Where the Wild Things are.

To be fair I covered my eyes and ears at Alvin in the Chipmunks so I think most 'childrens' movies are pretty scary. Where the Whild Things are looks exactly as it should......AWESOME
 
Man, I haven't been this hyped for a movie since TDK. Everytime I see a tv spot on I stop everything I'm doing to watch.
 
This looks to be taking a step back to the 80s kids films where it didn't talk down to them, and they acted like KIDS, and not cliches.
 
I see some of the media are already pushing the "Too scary for kids?" tag line. Disappointing, but not all that surprising to me, given what is pushed as children entertainment.

Maybe it needs more fart jokes, and a catchy Pop Song?

That shows how truly sensitive and *****fied most people in this society are becoming.

I don't see how anyone can find those 'Wild Things' remotely scary. If anything they slightly watered them down from the book. In the book their eyes had an evil look/nature to them that made them all look a bit more ferocious.

Take the fact that in the movie version they have cute looking eyes/faces and they didn't even try to alter the voice actor's voices to make them sound more like beasts, I would have loved to hear what people had to say if the Wild Things were more like the book.
 
My review:

No doubt about it, Where the Wild Things Are is a product of magical madness, the result of a gutsy studio (Warner Brothers) handing an ultra-pricy property to a maverick auteur in the hopes that some sort of movie-making alchemy would take place. With Spike Jonze, the punk-rock wunderkind responsible for the surrealistic head-trip epics Being John Malkovich and Adaptation, vividly reimaging Maurice Sendak’s uniquely illustrated beloved children’s literary staple, the final product was destined to be peculiar and challenging - a reality which incited numerous behind-the-scenes creative fisticuffs. Fortunately, from the turmoil has emerged an oft-flawed beauty of a film whose emotional and visual triumphs outweigh its pesky narrative shortcomings.

From the outset, with its graffiti-covered opening titles – which are curiously reminiscent of the studio’s The Dark Knight viral marketing campaign – and dynamic handheld opening featuring the movie’s little hero Max (Max Records) aggressively wrestling with the family dog, Where the Wild Things Are wears it’s down-and-dirty indie aesthetic on its scruffy, frayed sleeve. Jonze has hardwired the look of the film to the rambunctious psyche of his diminutive protagonist, a thin-skinned, hyperactively imaginative young boy trapped in the gulf between childhood and adolescence, desperate for the attentions of his popular older sister and busy single mom (the invaluable Catherine Keener). After a nasty domestic fight, spurred by the presence of a male suitor (Mark Ruffalo, in a brief part), little Max runs anxiously from the house and into the nearby woods. Or does he?

Max’s distressed entrance into the dim forest transforms into an epic journey across turbulent seas and craggy precipices, drawing him into the ominous island woodlands which the wild things call home. Initially threatened by the gargantuan creatures, the young boy is saved from certain devouring by the hot-blooded Carol (James Gandolfini), the volatile outsider of the group who convinces his monstrous family unit to crown Max as their king. Proving to be an eager ruler, the juvenile monarch initially engages the towering beasts in numerous games and fort-building ventures, before more complicated issues begin to rear their head. While Carol pines for the attentions of the distant KW (Lauren Ambrose), and the smaller, sensitive Alexander (voiced by Paul Dano, and resembling the bipedal cousin of The NeverEnding Story’s luckdragon Falkor) yearns to have his voice heard, Max finds himself having to empathize with and ease the complex painful feelings of his hulking subjects before summoning up the courage to return to his earthly home.

The world created by Jonze and his art department is both wondrously pristine and domesticated, and when we step into it, leaving behind the authentic middle-class suburban reality of Max’s universe, we are entering a new kind of place entirely; a fantastical land which stirs within us a sense of marvel and inquisitiveness. Inhabited by the immense monsters - stunning achievements of CG and practical effects - which bear grubby, matted fur and unclean claws, the island is a setting where the dreams of cinematic enthusiasts come true. Watching Max and his newfound friends standing on a cliff, perilously close to the treacherous surf, howling at the golden horizon, waves of astonished chills flowed down my spine. There are numerous moments in Wild Things that will leave you breathless with appreciation.

Truly, the film’s success hinges on young Max Records, a real find, who plays a refreshingly naturalistic kid; playful and intelligent, but also irrational and difficult. We believe the unfolding extraordinary events because we believe he does, and his relationship with Gandolfini’s lovingly textured Carol is superbly developed. They have a heart-to-heart while journeying across a sandy plane that is intensely moving and a visit to the monster’s secret model room produces one of the film’s most gorgeously memorable scenes.

