Directed By: Raja Gosnell
Written By: J. David Stem (screenplay) and Peyo (characters)
Starring: Hank Azaria, Neil Patrick Harris, Jayma Mays, Sofia Vergara, George Lopez & Katy Perry
Rated: PG
Written By: J. David Stem (screenplay) and Peyo (characters)
Starring: Hank Azaria, Neil Patrick Harris, Jayma Mays, Sofia Vergara, George Lopez & Katy Perry
Rated: PG
MY RATING: C+
Silly, adorable, little blue fun.
This movie begins with the Smurfs in their happy little village living merrily. Enter Gargamel (Hank Azaria) who is after them for their Smurf essence and ends up chasing them into a portal that transports them to our world, New York City to be exact. Now trapped in the big city the Smurfs must find a way back before Gargamel hunts them down. Along the way they stumble upon Patrick (Neil Patrick Harris) and his wife Grace (Jayma Mays) who wind up taking care of them while they try to get back home. Pretty simple and sweet and that about sums up this movie.
I found The Smurfs to be an adorable interpretation for the next generation. I am one of those kids who grew up watching the cartoon so I was a little skeptical about this new version but I was entertained. The highlight of this movie is the animation. I mean they made these new Smurfs the cutest things I've ever seen! They also had great personalities too! I wasn't a huge fan of George Lopez as Grouchy Smurf but his character took more of a backseat so that was good. Surprisingly Katy Perry was great as Smurfette and unrecognizable which is always a good thing when you're doing voice acting in an animated films. Alan Cumming was hilarious as Gutsy Smurf and Jonathan Winters was sweet and protective as the lovable Papa Smurf. Now of course Hank Azaria as Gargamel and his sidekick cat Azrael were the funniest things in the whole movie. I'm also biased because I love cats so I got a kick out of everything that damn cat did. Thank goodness they didn't give the cat a voice but he was animated to give him expressions which cracked me up. I would have to watch it again to catch all of Hank Azaria's lines because I was too busy laughing to hear them all. He's just a comedic genius.
The humor is definitely more for kids but parents will enjoy this too. This is the type of movie you watch just to be a kid again and laugh and not take things too seriously. You have to ignore the ad agency storyline they added in with Sofia Vergara and Tim Gunn. Didn't quite fit or add anything to this movie. You also have to ignore a terribly long scene where Neil Patrick Harris has a jam session with the Smurfs playing Guitar Hero. It was funny at first and then it went on way too long. You must ignore the visual disconnect when the Smurfs are supposed to be interacting with Patrick (Harris) and Grace (Mays). You can tell the actors didn't fully know where the Smurfs were going to be. Finally, ignore your confusion when an overly clumsy Gargamel suddenly becomes all powerful towards the end of the film. Huh? Shhssh it's good enough for the kids. At the end of the day I was entertained enough. It was cute, funny and heartwarming but not one to add to a list of classic family films.
So I'd say if you don't have kids to drag you to this movie then you can wait for DVD or cable.
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