Gnomeo & Juliet





Category: Animation
Year: 2011
Rating: 5.2/10 (172)
Director: Kelly Asbury
Country: UK
Language: English
Release Date:
11 February 2011
(USA)
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Taglines:
A little adventure goes a lawn way.
Writers:
Kelly Asbury (screenplay),
Mark Burton (screenplay),
and 8 more credits »
Movie Storyline
Garden gnomes Gnomeo (voice of McAvoy) and Juliet (voice of Blunt) have as many obstacles to overcome as their quasi namesakes when they are caught up in a feud between neighbors. But with plastic pink flamingos and lawnmower races in the mix, can this young couple find lasting happiness?
Cast:
James McAvoy
-
Gnomeo
(voice)
Emily Blunt
-
Juliet
(voice)
Ashley Jensen
-
Nanette
(voice)
Michael Caine
-
Lord Redbrick
(voice)
Matt Lucas
-
Benny
(voice)
Jim Cummings
-
Featherstone
(voice)
Maggie Smith
-
Lady Bluebury
(voice)
Jason Statham
-
Tybalt
(voice)
Ozzy Osbourne
-
Fawn
(voice)
Stephen Merchant
-
Paris
(voice)
Patrick Stewart
-
Bill Shakespeare
(voice)
Julie Walters
-
Miss Montague
(voice)
Hulk Hogan
-
Terrafirminator V.O.
(voice)
Kelly Asbury
-
Red Good Gnomes
(voice)
Richard Wilson
-
Mr. Capulet
(voice)
Soundtracks:
"Hello, Hello"
Performed by Elton John and Lady Gaga
Official Site(s):
Official Facebook |
Official site |
Trivia:
Kate Winslet was once attached to star as Juliet, but she was replaced by Emily Blunt.
User Review:
Toy Story Rip Off
, rated: 4/10
The one thing that makes animations a success is magic, it is hard to
explain but the film has to come alive with abundant heart, the
characters must hold your heart strings and the story has to mesh and
not really try to be magical or funny - it will succeed or it won't
when the magic happens. The Toy Stories have it, Shrek 1 had it, The
Lion King, Finding Nemo, WallE, Happy Feet, The Incredibles, Up all
have this magic. They are forces of animation to be reckoned with - and
Gnomeo and Juliet does not have this magic. It has moments of forced,
and sometimes clichéd, humor and is animation by numbers - it has all
been done to death before and did not hold my attention for its near
90min length. I found it overly cutesy with limited entertainment to
keep adults happy. I can see 10yr old girls loving it - 10yr old boys
will love the boy stuff like races on lawnmowers but the rest is too
pretty and pink for them.
It did have moments and characters I really enjoyed and is voiced by
some big names but overly I had no love for the characters. James
McAvoy plays Gnomeo and he does it OK but there is nothing special
about Gnomeo, same for Juliet - I got excited hearing Emily Blunt's
voice but m'eh it really didn't do much for me either - I did like her
Ninja moves and wish they had headed more along this line. Likewise Sir
Michael Caine, Maggie Smith, Julie Walters, Hulk Hogan, Jason Statham,
and even Ozzie Osbourne were all kind of flat and/ or underutilized.
Most of Ozzie's lines are in the trailer.The standouts that lifted the
tone of the film were the Nanny - now a plastic frog that spurts water
out of its mouth voiced by Ashely Jensen and the Friar - now a giant
plastic pink flamingo voiced by Jim Cummings - these two lifted the
flow of the film from mundane. I also found it very appropriate having
Patrick Stewart (Capt Picard) voicing Shakespeare.
The film is packed with numerous Shakespearean in-jokes. It takes place
in contemporary Stratford-on-Avon, Shakespeare's birthplace; a
shattered gnome is put together with a brand of glue known as The
Taming of the Glue; there is a Rosencrantz and Guildenstern moving
firm; Gnomeo is carried away by a van for Tempest Teapots (ie. a storm
in a teacup pun) and so on. Various lines of classic Shakespearean
dialog (not just from Romeo and Juliet) make sporadic appearances
throughout.
I was expecting this film to be quite cute for kids, like most
animations, but a quiet payout of Shakespeare and Romeo and Juliet for
the adults - it actually opens doing just that and I got all excited
hearing a little garden gnome saying "Before this story is this large
introduction" He then reads about 4 lines of the opening of R&J and
then says something along the lines of "Blah Blah Blah - let's just get
on with it". But it kind of ends there. If you are a serious
Shakespearean appreciator - avoid this film like the plaque - it
changes most of the story and to the point it completely alters the
story from a tragedy. But what do you expect - it is a kid's cartoon. A
statue of Shakespeare actually comes alive and debates with Gnomeo the
merits of the story being a tragedy - I think the real Shakespeare
would be turning in his grave .
I think the biggest letdown for me with this film is that basically
it's a B Grade ripoff of Toy Story, although as opposed to toys that
are really alive but do not allow humans to know, it is garden toys and
animals. It is the exact same premise but wrapped in Romeo and Juliet
story. For young kids this is fine as they can get a very VERY remote
piece of Shakespearean education in some cute colors but for me none of
the characters get even close to the likability of any of the
characters from Toy Story plus R&J is one of my all time favorite
stories and films (I love you Leo).
There is some good music from Elton John spread throughout the film
that lifts it a bit and while I did not watch it in 3D I could seem
some scenes that could be good in 3D. Regardless of my thoughts - this
film is made for young kids - and if it can keen your kids entertained
for 90mins then its job is done. The film will be releasing on Feb 11th
in the USA and Feb 17th in Australia. Worth 4/10. Suss all my reviews
at saltypopcorn.com
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