Where the Wild Things Are Film Review

Spike Jonze Directs Brilliant Adaptation of Maurice Sendak's Story

© Nick Rogers

Oct 16, 2009
James Gandolfini voices Carol, Lance Acord
A flawless expansion of Maurice Sendak's story, "Where the Wild Things Are" is a film to treasure, discuss and lovingly revisit. One of the decade's best family films.

Where the Wild Things Are is a masterpiece – a remarkably wondrous fable about a fantastic land, an earthy parable about imagination and emotion and a meditative elegy for childhood viewpoints from which we must all move on.

This is the miraculous result of Warner Brothers handing over Maurice Sendak’s property to director / co-writer Spike Jonze and co-writer Dave Eggers, and leaving the trio alone. (Thankfully, talk of reshooting the entire film never came to pass.)

It’s fun but not flippant, adventurous but not adrenalized, intense but not inappropriate, sentimental but not saccharine and melancholy but never morose. At every turn where it could falter, Where the Wild Things Are instead builds on preceding strengths.

That’s because Jonze is a filmmaker who focuses on the nuts and bolts of imagination as much as on the bells and whistles. Take the cosmically slippery line between jolting fiction and withering fact in Adaptation., or how sad, mundane reality colored choices of those inside a superstar’s body in Being John Malkovich.

And Eggers, overly pretentious and precious as A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius could be, knows firsthand the psychological perils of childhood.

Spike Jonze and Dave Eggers Find Natural Elasticity To Maurice Sendak's Simple Story

Together, they make Where the Wild Things Are play like Being John Malkovich for an audience still thrilling at building forts from couch pillows and bed sheets. It’s a natural, unforced elasticity to Sendak’s simple story.

Max – the defiant, petulant, impulsive, lonely and creative 9-year-old protagonist – has a blank slate on which to project his wildest dreams. Even in a world of magical creatures, angst prevails. Max is aware that his imagination is simultaneously an escape from, and evocation of, his reality – a coping mechanism.

Overly cautious, coddling parents content to sit through another thickheaded adaptation of a thin-paged children’s book might not see the discussion-provoking wonder in that. (There are no villains, no missions, no simple cure-all answers.)

But thoughtful kids will, as will any adults weary of the battering-ram approach of The Polar Express or Dr. Seuss’s How the Grinch Stole Christmas.

Max Records, Catherine Keener, Mark Ruffalo Are the Human Stars of Where the Wild Things Are

When you’re 9, it’s easy to vilify things behind which there’s no malicious intent, and that’s what Max does in a bracing prologue. His older sister has left him behind as a playmate, tending to her growing interest in boys. His single mother (Catherine Keener) strains under the stress of work and romance, but still gains solace from Max. However, Max acts out because he feels squeezed out.

Max fills this void of perceived abandonment with tales of vampires biting buildings and destructively bad behavior. After biting his mother in a fit of rage one night, he runs away to the banks of a river where a sailboat awaits. Purists may bemoan Max’s room not morphing into a jungle, but it allows a brilliant large-scale recreation of a previous playtime scene.

Max comes ashore on the island of the Wild Things – a geographical dreamscape where forests, seas and deserts melt together. Lance Acord’s sweeping cinematography is warm throughout, while also game for widescreen sight gags.

There, Max is besieged by the Wild Things – giant, lumbering creatures wreaking havoc in the forest. A high-tech/low-tech mixture of actors in suits and computer-generated faces, Sonny Gerasimowicz’s creature design is remarkable. Freedom of movement is so thorough that they pick up clumps of leaves in their haunches, and feelings beam through with the most emotionally lifelike digital faces since Gollum.

James Gandolfini, Catherine O'Hara, Forest Whitaker and Chris Cooper Provide Voiceover Work

In a bid to avoid being eaten, Max persuades the Wild Things he’s their king, and he leads them on wild rumpses, dirt-clod fights, alternately humorous and heartwarming exchanges of dialogue and the ultimate fort-building project. A score and songs by Carter Burwell and Yeah Yeah Yeahs frontwoman Karen O. enrich the heedless zeal of every sequence.

Jonze and Eggers explain why Max can hold court over the Wild Things in a manner simple enough for kids to detect without also pandering to adults. Each one evokes an aspect of Max’s home life, with spirited vocal-work byplay that’s all too rare. (The actors recorded their voiceovers together, rather than in separate sessions.)

Ira (Forest Whitaker) is a barehanded demolitions expert. Judith (Catherine O’Hara) acts like a “nagging” mother. Douglas (Chris Cooper) is the voice of reason. Alexander (Paul Dano) is the eager-to-please loner. KW (Lauren Ambrose) resembles Max’s sister in more ways than her red hair. There’s also the silent, lurking Bull, who could roar at any time.

Finally, there’s Carol, given verbal life by James Gandolfini in a voiceover performance so grand and nuanced you’ll wish there were an Oscar category for it.

Like Max, Carol is large and contains multitudes – calming and fatherly one moment, panicked and breathily desperate the next. It is through Carol that Max learns the Wild Things are not without their own neuroses, and the movie turns evermore soulful, contemplative and cathartic as he learns what it means to be “king.”

Where the Wild Things Are encourages embracing all that we are, but it’s not presumptuous to suggest what “it” is. Jonze and Eggers know that’s not the same for every child. Profoundly and unexpectedly moving, it urges a coexistence of love, responsibility, compassion and rambunctiousness that is intelligent and intimate. Unforgettably organic and otherworldly, it’s one of the best films of 2009.


The copyright of the article Where the Wild Things Are Film Review in Fantasy Films is owned by Nick Rogers. Permission to republish Where the Wild Things Are Film Review in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


James Gandolfini voices Carol, Lance Acord
       


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Comments
Oct 17, 2009 10:30 AM
Guest :
I thought this movie was brilliant! So many well thought-out layers and depth that makes it possible for a child to enjoy as well as a thirty something old movie buff such as myself. I originally thought this was a kids movie much like the book. However I was pleasantly surprised to find out that this movie is a story about life, growing up and the choices that we make. It also gives us empowerment to choose our destiny and not to be afraid to take chances along the way. If anything just to live! It seems so many people have just stopped living, stopped caring about their dreams and their purpose and their social responsibility to others. I also think there is a distinction between having the power to control or eat others and then the understanding that just because we have this power it doesn't make it right. I could go on and on about this movie and it's symbolism and the ultimate realization that there is no king. However I'm just sad that Spike Jonze has created this masterpiece and no one seems to get the message. I'm already reading about how people were bored and it wasn't what they expected. But I guess that's the genius of the message, its all part of reevaluating the life you've lived and things you've experienced but now may mean something different. There is more here than meets the eye you must keep looking.
Oct 20, 2009 10:17 AM
Guest :
"There is no king"...

There was a deep message behind the entire movie (which few got). We are unique individuals, just like the monsters. We are complex people with emotions and decisions, like the monsters. And ultiamtly, we are all on the same level. We are human. There is no king... There is no god... it is just us... the monsters... and it is up to us to make the world a better place.
2 Comments