“Let the wild rumpus start!” Nine-year-old Max runs away from home and sails across the sea to become king of the land Where the Wild Things Are. King Max rules a wondrous realm of gigantic fuzzy monsters–but being king may not be as carefree as it looks! Filmmaker Spike Jonze directs a magical, visually astonishing film version of Maurice Sendak’s celebrated children’s classic, starring an amazing cast of screen veterans and featuring young Max Records in a fierce and sensitive performance as Max.Through his handcrafted ode to the trials of childhood, Spike Jonze puts his own unique imprint on Maurice Sendak’s enduring classic. In the prologue, 9-year-old Max (Max Records) stomps around the house, feeling neglected. When his mom (Catherine Keener) sends him to bed without supper, Max runs away (something he doesn’t do in the book). He finds a boat and sails to a distant land where fuzzy monsters are raising a rumpus in the forest. Since his wolf suit allows him to fit right in, he joins the fray, catching the eye of Carol (James Gandolfini, excellent), who notes, approvingly, “I like the way you destroy stuff. There’s a spark to your work that can’t be taught.” With that, they pronounce the diminutive creature king, hoping he can bring cohesion to their fractured family. After Max comes across Carol’s scale-model town, he decides they should build a real one, but the project stalls as Alexander (Paul Dano) and Douglas (Chris Cooper) mope, Judith (Catherine O’Hara) browbeats Ira (Forest Whitaker), and Carol pines for K.W. (Lauren Ambrose), who prefers the company of owls Bob and Terry. Max realizes he has to make a choice: stay with the wild things or return home, where he has to keep his aggressive impulses in check. For readers of Sendak’s slim tome, his decision won’t come as a surprise, but Jonze ends the story on a lovely grace note. Until that time, the squabbling is a bit much–these monsters never stop talking–but Jonze, cowriter Dave Eggers, the Jim Henson Company, and singer/songwriter Karen O. have gone all-out to re-create the inner world of a child with as much empathy as was mustered for the inner adult world of Jonze’s Being John Malkovich. –Kathleen C. Fennessy
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January 2, 2006
#1
Picture every single indie rock cliche that ever existed, and put them in a blender, and voila! Karen O and the kids. VOMIT.
January 2, 2006
#2
This movie is a waste of time, could not believe how bad it was.
BAD>>>BAD>>>>BAD>>>>BAD.
January 3, 2006
#3
Never read the book, but the movie tries way too hard to be indie. Loved the director’s other movies, but this was just bad and depressing. The kid was just so rude and annoying-like most kids these days!! Not worth your time…
January 3, 2006
#4
This was playing on our airplane flight coming home from the East Coast. My 9 year old son was so excited. After about 15 minutes I couldn’t even watch it anymore and took my headphones off. About 5 minutes later he took his off and told me he didn’t like it at all. After we landed my husband who was sitting across from us said he made it 10 minutes into it and thought it was one of the worst movies he had ever seen. Don’t waste your time or money!
January 3, 2006
#5
Para los hispano hablantes que vean esta pelicula es una perdida de tiempo, la peor adptación que pudieron realizar de un libro, con una trama sosa y aburrida, que lo único que lo hace meditar es porque perdi el tiempo viendo esta pelicula, lástima con tantas posibilidades que posee la historia, ni siquiera un niño podría disfrutar este desastre cinematografico.