Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas (2000)Find more information about Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas (2000) at Movies.com!
The MPAA rated Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas (2000) PG for some crude humor.
The Grinch is an ambitious attempt to translate the impossibly difficult images of Dr. Seuss' (Theodor Geisel's) popular book into a live-action movie. But director Ron Howard, along with an army of motion picture artists (creating an enormous credit roll), were undaunted by the challenge.
Opening with all the Whos in
Whoville frantically spending money to celebrate
Christmas, little Cindy Lou Who (Taylor Momsen) is the
only source of reason. Searching for a richer meaning to
Christmas, she decides to nominate the mysterious Grinch
as the Holiday Cheermeister of the annual Whobilation
festival. In a community where even uttering the word
Grinch can bring upon you the condemnation of Mayor May
Who (Jeffrey Tambor), Cindy's forthright declaration
meets with understandable displeasure.
Determined to discover what
motivates the Grinch to be so Grinchy, Cindy Lou does
some investigating, providing us with a "back
story" that Dr. Seuss never got around to penning.
The result of a delivery mix-up, Baby Grinch ended up in
Whoville where he stuck out like a green thumb.
Discovering it's not easy being green (and hairy), he
headed up the mountain to live the life of a hermit (not
to be confused with Kermit...).
If you can imagine Jim Carrey
dressed in a lizard-green skin-tight furry suit and
speaking like Sean Connery (reportedly due to the
dentures he had to wear), then you've got a fair picture
of what to expect from what is perhaps the most
over-promoted movie of the year. Fortunately Geisel's
widow Audrey muzzled the majority of off-color jokes and
typical Carrey bathroom humor (only a few brief moments
of possibly objectionable content remain), however it
appears that left the writers stuck for something to say.
Consequently this film opens fast, drags in the middle, but happily reverts to Seuss' story for the finale and--aside from a couple of unnecessary revengeful comments from Carrey--reminds audiences that Christmas is more than presents and long movie line-ups. If the overdone wobbly camera effect (leaving me wishing the concession stand sold Gravol) and hefty prices to get your family into the theater don't leave you too dizzy, you may find a little Seuss magic still left in this 21st century Grinch.
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Talk about the movie with your family...
The message of the original Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas was that the real meaning of Christmas had nothing to do with commercialism. How does the marketing and promotion of this movie provide an ironic twist to the original intent?
To find out what Dr. Seuss really said about Christmas, check for the book by the same name at your local library, bookstore, or possibly your own bookshelf.
Rod Gustafson
©
2000 One Voice Communications. All Rights Reserved
Although we have not reviewed the DVD version of Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas (2000), we provide the following information for your convenience.