18 December 2023

“A Christmas Carol” (1984)

A Christmas Carol

Brief Description:

On Christmas Eve, tight-fisted businessman Ebenezer Scrooge is visited by the Spirit of Christmas Past, the Spirit of Christmas Present, and the Spirit of Christmas Yet to Come. Is there any chance his frozen old heart will change, and that he can escape the frightful destiny that awaits him?

(written by me)


Date: 1984

Genre: American British Christmas fantasy drama

Running time: 1 hour 41 minutes 


Cast: 

George C. Scott (Scrooge)

Mark Strickson (Young Scrooge)

Frank Finlay (Marley)

Angela Pleasence (Spirit of Christmas Past)

Edward Woodward (Spirit of Christmas Present)

Michael Carter (Spirit of Christmas Future)

David Warner (Cratchit)

Susannah York (Mrs. Cratchit)

Anthony Walters (Tiny Tim)
Louise Gasser (Martha)
Orlando Wells (Michael)
Nancy Dodds (Nancy)
Sasha Wells (Belinda)
Kieran Hughes (Peter)
Roger Rees (Fred / Narrator)

Caroline Langrishe (Janet)

Lucy Gutteridge (Belle)

Nigel Davenport (Scrooge's father)

Joanne Whalley (Fan)

Timothy Bateson (Mr. Fezziwig)

Michael Gough (Mr. Poole)

John Quarmby (Mr. Hacking)

Peter Woodthorpe (Joe)

Liz Smith (Mrs. Dilber)

John Sharp (Mr. Tipton)

Derek Francis (Mr. Pemberton)
Danny Davies (Forbush)
Brian Pettifer (Ben)
Catherine Hall (Meg)
Cathryn Harrison (Kate)


Director: Clive Donner

Production company: Entertainment Partners Ltd.


Based on: A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens 


Wikipedia page


Watch on Archive

(watched free on Tubi)


Setting/Aesthetic/Feel: 5/5

Oh my stars I LOVED THIS!!! I loved the 1951 and the 1938, and this version is just as good... maybe best. A little better than the 1938, anyhow. It was amazing! I love seeing Victorian England in colour. :D And this film has allllll the Christmas feels and alllll the Victorian feels!!


Characters: 5/5

Scott is a FANTASTIC Scrooge. He portrays him as a heartless, cold old man, a broken, fearful old man, and a jubilant, reinvigorated old man all so well! Finlay was a terrifying Marley (probably not for kids??) but probably the most accurate to the book, so I have to give him that. I didn't quite like Angela Pleasence as a Spirit of Christmas Past, but she was okay, and Edward Woodward was a SPLENDID Spirit of Christmas Present. The best I've seen so far!! As for the Spirit of Christmas Future, I don't think anyone else has captured the eeriness of that spirit so well before. The Cratchits are all excellent--specially Susannah York as Mrs. Cratchit--and Fred & Janet are well done too, and Belle & her family... oh, everybody! 


Plot: 5/5

Oh yes, yes! This aligns SO well with the book--I was really delighted how accurate it is, and I love the extra scenes--like the homeless family... that was SO GOOD!!! I love how many Christmas carols it includes, too... the one written for the film is quite good and all the other random carols sung throughout are lovely. And Susannah York actually made me cry for Tiny Tim, which no one else ever did... 


Theme/Message/Topics: 5/5

Excellent, excellent portrayal of the themes of the book. Just splendid. 


Content: 4/5 (low)

1 instance of D**mit; 1 instance of my G**.


Overall: 5/5

Oh, I loved every minute of this. I didn't think anything could replace the 1951 but this one is just as good... <3

11 December 2023

“Curious George: Go West, Go Wild” (2020)

 Curious George: 

Go West, Go Wild


Brief Description:

 George and Ted travel to cousin Ginny's farm for a relaxing outdoor weekend, but plans take a turn when her farm animals escape.