Yet one has to question who the film was made for. The script, by Jonze and Dave Eggers, is exceptional at conveying the deeper meanings behind the monsters’ personal parallels to Max’s own life, but too formless and oblique to be an easily accessible story. Frankly, it’s often something of a downer, with an omnipresent air of melancholy and an intentionally uncertain ending. As much as kids love ambiguity and rich subtext, Wild Things feels like the work of an eccentric filmmaker completely baffled by the wants or needs of his target audience, more interested in playing to the parents who are capable of performing the necessary heavy-lifting.

Although the movie ultimately falls short of its lofty aims, there is a beguiling purity in its dark, wounded soul that captures a greater truth – one which some may feel slightly uncomfortable acknowledging. Jonze’s Where the Wild Things Are is an entirely new breed of animal altogether, a grown-up children’s fable with passion and bite. There are wonders to be found within its gloomy frames, but what you discover there may not be quite what you were prepared for.

4 out of 5
 
just saw a trailer on comedy central right now, man i so pumped to see this.
 
I saw this Tuesday at Arclight Hollywood. And let me just say, I'm in the minority, but I ****ing hate this Scientology owned theatre chain. I hate parking there, I hate that they still ****ing charge you for parking after validation and pretty much everything else. Slight jeers to WB for not giving me full parking validation. I did Couples Retreat last week and Universal gave us free parking validation.

In the same theatre they were actually having the premiere of Black Dynamite. Michael Jai White was there and I saw a couple other familiar faces there. I couldn't network though because I had to get up to Wild Things. When I went in I almost thought I was in the wrong theatre because of all the Black Dynamite crap.

Walking in right after I did was none other than the legendary LEONARD MALTIN.

Anyway, on to the movie. I loved it. This is not at all shot like a kids movie. Its shot like a heady indie movie with big overgrown muppets. What I liked about it is because if this was probably some schmuck director they would've given all the wild things poop jokes or dumb ass buzz catchphrases. Nothing like that ever happens.

Max Records is freaking brilliant. He makes this movie and he always keeps himself the center of attention and never lets the creatures steal the show.

My feeling is and I imagine this was intentional, is that the movie itself is shot like an extension of Max's imagination. There's a really inventive and awkward transitional cut in the early moments of the movie that's very much like how a kid things and how short their attention spans sometimes are.

Basically I think the message is this. More often then not, when parents are so worried that there's something WRONG with their kids, there really isn't anything wrong with them. Kids are in essence "wild" creatures. Their behavior and their mood swings is just part of their adjustment in growing up, but its also what makes them so wonderful because when you are an adult you can't look at the world the same way anymore. Enjoy your kids while they are young and wild before they have to grow up and tell other kids **** like the son is going to die after the human race is destroyed.
 
i did some research; besides Scientology using the Arclight for screenings and events, it's just a rumor that is being run by the Enemies of Lord Xenu.
 
Considering how many people in the biz are into scientology, it's not that shocking.
 
i did some research; besides Scientology using the Arclight for screenings and events, it's just a rumor that is being run by the Enemies of Lord Xenu.
Its true. Straight from my friends that work at Arclight.

Also, I interviewed for Arclight. Their interview process is straight out of scientology ******** philosophy. They make you do all sorts of bizarre **** at the interviews.

Also a message and shout to to people like xwolverine, Octoberist, Hunter Rider and all the other people who act like jerks and say I hate everything:

I FREAKING LOVED THIS MOVIE! STOP SAYING I HATE EVERYTHING! IT TICKS ME THE HELL OFF!
 
ohh lookie here, mr. Vile One likes it! I love it when I make you made. it fuels me. energizes me. hahahahahahahahahaha
 
So, who is gonna check this out this weekend?
 
Most reviews, including Ebert, like it, but say kids will get somewhat bored. But older people will like it because it reminds them of their childhood.
 
Seeing it Sunday, cannot f'n wait.
 
I just saw it. It's really good and the Wild Things looked amazing obviously. There are some lagging bits on the island where they could have cut some of the one-on-one scenes but it's only 90 odd minutes and you are going to smile at the end.
 
I liked it a lot. Perhaps not as much as I thought I would, but I still liked it a lot. The kid who played Max did a good job. I thought at first that he started out obnoxious as hell, but I liked him more once he got to the island. I really liked the voice acting for the Wild Things, especially Gandolfini. What surprised me most about the movie was the dark turn it took at the beginning of the third act ([BLACKOUT]Carol going crazy, ripping off Douglas's arm and threatening to eat Max[/BLACKOUT]).
 

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