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Film

Review: Where the Wild Things Are

Saddened by such sombre Wild Things

December 10, 2009 10:39
Maurice Sendak's classic monsters are turned into middle-aged kvetchers on the big screen

By

Jonathan Foreman,

Jonathan Foreman

3 min read

The trailers for Where the Wild Things Are that have been playing for the last six months were so thrilling and so moving — I know adults who reduce themselves to tears watching them on the internet — that it would be almost impossible for any full-length feature to live up to their promise. And the film does not.

That said, Spike Jonze’s long-awaited film adaptation of Maurice Sendak’s classic 1963 children’s book is by no means a catastrophe or a travesty, like the efforts to put the Dr Seuss books on the big screen. Indeed, it is a dazzling achievement in many ways, brilliantly inventive in its efforts to capture the visual and emotional world of Sendak’s 18 pages, and often very beautiful.

Unfortunately, it may be too complicated and too sad for small children and too slow and self-consciously whimsical for adults. Certainly it loses momentum after the second or third time you see the superbly created Wild Things bouncing and bounding around their island. And it often seems to be pulling in different directions, as if the filmmakers could not agree if their story was really about a child’s imaginative world or an expression of young adult cynicism about the adult world.

Of course, to turn an 18-page picture book with only 10 lines of text into a film, Jonze, whose previous work includes Adaptation and Being John Malkovich, and his co-screenwriter, Dave Eggers, had to invent a great deal. In particular they fill out the character of the little boy Max and have given the monsters names, personalities and dialogue. One of them even becomes Max’s special friend. They also invent a backstory. Max (Max Records) here is a child of divorce, living with his mother (Catherine Keener) and older sister but missing his father. He enters the magic world of the Wild Things not from his bed, as in the book, but after running away from home, following a row he provokes with his mother.