(from IMDb)


Date: 2020

Genre: American children's fantasy 

Running time: 1 hour 25 minutes 


Cast: 

Frank Welker (Curious George)

Jeff Bennett (Ted / Conductor)

Max Mittelman (Emmett)

April Stewart (Ginny)

Phil Morris (Frank)

Adrienne Barbeau (Ginny's mom)

Dee Bradley Baker (Billy / Frick / Frack / Ricochet / Prairie Dog / Sadie / Spittoon)


Director: Michael LaBash

Production company: Imagine Entertainment & Universal Animation Studios 


Based on: the Curious George books by H.A. & Margret Ray


IMDb page



Setting/Aesthetic/Feel: 3/5

There was definitely a prairie/Wild West/farm feel, which was quite nice. I'm not a fan of over-bright animations but I didn't mind this too much. Also, watching characters cross the country always makes me wanna travel so badly!!


Characters: 3/5

The characters were pretty one-dimensional and shallow. Emmett was way too clumsy at first. But I guess for a kids' film they were okay. 


Plot: 3/5

Some stuff was wildly inaccurate, but overall it was a fun, simply film with some quite funny moments. Even the inaccurate stuff was quite amusing. I enjoyed watching the vacation and the search for the animals, and the climax was enjoyable... yeah, overall, it was a fun film. 


Theme/Message/Topics: 4/5

I enjoyed the message of believing in yourself and trying new things over and over. 


Content: 4/5 (low)

Possibly some mild euphemisms.


Overall: 3/5

Not the greatest kids' film or the best George movie, but it was a fun time well spent with my siblings. 

“Home Alone 3” (1997)

 Home Alone 3


Brief Description:
8-year-old Alex Pruitt defends his home from a dangerous band of international criminals working for a terrorist organization.
(from Wikipedia)

Date: 1997
Genre: American family comedy 
Running time: 1 hour 42 minutes 

Cast: 
Alex D. Linz (Alex)
Haviland Morris (Mrs. Pruitt)
Kevin Kilner (Mr. Pruitt)
Olek Krupa (Beaupré)
Rya Kihlstedt (Alice)
Lenny Von Dohlen (Jernigan)
David Thornton (Unger)
James Saito (the Mob Boss)
Seth Smith (Stan)
Marian Seldes (Mrs. Hess)
Christopher Curry (FBI Agent Stuckey)
Pat Healy (FBI Agent Rogers)
Baxter Harris (Police Captain Jackson)
Neil Flynn, Nick Jantz, Tony Mockus Jr., & James Chisem (Police Officers)
Freeman Coffey (USAF Recruiting Officer)
Adrianne Duncan (Flight Attendant)
Jennifer A. Daley (Police Photographer)
Darren T. Knaus (the Parrot)

Director: Raja Gosnell
Production company: Hughes Entertainment & Fox Family Films


Setting/Aesthetic/Feel: 4/5
A quiet neighbourhood of old Tudor-style homes with everybody gone during the day. Nice enough setting. 

Characters: 4/5
I liked these characters better than those from Home Alone 1 & 2. Alex is much less of a brat (and more 8-year-old-ish). His parents are quite nice; and his siblings are much more loving, and their picking on him is much more fair and teasing than hateful. Mrs. Hess was such a nice surprise, and the villains were fun because they could be taken more seriously. 

Plot: 4/5
I enjoyed this much more than the first two films. It’s more of a series of misunderstandings than deliberate unkindness, and Alex isn’t forgotten at home, but forced to stay behind by a series of circumstances (aka his parents are much more responsible). I also liked the extra issue of his parents’ lack of money. And I was pleasantly surprised by how the 911 calls were handled. I enjoyed how the film played out with the microchip and where + how it got to Alex, and the build of suspense as the robbers try to retrieve it. The showdown is less violent than HA 1&2, but just as fun, and I liked the little snippets that reminded me of the original films! And I really liked the ending :) Also, love how the parrot played into all this! Made me laugh out loud. 

Theme/Message/Topics: 3/5
There actually wasn’t much of one at all, unless it was to trust your kids, lol. Christmas is really a totally incidental thing... it's basically just set in December.  

