James and the Giant Peach Movie Review
James and the Giant Peach Review

"James and the Giant Peach" Overview

Rating: G
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Henry SelickProducer : Denise Di Novi,Tim Burton
Screenwiter : Karey Kirkpatrick,Jonathan Roberts,Steve Bloom
Starring : Paul Terry,Pete Postlethwaite,Joanna Lumley,Miriam Margolyes,Susan Sarandon,Jane Leeves,David Thewlis,Richard Dreyfuss
Lemme tell ya, this was the most unusual screening I've been to in a long
time. After all, what better way to spend a Saturday morning than with 200
hyperactive children, all of whom are fawning over a guy dressed up in a giant,
fuzzy, grey bat suit, complete with six-foot wingspan? (Note: as far as I can
tell, the bat had nothing to do with the film.) And lemme tell ya, none of
this was as strange as the film I was about to see....
Now I'm probably the last person in the world who ought to judge what makes for
a good children's movie, but if you'd asked me that yesterday, I certainly
wouldn't have said James and the Giant Peach. This is a story about a young
boy, James (Paul Terry), whose parents are eaten by a spiritual rhinoceros. He
is adopted by his cruel aunts (Miriam Margolyes and AbFab's Joanna Lumley), who
abuse him cruelly. Then an "old man" (Pete Postlethwaite) gives James some
"alligator tongues" which he spills on a peach tree, creating the
aforementioned giant peach. Inside this peach, where James hides to get away
from his aunties, he finds a bunch of giant bugs: a Brooklyn centipede
(Richard Dreyfuss), a cowardly earthworm (which is, by the way, not a
bug--David Thewlis), a sultry spider (Susan Sarandon), a matronly ladybug (Jane
Leeves), and sundry other insects.
Fun for the whole family? Maybe so, although the adults seemed to enjoy the
highbrow humor more than the kids, as everyone there seemed to be having a
moderately good time. Personally, I found the constant switching between live
action, straight animation, and claymation(!) somewhat stultifying. And hey,
it wouldn't be a Disney film without lots of spontaneous singing.
The end result with James and the Giant Peach is a fairly good picture that
drags at the beginning and may land above the heads of much of its target
audience. Still, the creators of The Nightmare Before Christmas have done a
pretty good job of following up that film (there's even a Jack Skellington
cameo), although I doubt James will carry as wide an appeal. The messages to
kids, about chasing your dreams, working together, and facing down your fears,
are all noble, and we adults can probably learn a thing or two as well.
Mrs. Ladybug sums it all up with one marvelous line, though: "It's better than
aphids." Who am I to argue?
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"Look, up ahead, a giant banana!"
Reviewer: Christopher Null



