2010-02-10 07:38 KST  
  RSS
Global Voices Online - The world is talking. Are you listening?
JapanFocus
'Charlotte's Web' A Tangle of Disrespect
Film version of kid lit classic amps the fart, holds the heart
Brian Orndorf (briano)     Email Article  Print Article 
Published 2006-12-14 17:58 (KST)   
"Charlotte's Web" isn't just a classic children's book, it's an institution; the top gun of tear-jerking elementary school staples that has never left the rotation of scholastic importance since its debut in 1952. Why is that? Because E.B. White's tender tale of friendship and mortality was respectful and imaginative. The new movie's take on "Charlotte's Web"? Fart jokes and Cedric the Entertainer.

Saved from certain doom by pre-teen Fern (Dakota Fanning), pig Wilbur (voiced by Dominic Scott Kay) is moved to a barn to fatten up for the holiday feast. There he meets his fellow farm animals and a friendly spider named Charlotte (Julia Roberts). Charlotte can't bear to see the pig meet his destiny, so she concocts a series of spider web messages to wow the humans into thinking Wilbur is a magical pig. When the plan works, Wilbur and Charlotte's bond is formed, only to be tested by the demands of time.

  TODAY'S TOP STORIES
[Opinion] Twitter Is Politics In Venezuela
Korea's HIV/AIDS Policies, Empty Promises
[Opinion] The Great Global Arms Bazaar
'Revolving Door' Israeli Labor Economics
Of Time and the City
  FROM THE SECTION
Lake Tahoe
"Everlasting Moments" Are Saved In Photos
"The Lovely Bones"
[DVD Review] ‘The Butcher:’ Movie-Making is Butchery
'Ballast' Doesn't Point Way
I'll admit that this new take on "Web" does stay true to White's plotting, and that of the 1973 animated spin. However, simply keeping in time with plot and overall authenticity are two very different ideas, and I fail to see the need for the production to hip up "Web" for the nano-second attention spans of today's kid audience. I mean, seriously, does the world need a "Charlotte's Web" with belching and flatulence gags? The book managed to crawl its way to timeless status without the need to pander, so why isn't that bravery respected?

It would make me sick to know that this picture is some impressionable child's first introduction to the world of "Web," only to refuse the book afterwards because nobody cuts the cheese in the literary incarnation.

Director Gary Winick, whose previous film, "13 Going on 30," was a real charmer, seems on auto-pilot here. Moments of emotion fall onto the frame with assembly line smoothness, carefully building the film's final act of tragedy and hope. Perhaps the voice cast sparkles too much (including Robert Redford, Oprah Winfrey, Andre Benjamin, Thomas Hayden Church, John Cleese, and a lively Steve Buscemi as rat Templeton), leaving little room for Wilbur to find center stage. Possibly Roberts's motherly, but monotone reading of Charlotte clogs the giving, loving glow of the charitable spider. Or maybe this film is more interested in becoming "Babe III" than trying to focus on the important elements of the story. The bottom line is that this cinematic "Web" leaves the viewer cold when the book effortlessly burrowed deep into the soul.


©2006 Paramount Pictures

The 1973 film, with all its period trappings and questionable animation, seemed to sweetly comprehend what made White's prose tick. I'm having great trouble understanding why the 2006 live-action adaptation doesn't register more profoundly.

Oh wait, it's the farting. It's always the farting.

D+
Which films opening this Christmas will you be sure to see? (Pick up to 5)  (2006-12-11 ~ 2006-12-31)
Apocalypto
Happy Feet
Casino Royale
Deck the Halls
The Holiday
Rocky Balboa
Letters from Iwo Jima
The Santa Clause 3
Deja Vu
Blood Diamond
©2006 OhmyNews
Other articles by reporter Brian Orndorf

Add to :  Add to Del.icio.usDel.icio.us |  Add to Digg this Digg  |  Add to reddit reddit |  Add to Y! MyWeb Y! MyWeb

  Comments    Note: Kindly refrain from personal attacks and profanity.
   Name   Your Blog  
   Title  
   Comment  
   Input
   number
  92   
218.  Deandre Omarion , 2007-08-31 14:12  
217.  Deandre Omarion , 2007-08-31 14:12  
216.  Deandre Omarion , 2007-08-31 14:12  
215.  Deandre Omarion , 2007-08-31 14:12  
214.  Deandre Omarion , 2007-08-31 14:12  
213.  Deandre Omarion , 2007-08-31 14:12  
Ronda Hauben
 
Ban Ki-moon on Goldstone Report Progress
Michael Werbowski
 
The Great Global Arms Bazaar
Michael Solis
 
Korea's HIV/AIDS Policies, Empty Promises
Yehonathan Tommer
 
'Revolving Door' Israeli Labor Economics
[ESL/EFL Podcast] Saying No
Seventeenth in a series of English language lessons from Jennifer Lebedev...
  [ESL/EFL] Talking About Change
  [ESL/ EFL Podcast] Personal Finances
  [ESL/EFL] Buying and Selling
How worried are you about the H1N1 influenza virus?
  Very worried
  Somewhat worried
  Not yet
  Not at all
    * Vote to see the result.   
 The Great Global Arms Bazaar
 [Opinion] Twitter Is Politics In Venezuela
 Ban Ki-moon on Goldstone Report Progress
 Of Time and the City
 Note to the OMNI Editors
 The Great Global Arms Bazaar
 Human Rights Watch Says Sanctions Must Stay
 Women are Unbelievable!
 I'm Going to Explode
 Media Development
KOREA WORLD SCI&TECH ART&LIFE ENTERTAINMENT SPORTS GLOBAL WATCH INTERVIEWS PODCASTS
  copyright 1999 - 2010 ohmynews all rights reserved. internews@ohmynews.com Tel:+82-2-733-5505,5595(ext.125) Fax:+82-2-733-5011,5077