Content: 2/5 (high)
Alex’s brother has a picture of an unclothed model with her chest area and hips covered in sticky-notes, & Alex removes a few of the sticky-notes but nothing is really revealed. Later a villain opens the bathroom and you can dimly sees a female form in the shower; he opens it and finds the picture hanging there sans sticky-notes (side chest can be seen, and the image cuts off above her bellybutton). There’s a picture of a girl in a bikini in Alex’s brother’s room as well. A scene where Alex undresses in the bathroom; his family hears him scream and say he “slammed the toilet seat on his thing again.” A scene where Alex watches a recording of women exercising and shoots a dart at a woman’s behind. A scene where a mouse climbs out of a man’s suit near the groin and a woman tries to kill the mouse (“you smacked my winky”). Language: OMG.

Violence: 3/5 (medium)
A little less violent than HA 1&2 but along the same lines. 

Overall: 3/5
I wasn’t a fan of the content at all, but it is centered in a few specific scenes, and easy to skip. And I loved the rest of the film. If it wasn’t for the content, this would definitely get 4 stars!

“Home Alone 2: Lost in New York” (1992)

Home Alone 2: Lost in New York

Brief Description:
10-year-old Kevin McCallister is separated from his family on their holiday vacation to Florida, this time in New York City where he has another encounter with the Wet Bandits after their escape during a prison riot.
(from Wikipedia)

Date: 1992
Genre: American Christmas comedy 
Running time: 2 hours

Cast: 
Macaulay Culkin (Kevin)
Joe Pesci (Harry)
Daniel Stern (Marv)
John Heard (Peter)
Catherine O’Hara (Kate)
Devin Ratray (Buzz)
Hillary Wolf (Megan)
Maureen Elisabeth Shay (Linnie)
Michael C. Maronna (Jeff)
Gerry Bamman (Uncle Frank)
Terrie Snell (Aunt Leslie)
Jedidiah Cohen (Rod)
Senta Moses (Tracy)
Daiana Campeanu (Sondr)
Kieran Culkin (Fuller)
Anna Slotky (Brooke)
Tim Curry (Mr. Hector)
Brenda Fricker (Pigeon Lady)
Eddie Bracken (Mr. Duncan)
Dana Ivey (Hester Stone)
Rob Schneider (Cedric)
Leigh Zimmerman (Fashion Model)
Ralph Foody (Johnny)
Clare Hoak (Johnny’s girlfriend)
Monica Devereux (Hotel Operator)
Bob Eubanks (Ding-Dang-Dong Host)
Rip Taylor (Celeb #1)
Jaye P. Morgan (Celeb #2)
Jimmie Walker (Celeb #3)
Ally Sheedy (New York Ticket Agent)
Rod Sell (Officer Bennett)
Ron Canada (Cop in Times Square)

Director: Chris Columbus
Production company: Hughes Entertainment


Setting/Aesthetic/Feel: 4/5
I love the NYC aesthetic. I don’t know why. I also love hotel aesthetics... and rich hotels are pretty cool. ;) I feel like the film did a good job of getting the good and bad sides of a big city... the Christmas decor, the indifference, the kind strangers, the frightening nightlife... very interesting balances. But Kevin running around in NYC gives me anxiety for him—poor little kid!! 

Characters: 4/5
I liked the family better in this film than in the first one. Buzz is still pretty nasty... and I’m still mad at Kate for punishing Kevin unfairly. However, it probably is realistic... Anyways, Peter made a better father here. Frank is still nasty, but Leslie and the kids aren’t too bad. And I liked Pigeon Lady. The concierge is sooooo irritating, but the bellhop isn’t too bad...  

Plot: 4/5
I really love how the plot is similar to the first film yet different... same enough for you to tell what parts are similar but different enough that you’re unsure what will happen or surprised that something doesn’t happen. Kevin was more a brat here—definitely should have gotten in touch with his parents and shouldn’t have made the choices he did—but at least he felt remorse and tried to make up in a little way. I enjoyed the adventures around the hotel, and the toystore, and the fighting with Marv & Harry... that climax was just as much fun as the first, and sans swearing!! And the ending is pretty great again :) 

Theme/Message/Topics: 4/5
I love the message about your heart... about how people don’t forget about you, but forget to remember you... and Kevin’s encouragement to the Pigeon Lady that she’s “good at talking to people…” and about how he think he’ll have fun by himself but ends up not. 

