The Cat in the Hat Movie Review
The Cat in the Hat Review

"The Cat in the Hat" Overview

Rating: PG
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Bo WelchProducer : Brian Grazer
Screenwiter : Alec Berg,Jeff Schaffer,David Mandel
Starring : Mike Myers,Spencer Breslin,Dakota Fanning,Alec Baldwin,Sean Hayes,Kelly Preston
Make a movie about a black cat, and you’re just asking to be cursed with a
streak of bad luck. Yet even the most hardened cynic will be surprised at how
far Universal’s The Cat in the Hat strays from the childish antics of Dr.
Seuss’ original work. Judging from this humorless monstrosity, the Cat team
spent 10 years working on their film’s decorative appearance and a combined 10
minutes writing sleazy jokes and a catastrophic script that I wouldn’t use to
line a litter box.
Director Bo Welch and production designer Alex McDowell earn a few points for
their visions. Welch perfected his craft on lavishly bizarre features like
Edward Scissorhands and Beetlejuice, and McDowell’s design work on Cat
literally sets Seuss’s story free from the page. The gorgeous sets form a
pastel feast for the eyes. They’re a sight to be seen, yet they’re inserted
into an unwatchable bomb that shouldn’t be seen by anyone.
As for Seuss, his story stays the same with minor revisions. Single mom Joan
(Kelly Preston) sells real estate, but her job is at stake. Her boss, Mr.
Humberfloob (Sean Hayes), has an odd germ fetish, and he demands that her house
be spotless when the company hosts a gathering of real estate clients there
that evening.
Joan’s children, meanwhile, have issues. Control freak Sally (Dakota Fanning)
plans each minute of her day in a pocket organizer. Brother Conrad (Spencer
Breslin) needs parental supervision, but he’s too busy keeping his mom’s smarmy
boyfriend (a sinister Alec Baldwin) from shipping him off the military school.
One rainy day, the kids are visited by a troublesome cat (Mike Myers), who
promises fun but delivers mayhem.
Our luck changes for the worse the minute Myers’ black cat crosses our path.
Never before has a title character sucked the energy and humor out of a project
the way Myers does when he prances across the screen. His black cat is a Roach
Motel of comedy. Jokes go in, but the laughs don’t come out.
Myers’ approach to the cat is a mystery. He can’t shed the sounds of his past
characters, from Linda Richman to Dr. Evil. His impressions lean more towards a
mixture of the Cowardly Lion and Match Game panel member Charles Nelson Reilly.
With a lack of material, Myers opts to mug more than a street gang in Central
Park, and his shtick grows annoying almost immediately. He’s trapped in a
one-man show where every gag bombs.
Cast members not shackled to a cat suit come out okay. Baldwin finds the right
comedic tone using one-quarter of the make-up Myers requires. Fanning continues
to prove she’s the best actress still shopping at Gap Kids. And Hayes gets
decent laughs hiding behind a glossy talking fish.
But it’s not enough to justify the efforts on screen. Cat boasts a truncated
81-minute runtime, but has enough material to fill eight. All in all, this Cat
is a dog.
The critic sat on the cat.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





