|
Horton Hears A Who
20th Century Fox, 88mins, G


Directed by Jimmy Hayward
and Steve Martino
In the early 1940s, animation giant Bob Clampett decided to do
something different. He made an adaptation of a genuine book. It was
about an elephant named Horton, who had hatched an egg as a favor to
the mother, who was off for a while. The book was written by a
sertain Theodore Seuss Giesel, who using his middle name as a
nom-de-plume, was making a name for himself as an editorial
cartoonist and writer of childrens books.
IT was so popular that
it Geisel wrote a sequel [albeit fourteen years later], which was
made into a TV special by Chuck Jones in 1970, which brings us to a
great philosophical question. How is it possible to adapt Dr. Seuss
to the big screen. After all, his works were relatively short, and
while Clampett's adaptation works brilliantly, it was only ten
minutes long, and Jones' “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” was
heavily padded to twice that long (not including commercials, which
make it a half hour).
Then, of course there were those two atrocious live-action
adaptations that came out recently. They didn't work because they
were too long, and didn't have the feel of the creator's artistic
style. In fact, Geisel's daughters vowed never to have a live-action
adaptation of his work again. Which was a good idea.
Now the people who did “Ice Age” managed to get the rights to
“Horton Hears a Who”, which is probably the good doctor's deepest
book, and managed to actually get it right.
On the fifteenth of May,
in the Jungle of Nool, In the heat of the day, in the cool of the
pool, we meet Horton the elephant(Jim Carrey) splashing around and
enjoying himself. He's the local educator, sort of like the devil
ray in “Finding Nemo” only with a better sense of humor. Only this
time, he's the center of attention, when he hears a voice from
another planet, for the Mayor(Steve Carell) of Whoville, who lives
on a speck with the rest of his race, has somehow managed to
accidentally make contact.
Now the film differs from the book in a number of ways, for example,
in the microscopic sphere, the Mayor is a bit of a nebbish who
spends a lot of time having sex, [he has 96 daughters and one son]
and doesn't have the respect of the city council or his only son.
He's scared no one will believe him when he says that there's a
bigger world out there, which is a similar problem to Horton's, for
the dictatorial Mrs. Kangaroo(Carol Burnett) has warned him not to
cause trouble by talking about other worlds that are invisible to
the naked eye.
Cinco Paul and Ken Daurio had a very special problem, how to keep it
over the top in the Dr. Seuss fashion while actually being
restrained enough to keep everything from falling apart [not to
mention rated “G”] This they and directors Jimmy Hayward and Steve
Martino do. It's Dr. Seuss all the way, and the whole thing is one
of a piece. This is a fun film, and is well worth a look.
Go
to List of New Reviews
Go to Index Archives of
past reviews
|