Pigeon Lady: I’m just afraid if I do trust someone, I’ll get my heart broken again.
Kevin: I used to have this really nice pair of rollerblades. I was afraid if I wore them, I’d wreck them. So I kept them in a box. Do you know what happened? ... I outgrew them. I never wore them once outside. I just wore them in my room a couple times.... If you aren’t going to use your heart, then what’s the difference if it gets broken? If you just keep it to yourself, maybe it’ll be like my rollerblades. When you do decide to try it, it won’t be any good. You should take a chance. Got nothing to lose.... Your heart might still be broken, but it isn’t gone.

Wasn't a fan of the bogus “a good deed erases a bad deed” though.

Content: 3/5 (medium)
1 scene in a swimming pool (off-screen, Kevin’s shorts float off). Kevin watches a film where a gangster accuses his girlfriend of “smooching” with his brother and plenty of other guys; K later uses the film to play with the hotel people, causing people to assume the concierge “smooched” other guys, including a hotel worker. Kevin says Uncle Frank told him not to come into the bathroom when he was showering because if K saw him naked he’d “never grow up to be a real boy”; Peter tells him to go in anyways to get his tie; Kevin covers his eyes but you dimly see Uncle Frank in the shower; K records him singing & Uncle Frank calls him a pervert. 2 women smoke in one scene. Language: d**n, a**, g*d-dar*ed, OMG*d.

Violence: 3/5 (medium)
Basically the same thing as “Home Alone.” Bricks are thrown, fire is used, Harry’s head is burned, and a nail gun gets Marv twice. The robbers try to kill Kevin & the Pigeon Lady. 

Overall: 3/5
Much better than the first film, and I actually quite enjoy it!

“Home Alone” (1990)

 Home Alone


Brief Description:
8-year-old Kevin McCallister defends his suburban Chicago home from a home invasion by a pair of robbers after his family accidentally leaves him behind on their Christmas vacation to Paris.
(from Wikipedia)

Date: 1990
Genre: American Christmas comedy 
Running time: 1 hour 14 minutes 

Cast: 
Macaulay Culkin (Kevin)
Joe Pesci (Harry)
Daniel Stern (Marv)
Roberts Blossom (Marley)
John Heard (Peter)
Catherine O’Hara (Kate)
Devin Ratray (Buzz)
Hillary Wolf (Megan)
Angela Goethals (Linnie)
Michael C. Maronna (Jeff)
Gerry Bamman (Uncle Frank)
Terrie Snell (Aunt Leslie)
Jedidiah Cohen (Rod)
Daiana Campeanu (Sondra)
Senta Moses (Tracy)
Kieran Culkin (Fuller)
Anna Slotky (Brooke)
John Candy (Gus Polinski)
Larry Hankin (Officer Balzak)
Jeffrey Wiseman (Mitch)
Ray Toler (Uncle Rob)
Virginia Smith (Aunt Georgette)
Matt Doherty (Steffan)
Kristin Minter (Heather)
Ralph Foody (Johnny)
Michael Guido (Snakes)
Billie Bird (Irene)
Bill Erwin (Ed)
Gerry Becker (Officer #1)
Alan Wilder (Scranton Ticket Agent)
Hope Davis (French Ticket Agent)
Kenneth Hudson Campbell (Santa)
Jim Ortlieb (Drugstore Clerk)

Director: Chris Columbus
Production company: Hughes Entertainment


Setting/Aesthetic/Feel: 5/5
First off, I LOVE the homey Christmas aesthetic!!! The lights, the snow, the decorations, the families coming home for Christmas Eve... I LOVE ALL OF IT. It’s amazing. 

