Piglet's Big Movie Movie Review
Piglet's Big Movie Review

"Piglet's Big Movie" Overview

Rating: G
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Director: Francis GlebasProducer : Michelle Pappalardo-Robinson
Screenwiter : Brian Hohlfeld
Starring : John Fiedler,Jim Cummings,Andre Stojka,Kath Soucie,Nikita Hopkins,Ken Sansom,Peter Cullen
It’s hard to believe that Piglet’s Big Movie has made any money over the last
two weeks. In an era were kids are used to fancy animation and lots of
eye-twitching excitement, this latest entry in the classic Winnie the Pooh
cartoons/stories is such an anomaly. Lessons are taught with a pat on the back,
not with a blaring soundtrack. You can actually appreciate the detail of the
backgrounds and the way the animals talk. And Carly Simon songs are featured
throughout the movie. She’s old enough to be (gasp!) someone’s grandmother!
When you're a revered part of childhoods galore, even Disney can afford not to
play overt marketing games. Thank goodness. If I had kids, I would take them to
Piglet’s Big Movie because it feels like a storybook—you get a chance to take
in what’s onscreen and not get bombarded with toy advertisements and
contemporary alterations (let’s say: Tigger as a laid-back, smack talking
skateboard champ).
The plot is kid-friendly and full of flashbacks. After helping out Pooh,
Rabbit, and the others score a huge pot of honey and not getting any credit,
Piglet feels left out. The little guy roams through the Hundred Acre Woods,
while his distracted friends grow concerned, then scared. This leads to a
search party for Piglet, where the searchers realize (through Piglet’s
scrapbook) just how much Piglet means to them. The littlest title character
even gets a chance to prove his worth when his buddies get into a climatic
tight spot.
Its simplicity and lack of motive makes Piglet’s Big Movie succeed. The movie
teaches lessons, amuses you and gets you humming its sweet songs. Still, though
I am no child psychologist, or even Dr. Phil, I have an issue. Small children
might misconstrue the movie’s message that little people can make a big
difference. Sure, it’s nice that Piglet gets his due, but some kids might think
that they deserve such treatment for washing their hands or turning off the TV.
They might feel that the slightest lack of appreciation for anything they do
means they are unwanted.
Any successful form of children’s entertainment stems from little characters
being slighted, wronged, humiliated, or picked on and then triumphing over that
issue. However, in a movie that celebrates teamwork and selflessness, doesn’t
that message seem a smidge hypocritical? Especially when the movie’s final shot
is Piglet’s shadow towering over his friends.
But I’d still rather take my imaginary kids to see Piglet’s Big Movie than The
Lizzie McGuire Movie. In the preview I saw, newly minted star Hilary Duff
(whose songs are featured in the movie; can someone say synergy?) has to decide
between her family and an international singing career. The movie also has the
beautiful Duff tripping over anything made of matter, a movie cliché that’s a
lazy writer’s best friend and a surefire sign the movie has little to offer.
Remember The Princess Diaries?
I guess a little explaining isn’t so bad.
That's the special hunny.
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Review by Pete Croatto
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