The Simpsons Movie Movie Review
The Simpsons Movie Review

"The Simpsons Movie" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : David SilvermanProducer : David Mirkin,James L. Brooks,Al Jean
Screenwiter : Mike Reiss,George Meyer,James L. Brooks,Ian Maxtone-Graham,John Swartzwelder,David Mirkin,Matt Groening,Al Jean,Mike Scully,Jon Vitti
Starring : Dan Castellaneta,Julie Kavner,Nancy Cartwright,Yeardley Smith,Pamela Hayden,Hank Azaria,Tom Hanks
Best. Animated. Movie. Ever?
Not quite, Comic Book Guy, but the long-gestating and highly anticipated The
Simpsons Movie does deliver a raucous feature-length venture that should
satisfy faithful fans while still entertaining audience members who don't know
Homer J. Simpson from a hole in the wall. By stretching a formula normally
applied to a 22-minute episode, Simpsons lobs comically sacrilegious spitballs
at an environmentally sensitive storyline that justifies its big-screen
treatment. The humor stays irreverent without making the still-running sitcom
irrelevant.
Flash back, momentarily, to "Lisa the Vegetarian," the fifth episode of the
show's seventh season. Upon learning that his socially conscious daughter Lisa
(Yeardley Smith) plans to give up meat, shocked parent Homer (Dan Castellaneta)
tries his best to understand her sacrifice.
Homer: Are you saying you’re never going to eat any animal again? What about
bacon?
Lisa: No.
Homer: Ham?
Lisa: No
Homer: Pork chops
Lisa: Dad, those all come from the same animal.
Homer: Heh heh heh. Ooh, yeah, right, Lisa. A wonderful, magical animal.
Homer's ignorance is equally pathetic and prophetic, as his "magical animal"
ends up being the final nail in the festering coffin that is Springfield, the
fictional town the Simpsons call home.
Trouble ensues when Homer adopts an orphaned pig, which isn't a major issue
until he needs a place to dispose of the animal’s waste. Small problems often
balloon to epic proportions in the Simpsons world, and before long, the family
has fled a contaminated -- and federally barricaded -- Springfield to seek
refuge in the wilds of Alaska.
It's difficult to write fresh material for an army of characters who have
existed in another medium for 18 seasons, and The Simpsons Movie recycles small
elements that rabid followers recognize. Problem child Bart (Nancy Cartwright)
once again considers joining the Flanders family, while Lisa finds love in
fellow adolescent activist Colin (Maile Flanagan). It's all been done, but we
don't mind doing it again.
A team of veteran Simpsons writers returned for the film project and their
enthusiasm blankets the first act. The finest and fastest jokes gush in a
furious torrent of supporting-character cameos, each bearing a stinging laugh
line. Simpsons slows down as the plot advances, making room for Albert Brooks,
voicing the maniacal head of the Environmental Protection Agency, and Tom Hanks
as himself. Inevitably, favorite characters are either relegated to quick sound
bites (Dr. Nick) or erased completely (Sideshow Bob). Let's hope they're more
prominently featured in a sequel that doesn’t take another 18 years to produce.
I smell hot dogs.
|
Review by Sean O'Connell
|