Also, although I am not a fan of how mean they are to each other, the big family dynamic of rush and getting in each others’ way as we try to get stuff done, is pretty accurate... ;P 

Characters: 3/5
I just mentioned how I am not a fan of how mean they are. Yeah, I’m not a huge fan of the characters of the film. Kevin’s mother is decent (though she was unfair about the punishment) and his father is decent (though he has his not-so-shining moments too). Kevin himself is a cute kid, even if he’s a bit of a schemer, and has his not-great points (I hate how he talks back to his parents). But after all, the kid is 8 and his family doesn’t treat him very well. Hate Uncle Frank, and why doesn’t Aunt Leslie stand up to him? As for the kids, they’re basically all brats with poisonous tongues. AND I HATE BUZZ. What a horrid, horrid elder brother. And of course Marv & Harry deserve everything they get... I liked Old Marley though. 

Plot: 4/5
Personally, I think the whole forgotten-at-home side of the plot is very realistic. Specially since they counted in the neighbour kid as Kevin initially. I enjoy the way the plot layers Kevin’s adventures and those of his family/mother as they (try to) come home. The part of Kevin being an adult are oddly inspiring. And the comedy side of the story is great... I enjoy seeing what Kevin has planned next through the whole climax! Finally, the ending is pretty awesome. :D 

Theme/Message/Topics: 4/5
I ADORE the church scene. “This is the place to be if you’re feeling bad about yourself.” I would have liked that to be more fleshed out but being it’s a secular film, I was just pleased and surprised that scene was there at all! I also really love the message about courage... The message about family could be a bit stronger but it’s okay. 

Kevin: How do you know?
Marley: I don’t know. I’m just afraid he won’t.
Kevin: No offense, but aren’t you too old to be afraid?

Content: 1/5 (high)
Some drinking + smoking, lying & stealing. Several uses of language: h**l, d**n, d**il, s***, c*ap, a**, probably more. Mostly happens during the climax with the robbers. Kevin flips through a Playboy & mentions no one is wearing any clothes. Buzz mentions nude beaches and girls armpit shaving. There are 1 or more pictures of a bikini-clad model in Buzz’s room. Mentions of Fuller wetting the bed; 2 brief scenes where Kevin is shirtless with a towel wrapped around his middle.

Violence: 3/5 (medium)
Lots of slapstick violence—burning, hitting, getting a nail through your foot, etc. There’s no blood but there is burn scars. It didn’t bother me the second time I watched the film but the first time it did. Threats of violence against Kevin by Marv & Harry (“gonna kill him,” “gonna bite all his fingers off,” etc). Old Man Marley is rumoured to have murdered his family and kept their bodies in his garbage cans, where they’ve mummified (false); he also has a bloody hand wrapped up.   

Overall: 2/5
I love the Christmas theme. And the film is really funny. But I hate the family, and most of all the content is definitely not family-friendly as I was lead to believe it would be. 

10 November 2023

“The Ice Age” (2002)

The Ice Age


Brief Description:

Sid the sloth was left behind by his family on their annual migration. Manny the Mammoth is going against the current of animals heading south. Diego the Saber-Tooth Tiger is struggling to keep up his position in his group. When Manny rescues Sid, the sloth on’t leave him alone. Meanwhile, Diego tries to steal a woman’s baby for his leader’s revenge, but she wrecks his plans by jumping over some falls to protect her son. When the woman hands over the baby to Manny and dies, Diego tries to convince them to hand the baby over, but Manny’s not about to trust him. Through a series of adventures and misfortunes, will the unlikely group form friendship, or will tragedy rip them apart at last? 

(written by me)


Date: 2002

Genre: animated adventure comedy

Running time: 1 hour 21 minutes 


Cast: 

Ray Romano (Manny)

John Leguizamo (Sid)


Denis Leary (Diego)


Goran Višnjić (Soto)


Jack Black (Zeke)


Cedric the Entertainer (Carl)


Stephen Root (Frank)


Diedrich Bader (Oscar)


Alan Tudyk (Lenny)

Jane Krakowski & Lorri Bagley (Rachel & Jennifer)

Chris Wedge (Squirrel)


Tara Strong (Baby)


Director: Chris Wedge

Production company: Blue Sky Studios & 20th Century Fox Animation


Wikipedia page


Watch on Archive


Setting/Aesthetic/Feel: 3/5

I first saw this film at some friends’ house years ago. I always remembered it and how much we enjoyed it, so I gave it another shot recently while stuck in bed with a twisted ankle. I’m taking it as fantasy, which it definitely is. The setting is pretty nondescript. Just ice and snow or rocks and dirt, etc. 


