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The Tale of Despereaux Movie Review
The Tale of Despereaux Review
"The Tale of Despereaux" Overview

Rating: G
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Sam Fell,Robert StevenhagenProducer : Gary Ross,Allison Thomas
Screenwiter : Gary Ross
Starring : Matthew Broderick,Dustin Hoffman,Emma Watson,Tracey Ullman,Kevin Kline,William H. Macy,Stanley Tucci,Ciaran Hinds,Sigourney Weaver
The Tale of Despereaux began life as a children's book, and the animated film
version does its best to reproduce the sounds of a storybook: The characters,
especially the brave little titular mouse, are earnest rather than
wisecracking, and Sigourney Weaver speaks in soothing, empathetic tones as the
narrator, just like mom. The movie might have looked a bit more like a lush
picture book, though, if it had been hand-drawn rather than computer-generated.
Computers are now the default tools of the animation world, of course, and
animators have produced many stunning and even personal images using them. But
the animation in Despereaux is hardly state-of-the-art, and so in exchange for
that token modernity we get the same waxy, deformed humans a computer could've
struggled with in the late nineties. The mammals fare a bit better, but the
movie's limited charm comes from its old-fashioned, homespun quality, not CGI
breeze rustling through tiny CGI mouse hairs.
If computers have indeed turned animation into a more competitive game than it
was a few decades ago, The Tale of Despereaux is ill-equipped; an unfair
observation, perhaps, but difficult to sidestep. The elongated schedule
involved with producing a feature-length cartoon renders complaints about
resemblances to other recent cartoons similarly unavoidable and churlish; allow
me, then, to delicately mention that following Flushed Away and especially
Ratatouille, Despereaux's world of aspiring rodents is a little mustier than
its predecessors. (Flushed Away is especially fair game, as Desperaux
co-director Sam Fell also worked on that far better Aardman/DreamWorks
production.)
None of this would be so disagreeable if Despereaux had a little more spark.
The title character (voiced by Matthew Broderick) is cute enough, a tiny but
big-eared mouse born without the requisite mouselike fear of cats, knives,
humans, or the outside world. Eventually, his curiosity and gallantry
(amusingly rendered by his calm exterior) gets him banished from mouse land;
his fellow mice are especially jumpy after the prior banishment of the
adventurous rat Roscuro (Dustin Hoffman), who accidentally ruined the kingdom's
annual celebration of soup. There's more to that soup subplot, and to the
underground rat world, too, and a couple of sub-subplots I haven't mentioned;
for a sweet-natured children's film, it juggles a surprising litany of
characters and stories without much grace.
In service of the subplots is an army of voiceover actors. It is now more or
less a requirement that animated films feature an all-star cast. Lacking a Jack
Black or an Eddie Murphy, The Tale of Despereaux employs roughly three movies'
worth of supporting players. Though more colorful actors like William H. Macy,
Kevin Kline, Christopher Lloyd, and Stanley Tucci are arguably better-suited
for distinctive voiceover work than the A-listers sleepwalking through so many
DreamWorks cartoons, Despereaux is teeming with so many under-realized
characters that few voices, celebrity or not, make any kind of impression.
Hoffman vocalizes the wounded, bedraggled Roscuro with appropriately worn
pathos, but Broderick is too serene; Despereaux's low-key cuteness winds up as
a dominant quasi-personality trait.
As children's entertainment, The Tale of Despereaux has its heart in the right
place, and might rightly be taken as an antidote to its screechier,
talking-dog-laden live-action cousins. But with Pixar's advances towering on
one side and classic Disney features on the other, this wan little picture
might just as well slip, mouselike, into the cracks.
Great, more vermin.
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger
The Tale of Despereaux is but another depiction of Arabs, as a collective
group, living to be fed, dark rats, living underground in dark ridden
surroundings, and the lowest of the lowest scum. The cute, white, clean cut
Western mice are yes living blinded by the rules of big government, yet
“civilized” in comparison to the still in the dark ages, trash eating
rats. The one, who rises to save the day, Desperaux, is the brave Western,
eager to spread freedom who meets an Arab, Chiaroscuro, who he was able to
educate as to the meaning of honor and being a “gentle man.” But, the
Arabic rat, hurt for being mistreated by the queen, betrays a and conspires
against her; not until Despereaux bravely pursues freeing the princess does
Chiaroscuro, the good Arab rat, decides to follow into Despereaux footsteps and
does something useful. But in the end, the Arab rats return to their dark,
underground useless existence, while the light shines on the Western, mice
kingdom.
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