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Hears a who horton
Hears a who horton




Carrey), and the elephant makes it his mission to keep the Who-world safe from harm. In short order, Horton establishes communication with the Whos, led by the Mayor (Steve Carell, a fine vocal partner for Mr.

hears a who horton

The sound emanates from the town (or is it a planet?) of Whoville, peopled by those classic pear-shaped Seuss creations brought beautifully to life here in pristine not-too-busy animation. There's even a wildly inspired Manga-esque sequence and an out-of-left-field rendition of "Can't Fight This Feeling" which feels like is belongs at the end of a Judd Apatow comedy.Īs in the original tale, the plot is set in motion when a speck of dust floats by the ear of the titular pachyderm. "Horton" keeps the Seuss text in voice-over (natch) and injects its characters with a distinctly modern patois (lots of "awesomes" and a few "dudes" are thrown in). Not so in "Horton", however, thanks in large part to the clever, non-stop script by Ken Daurio and Cinco Paul ("The Santa Clause 2"). Carrey is able to employ his usual rapid-fire vocal antics, turning up the wide-eyed innocence which has been known to lapse into schmaltz in the past (i.e., "The Majestic"). But his place is behind a mic, not covered in prosthetics (the same could be said for Mike Myers in "The Cat in the Hat"). Jim Carrey is perfect for those playfully acrobatic Seussian rhymes. It turns out Ron Howard had the right idea, just the wrong medium. And the adults will have plenty of fun watching it too.

hears a who horton hears a who horton

"Horton Hears a Who!" - a computer-animated adaptation of the 1954 Seuss favorite about an imaginative elephant's belief in life on a speck of dust - may not have the staying power of "The Grinch", but it's sure to occupy a space in the (Blu-ray Disc) library of many a tyke. As Ron Howard's 2000 live-action attempt proved, it's wiser not to even try (even with Jim Carrey covered head-to-toe in green fur as the green meanie of the title). Seuss adaptations, it's nigh on impossible to trump 1966's animated holiday perennial "How the Grinch Stole Christmas!", with its classic, low-res animation and pitch-perfect Boris Karloff narration.






Hears a who horton