Characters: 4/5

I love Manny. Sarcasm Master, but amazingly loving & sacrificing, with a heartbreaking backstory. I love how he spent his grief through the film by doing bigger and bigger acts of love & forgiveness. Diego is also quite funny, and he comes across as a bit pitiful… really enjoyed his arc as he slowly starts softening too. And Sid is just downright dumb and hilarious. Their friendship is awesome.


Plot: 4/5

The story centres more around the relationship of the three MCs than on any actual plot, although the whole point is them travelling together to give the baby back to the humans. I enjoy the adventures and misadventures, but most of all their conversations and the moments where they display their emotions and whatnot. :) It’s a pretty heartwarming film to be honest. 


Theme/Message/Topics: 4/5

Basically just love & forgiveness… 


Content: 4/5 (low)

Probably some euphemisms. 


Violence: 5/5 (low)


Overall: 4/5

A fun, simple, heartwarming, and humorous film. :) 

8 November 2023

“Zootopia” (2016)

Zootopia


Also known as: Zootropolis and Zoomania


Brief Description: 

In a city of anthropomorphic animals, a rookie bunny cop and a cynical con artist fox must work together to uncover a conspiracy.

(via IMDb)


Date: 2016

Genre: American animated action comedy

Running time: 1 hour 48 minutes


Cast: 

Ginnifer Goodwin (Judy)

Della Saba (young Judy)

Jason Bateman (Nick)

Kath Soucie (young Nick)

Idris Elba (Chief Bogo)

Jenny Slate (Ms. Bellwether)

Nate Torrence (Clawhauser)

Bonnie Hunt (Mrs. Hopps)

Don Lake (Mr. Hopps)

Tommy Chong (Yax)

J.K. Simmons (Mayor Lionheart)

Octavia Spencer (Mrs. Otterton)

Alan Tudyk (Duke Weaselton)

Shakira (Gazelle)

Raymond S. Persi (Flash / Officer Higgins)

Maurice LaMarche (Mr. Big)

Phil Johnston (Gideon Grey)

Fuschia! (Polar bear drill instructor)

John DiMaggio (ice cream parlour owner / Doug's assistants)

Katie Lowes (Dr. Badger)

Gita Reddy (Nangi)

Jesse Corti (Manchas)

Tom Lister Jr. (Finnick)

Josh Dallas (pig)

Leah Latham (Fru-Fru)

Rich Moore (Doug / Larry)

Fabienne Rawley & Peter Mansbridge (news anchors)

Jared Bush & Byron Howard (Judy’s neighbours)

Mark Rhino Smith (Officer McHorn)

Josie Trinidad (Mrs. Armadillo)

Kristen Bell (Priscilla)


Director: Byron Howard & Rich Moore

Production company: Walt Disney Pictures & Walt Disney Animation Studios


Wikipedia page


Watch on Archive



Setting/Aesthetic/Feel: 5/5

I fell in love with the idea of Zootopia when I first saw it in “movie clip” videos online. Anthropomorphic animal cities are so fun! I really like how the city had the different zones—tundra, ice, desert, and rainforest—and how the different animals coexist, with all the pros and cons that takes :) Also, seeing things like iPhones and modern whatnot is pretty cool ;P


Characters: 5/5

I love Judy! She’s smart, tactful, super hardworking and driven, loyal and loving and so passionate for justice and equality. Nick is also pretty awesome. He’s cynical, but super softie, and a pretty hardworking guy as well. I hated Chief Bogo, but I couldn’t help liking Mayor Lionheart… he’s such an amiable guy after all. ;P And I felt sorry for Ms. Bellwether… she was so cute and mistreated! Clawhauser is super cute/sweet/fun, and Judy’s parents are adorable in their hardworking backcountry stereotypes. Gideon Grey might be offensive to some people, but I loved his warm southern accent and his redemption arc (A REAL HEARTFELT APOLOGY, Y’ALL!!). Mr. Big & Fru-Fru were hilarious and adorable. I mean, everyone here was so vivid and fun!


