lunatics who will unfortunately not benefit from it. The rest of us were punished by this movie for a minority's maladjustment.
Enjoy your cake while you can, Max. Desserts just won't taste the same when you wind up in prison.
A PG-rated motion picture should be investigated by parents before they let their younger children attend. The PG rating indicates, in the view of the Rating Board, that parents may consider some material unsuitable for their children, and parents should make that decision.
I guess you made a poor decision by taking your infants to this movie.
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Cast: Catherine Keener, Max Records, Mark Ruffalo, Lauren Ambrose, James Gandolfini, Catherin O''Hara, Forest Whitaker
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