~ MR. POPPER'S PENGUINS (2011) ~
MR. POPPER'S PENGUINS (2011) Synopsis / Review
Jim Carrey is back on screen again after his previous involvement in A Christmas Carol back in 2009. For this time, he is on a live-action family comedy film called as Mr. Popper’s Penguins, which he starred as Mr. Popper himself, the main character. After searching for more information regarding the film which I usually does for every movie review I wrote, it is interesting that this film is adapted on a novel of the same name, back in 1938! And the producers only thought of making a film of similar sort after 72 years. There is less than 15 people including us in the hall for the movie which had been released almost a month ago. It seems that all attention has been brought to Harry Potter and Transformers in cinemas while others have to suffer less grossing.
Looking at the title itself, the film would appears to be something light, relationship-based (turns out to be family oriented), and pure entertaining. The film managed quite well in reaching out to those aspects listed earlier, but for goal far beyond that few ones, there the film fails. This is definitely not an Oscar-worthy film but still a worth-watching especially for kids, and for those whom just wanted to go to cinema for a movie without any high expectation for the film. It is just all about a middle-aged man whom is given a present of 6 live penguins from his father whom travels around the world and seldom meet him. The existence of the penguins in his house changed his character which turns out to be having priority on family rather than on his work which he practised at the beginning with failure on his marriage and on his relationship with his children.
The only thing that really interests me and grabbed my attention from the film is the penguins. They are so cute and adorable (I wish to have one as my pet but it would definitely dies under such hot weather in Malaysia here), and their existence steals the show. Whenever they appears, the film appears to be fun and enjoyable to watch…but whenever they are not on screen, boredom surfaces when the story then directs to the relationship between Mr. Popper (Jim Carrey) with his ex-wife and his two children. It is essential for the presence of this part to form the story of the film, but definitely shouldn’t be made to the level that not much emotion is evoked as supposed to be, as well as the part is taking a very long portion of the film, giving the penguins few privilege on screen only. It would be nice if it is cut short without essential parts taken out.
I like the part when the scene is in the Guggenheim Musem, New York. That part is just hilarious and fun to watch. This is what I expect for the whole movie, not for a single scene like this that took only few minutes. The idea of the penguins accidentally sliding down on the water as aided by the architecture of the museum through the gently-sloping ramp down to the ground floor and definitely causing chaos to the visitors. Sorry for a little spoiler here, but I have to just mention a scene that worth a mention by me. Other scenes…not memorable at all.
Looking at the title itself, the film would appears to be something light, relationship-based (turns out to be family oriented), and pure entertaining. The film managed quite well in reaching out to those aspects listed earlier, but for goal far beyond that few ones, there the film fails. This is definitely not an Oscar-worthy film but still a worth-watching especially for kids, and for those whom just wanted to go to cinema for a movie without any high expectation for the film. It is just all about a middle-aged man whom is given a present of 6 live penguins from his father whom travels around the world and seldom meet him. The existence of the penguins in his house changed his character which turns out to be having priority on family rather than on his work which he practised at the beginning with failure on his marriage and on his relationship with his children.
The only thing that really interests me and grabbed my attention from the film is the penguins. They are so cute and adorable (I wish to have one as my pet but it would definitely dies under such hot weather in Malaysia here), and their existence steals the show. Whenever they appears, the film appears to be fun and enjoyable to watch…but whenever they are not on screen, boredom surfaces when the story then directs to the relationship between Mr. Popper (Jim Carrey) with his ex-wife and his two children. It is essential for the presence of this part to form the story of the film, but definitely shouldn’t be made to the level that not much emotion is evoked as supposed to be, as well as the part is taking a very long portion of the film, giving the penguins few privilege on screen only. It would be nice if it is cut short without essential parts taken out.
I like the part when the scene is in the Guggenheim Musem, New York. That part is just hilarious and fun to watch. This is what I expect for the whole movie, not for a single scene like this that took only few minutes. The idea of the penguins accidentally sliding down on the water as aided by the architecture of the museum through the gently-sloping ramp down to the ground floor and definitely causing chaos to the visitors. Sorry for a little spoiler here, but I have to just mention a scene that worth a mention by me. Other scenes…not memorable at all.
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