Plot: 5/5

Okay, so I love stories of young adults coming of age and all that stuff. So inspiring. And Judy is nothing if not inspiring! The plot starts with her as a kid, announcing her desire to be a police officer and defending friends against bullies. Jumping ahead, it shows all her struggles in training. Once she finally enters the force, she’s assigned parking duty, which destroys her—instead of being a hero, she’s a villain. Chief Bogo does all he can to keep her there, but with Mayoral Assistant Bellwether, Judy manages to get permission to crack a missing persons case in 48 hours. The only lead she encounters is Nick, whom she has to blackmail into helping her. Their adventures all over the city as they peel back the layers of the case… it’s awesome. Then there’s the climax with all the city in an uproar and predators being shunned & victimized… breaking up Nick & Judy’s awesome friendship thanks to her unthinking words… and then… well, I don’t want to spoil the ending, but it is truly EPIC. I didn’t want to stop watching, even as the credits rolled by!


Theme/Message/Topics: 5/5

It’s a comedy, but there are some real good and deep themes. 

- Believing in yourself and chasing your dreams instead of settling down out of fear of the unknown, or disrupting your current comfort zone. (Judy’s whole storyline is epic and super inspiring.)

- Being unmerciful/too quick to act, shown in Judy’s disastrous run as a “meter maid.” 

- Humility, and apologizing properly. 

- Prejudice, justice, & equality, in how the predators are treated by the prey and how the “little folks” are treated by the big animals, as well as stereotypes about foxes & bunnies damaging life for Nick and Judy respectively. Great simple little reminders about diversity and non-diveristy.

- The cons of living an ideal that “anyone can be anything.”

- The villain’s motive & arc are very thought-provoking & super well done, with all the bitterness, narrow-mindedness, and callousness it holds.

- Self-sacrifice, loyalty, & love. 

- And while I don’t like the music of “Try Everything,” I LOVE THE LYRICS!!!


Content: 3/5 (medium)

I alluded to the cons of “anyone can be anything.” There’s a scene where to get more info about the missing person she’s investigating, Judy is taken to a naturist club. The scene doesn’t last too long, but you have all these unclothed animals running around doing various activities… I don’t watch and listen instead because it’s pretty uncomfortable.

Also, when checking the character list it seems Judy’s neighbours are a homosexual couple?? It doesn’t say so in the film and I thought they were friends. 

Gazelle, the pop star, does a show at the end of the film. Lots of dancing by her in a miniskirt and crop-top and shirtless tigers, as well as the whole audience. And the music is definitely not something I’d listen to.

Mild euphemisms; “like the devil.”


Violence: 5/5 (low)

Non-graphic fighting; a scene where [MAJOR SPOILER] Nick “goes wild” and stalks Judy, and she pretends to die and screams a death scream that is brief but kinda disturbing haha. [END OF MAJOR SPOILER] 


Overall: 4.5/5

Overall, I really, really enjoyed this. It had a lot of my favourite things in films all rolled up into one, and I wish I could find a good cover of Try Everything… 

1 November 2023

“Planet 51” (2009)

Planet 51


Brief Description:

An alien civilization is invaded by Astronaut Chuck Baker, who believes that the planet was uninhabited. Wanted by the military, Baker must get back to his ship before it goes into orbit without him.

(from IMDb)


Date: 2009

Genre: animated science fiction comedy

Running time: 1 hour 31 minutes 


Cast: 

Justin Long (Lem / Rover)

Dwayne Johnson (Captain Chuck Baker)

Jessica Biel (Neera)

Seann William Scott (Skiff)

Freddie Benedict (Eckle)

Gary Oldman (General Grawl)

John Cleese (Professor Kipple)

Mathew Horne (Soldier Vesklin)

James Corden (Soldier Vernkot)

Alan Marriott (Glar)

Rupert Degas (Chief Gorlock)


Director: Jorge Blanco

Production company: 

