Jim Carrey
Bill Wine - Celebrity News Service Movie Critic
Mr. Popper's Penguins
The younger the children you take to Mr. Popper's Penguins, the more they'll like it.
As for the rest of us, well, this fizzle of a family film is remarkably and resoundingly resistible.
That's because, as a gimmicky kidflick, it doesn't trust youngsters to knowingly respond and thus speaks down to them to an insufferable degree. It is, in the end, for the birds.
In the lazy and bland Mr. Popper's Penguins, neither Jim Carrey nor the six penguins with whom he co-stars are shown to any kind of advantage. The charm and appeal of all seven of them is squandered.
Of course, playing opposite four-legged creatures is nothing new to Carrey. After all, it was Ace Ventura: Pet Detective that launched him into the superstardom stratosphere in 1994.
He does it again here in a kids' comedy that's loosely based on the 1938 children's book of the same name by Richard and Florence Atwater that won a Newbery award in 1939.
It's the tale of driven New York real estate developer Tom Popper, played by Carrey, a divorced and distracted father of two, who has made his share of moral compromises and emotional sacrifices in the name of succeeding at his life's work.
Then he receives an unusual gift from his estranged father -- six Gentoo penguins. Suddenly he has to care for this penguin six-pack -- and be the kind of caretaker he rarely if ever is with his own children -- and turn his lavish apartment into a wintry haven.
Director Mark Waters (Mean Girls, Just Like Heaven, The Spiderwick Chronicles, Ghosts of Girlfriends Past) showcases his main ingredients -- Captain, Bitey, Nimrod, Lovey, Loudy, Stinky; oh, and Jim -- and builds the rest of the bland fable's halfhearted elements around them: the plot, characters, dialogue, relationships, settings, and themes all get short shrift.
For the penguin footage -- and there's a lot of it -- Waters straddles the line between CGI and traditional by using real penguins for much of the bits, but also resorting to computer-generated embellishments. And, admittedly, he does it so seamlessly, it's remarkably difficult to tell the difference between live action and animation.
He also keeps things as broad and obvious as can be from the first frame on, whether he's telling his story, setting up childish slapstick bits, sweeping snow off the path of the film's overly familiar and much-tread-upon central theme, or sledgehammering home the film's heavyhanded, repetitive message.
Our inherent fascination with these tuxedoed fowl -- exploited entertainingly in such recent penguin-centric films as March of the Penguins, Happy Feet, Farce of the Penguins, The Pebble and the Penguin, and Surf's Up -- is trotted out once again but without much enthusiasm or conviction.
The sometimes strangely strident screenplay by Sean Anders, John Morris, and Jared Stern wins over only the youngest viewers. For everyone else, the feeling persists that this material, at least as developed here, must have played a heck of a lot better on the page than on the screen.
Carrey seems either slightly embarrassed by, or perhaps disinterested in, the material, which explains why, in an effort to raise the entertainment level, he breaks character several times to give us trademark bits, impressions, or facial contortions of comedian Jim Carrey rather than actor Carrey as the conceived title character.
Come to Popper, he's saying. But we don't. Even when we laugh, we don't. And we don't laugh much anyway at this one-trick pony, Mr. Popper's Penguins.
Cute belly-flopping birds. Cutesy flopping movie.
Mr. Popper's Penguins" Movie Trailer
MPAA rating: PG, Comedy.
Running time: 1:37.
Jim Carrey is Mr. Popper, a driven businessman who is clueless when it comes to the important things in life -- until he inherits six penguins. Popper's penguins turn his swank New York apartment into a snowy winter wonderland -- and the rest of his life upside-down. Filmed on a refrigerated soundstage with real Gentoo Penguins, Mr. Popper's Penguins is a contemporary adaptation of the classic book.
more MOVIE REVIEWS ...
Recent Movie Reviews - Films in Theaters
Green Lantern
Green Lantern
Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively
Green Lantern a relationship picture, in which test pilot Hal Jordan learns to be a better man en route to saving the planet from the fire-breathing, soul-sucking Parallax. Blake Lively provides a welcome distraction as Hal's ex, Carol Ferris. With the help of his ring, Hal can turn anything he can think of into reality
Mr. Popper's Penguins
Mr. Popper's Penguins
Jim Carrey
Neither Jim Carrey nor the six penguins with whom he co-stars are shown to any kind of advantage. He does it again here in a strained kids' comedy that's loosely based on the 1938 children's book of the same name by Richard and Florence Atwater
Beginners
Beginners
Christopher Plummer and Ewan McGregor
Ewan McGregor plays Oliver, a 38-year-old Los Angeles graphic designer who's coping with the fact that his 75-year-old widower father -- Hal (Christopher Plummer) -- is gay. It's also when Hal is diagnosed with terminal cancer. Melanie Laurent plays Anna, a free-spirited French actress whom OIiver would appear to be falling for
- The 2011 Summer Movie Preview
- Super 8
- X-Men: First Class
- The Tree of Life
- L'Amour Fou
- The Hangover Part II
- Kung Fu Panda 2
- Hesher
- Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
- Meek's Cutoff
- Bridesmaids
- Everything Must Go
- The Double Hour
- Thor
- Jumping the Broom
- The Beaver
- Fast Five
- Hoodwinked Too! Hood Vs. Evil
- Incendies
- Water for Elephants
- POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
- Scream 4
- The Conspirator
- Rio
- Miral
- Super
- Arthur
- Hanna
- Your Highness
- Soul Surfer
- Source Code
- Insidious
- Hop
- Trust
- Win Win
- Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules
- Sucker Punch
- Jane Eyre
- The Lincoln Lawyer
- Limitless
- Red Riding Hood
- Battle: Los Angeles
- Mars Needs Moms
- The Adjustment Bureau
- Poetry
- Take Me Home Tonight
- Rango
- Hall Pass
- Kaboom
- Unknown
- I Am Number Four
- Just Go With It
- Gnomeo and Juliet
- The Eagle
- Cedar Rapids
- Sanctum
- The Housemaid
- The Rite
- No Strings Attached
- The Mechanic
- Biutiful
- The Way Back
- The Company Men
- Barney's Version
- The Dilemma
- The Green Hornet
- Another Year
- Country Strong
- Blue Valentine
- Gulliver's Travels
- Rabbit Hole
- Casino Jack
- The King's Speech
- True Grit
- Little Fockers
- Sofia Coppola's Somewhere
- The Fighter
- How Do You Know
- TRON: Legacy
- I Love You Phillip Morris
- The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
- The Tourist
- Night Catches Us
- Black Swan
- Burlesque
- Tangled
- Love & Other Drugs
- Faster
- Made In Dagenham
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1
- The Next Three Days
- Skyline
- White Material
Copyright © 2011 AHN - All Rights Reserved