Ilion Animation Studios & HandMade Films International


Wikipedia page


Setting/Aesthetic/Feel: 4/5

Disclaimer to preface all this: no, I don’t believe in aliens. But I saw nothing wrong with a fantasy movie imagining a 1950s other world. Specially when throughout the movie there’s no weird alien claims made or anything. I really saw it more as an allegory than anything. I liked how cute and 1950s-America-ish that planet is! It’s also amusing to see the differences between our world and that world, like their cars… ;P 


Characters: 4/5

I liked Lem a lot. He was very retable and had a great arc. Took him forever to decide to be a hero, which was, again, very relatable. ;P Neera was super cute and sweet and I loved her! Skiff and Eckle were hilarious—particularly Skiff—and Rover was adoooorable. So was that horrible black dog-like monstrosity that you just had to fall in love with by the end (so unfair). And Lem’s & Neera’s parents were awesome, even if they barely showed up. Vesklin & Vernkot were just great comedic sidekicks, and Glar too. Kipple was TERRIFYING and AWFUL, and so was the General… well… until… you’ll find out. ;P And finally, I know Chuck tried. It wasn’t that he wasn’t nice, it was just that his ego was about as big around as his helmet and I could never really like him much. 


Plot: 4/5

Admittedly, I didn’t get to listen to this with closed captions, so I missed some of the plot because I couldn’t get the dialogue. So there may be several parts I missed. Anyways. I really liked the plot as far as I saw it. The suspense was high (for me, anyways, because the clock was TICKING and the obstacles were MOUNTING and things just kept getting WORSE… even if it had to come out right in the end… right?? … I didn’t know, and it sure didn’t look like it would). Anyhow. I really liked how everything was set-up for the arrival of Chuck before we were dumped into the actual clock-ticking. There was plenty of humour and action, but also some cute/sweet scenes… I don’t know, I really liked it. And the ending is, like, perfect. 


Romance: 4/5

Just adorably cute and vintage, but with a great pursuit and seeking-good-character theme to add to it! 


Theme/Message/Topics: 5/5

Admittedly, my favourite part about the film is the themes. First, Lem’s arc. I deeply relate to his fear of the future, his lack of self-confidence, his frantic desire that nothing challenge his status quo and dreams… His arc of learning sacrifice and choosing the right thing, even if people couldn’t see it, was great. 


Second, the themes of prejudice and mass ignorance. The completely ridiculous ideas of the general populace about humans/Chuck was laughable, but also sobering. Not because of our own hysteria/assumptions about (possible) extraterrestrial life, but because of our assumptions/prejudice against fellow humans. The added sub-themes of the scientific ignorance (such as Kipple’s bogus ideas about zombies and mind control, and his methods of figuring the character and intentions of the astronaut he never met, and also the incorrect scientific “knowledge” about their own universe) was also powerful. And from that comes the final off-shoot theme of hating people because of fearing them because of not understanding them. As silly as Glar is, I love his message of peace and love against the general fear and hatred towards the “alien” astronaut. Neera’s declaration for them was good


Content: 4/5 (low)

In the scenes where Chuck is (about to be) brain-operated, he is bare and covered with a blanket. In a final brief scene shot in that room, you see a shot of his legs as he gets off the table and the blanket slips off. The extraterrestrials (Lem, Neeta, Skiff, & Eckle) all stare at him before Skiff remarks, “That’s an odd place for his antenna to be.” 


I don’t remember any other content besides possibly some mild euphemisms (can’t quite remember) and for those who care about it, 1950s music and dancing. I may have forgotten some other content.


Violence: 4/5 (low)

Mild violence like shooting, etc. Threat of brain operation; a shot where the saw is almost on Chuck’s head; & a scene where extraterrestrials are carried off with their brains in boxes. A scene where a bunch of soldiers get electrocuted; in a final scene, the army base blows up. 


Overall: 4/5

When my siblings sat down to watch this I was very skeptical, but I ended up enjoying it quite a bit! I think it could probably be a family film with some fast-forwarding (but don’t quote me on it because again, I missed some of the plot & dialogue and forgot more ;P).