THE WAR WITH GRANDPA – Review

For the second weekend in a row, it’s family time at the multiplex (that’s right, no streaming or VOD as this film’s marketing makes clear, in theatres only). But that “FT” tag is true on both levels since LOVE ON THE ROCKS was an adult “dramedy” and ETERNAL BEAUTY was a dark tale of conflict and tragedy. The latter focused on sisters while the former featured a “caper” involving a father (and grandfather) and his daughter (also a mother). This new flick almost wears its “PG” rating as a beacon welcoming in “all ages”. It does concern three generations of a family, and it’s a comedy full of “gross-out” gags, slapstick pratfalls, and elaborate pranks to appeal to the tots and “pre-teens” weaned on annual holiday reruns of the HOME ALONE movies. Oh, but things aren’t all “tears and hugs” as the youngest lad in this household starts THE WAR WITH GRANDPA.


The aforementioned “son” Peter (Oakes Fegley) is pretty excited to be starting the sixth grade along with his pals/lunch tablemates Emma (T.J. McGibbon), Steve (Isaac Kragten), and Billy (Juliocesar Chavez) despite some of the older bullying students (including Steve’s sadistic sister Lisa). But things are about to get complicated at his house. Mom Sally (Uma Thurman) is again ditching her job to drive two hours to handle the latest “incident” with her widowed father Ed (Robert De Niro). He’s adamant about staying in his home, but Sally delivers an ultimatum: move to a “retirement community” or move in with her family. Reluctantly he begins packing. That night Sally and hubby Arthur (Rob Riggle) deliver the news to the kids. Rebellious “boy crazy” teen Mia (Laura Marano) and Christmas-obsessed (she sings carol constantly) seven-year-old Jennifer (Poppy Gagnon) are thrilled, as is Peter, until “the other shoe drops”. The girls share a room, so he’ll have to move out of his much-adored “solo pad” and relocate in the attic (grandpa would go there, but for those stairs…). Ed is soon welcomed with open arms as Peter does battle with cobwebs, dust, mice, and even a bat (it just flew in from Transylvania and boy are its wings tired). Late one night Ed notices a letter being pushed under his closed door. It’s a “declaration of war” over the room, signed by “the Secret Warrior”. He shrugs it off till then next day when the first “blow’ is struck. That afternoon on a “play date” with old pal Jerry (Christopher Walken), Ed tells him of the “war” note. Jerry encourages him to retaliate, as does his BFF “ladies man” Danny (Cheech Marin). Returning home Ed takes Peter aside and agrees to the “conflict” with some rules that no other family members will be notified or involved in this. Later Ed enlists another soldier when he buys some “weapons’ at a “big box” electronics store with the aid of a very friendly clerk named Diane (Jane Seymour). Now that the armies are formed (Peter’s school pals soon join him), who will acquire the ultimate prize of that “primo” bedroom? And what of the “casualties” amongst the “bystanders”?

Uhhh, where to start with the squandering of the superb screen veteran cast. Well, with the title character himself, “Grandpa” Ed as played by DeNiro, who almost seems to be echoing the later years of another screen icon, and “actors’ actor” Laurence Oliver. He appeared to be amassing a financial legacy as his career came to a close in the late 70s and early 80s (General MacArthur in INCHON…yup). Luckily DeNiro is part of David O. Russell acting ensemble and was reunited with another creative partner late last year with THE IRISHMAN. These have been the few bright spots in the last decade or so as he’s bounced from VOD thriller duds to dopey, dim-witted comedies (that other BAD GRANDPA, for a similarly-titled example). As Ed he does that required parodying of his former film “tough guys” (perhaps he could put these tired “self-parodies” to rest, please), along with the squinting and hesitating line delivery, when he’s not groaning, grunting, and grimacing in pain as endures copious clunky punishments, seeming to have been injected with cartoon DNA, as he brushes them off like Tom the Cat in those much funnier and clever MGM classics. Perhaps he’s using the old excuse of “doing something for the wee folk to watch”, but it just doesn’t excuse his participation. Adding to the insult is the reunion with THE DEER HUNTER co-star Walken. After over 40 years, this is what brings these two Oscar winners back together? Walken glides through the forced hi-jinks, hoping to coast on his fading “hipster cool”. That’s also true of Marin, basically, a “wacky” sidekick in the action set pieces. His role is just a notch or two above Seymour who’s stuck in the obligatory “mature” but still “randy” love interest (guessing that Ann Margaret and Susan Sarandon wisely passed). Their pairing seems forced at best. She still fares better than Thurman who has to constantly be the “party pooper”, dishing out the rules, while also enduring the war’s “collateral damage” causing her to screech and mug. There’s little chemistry with Riggle as her hubby, who also becomes the brunt of slapstick bits while doing the whole “doofus dad” bits (this gifted comic actor deserves a much better showcase). As for the kids, Fegley as Peter is good as the “nice boy” who gets a kick out of releasing a bit of his inner “hellion”, and makes more of an impact than any of his youthful castmates, though Gagnon is achingly adorable as she “holidizes” everything in sight.

All this clumsy caterwauling is co-ordinated by director Tim Hill, who has bounced between cable TV kids sitcoms, full-on animated features (with Spongebob), live/toon hybrids like the much-better HOP, along with Garfield and Alvin and the Chipmunks, even the Muppets. He mixes elements of all of them as he juggles the lackluster script adaptation of Robert Kimmel Smith’s book. Ed and his pals seem like they’re CGI or foam (like Kermit and company) as they effortlessly bounce back from slapstick stunts that would sentence them to a skilled care facility, at the very least (slipping on a floor of marbles should pulverize a hip, for certain). But Ed and his seventy-something pals (though Seymour has a few months left in her “slinky 60s”) are able to do most anything the slovenly story needs. A trampoline dodgeball match, why not (I kept wondering why the 20-something referee would allow it…maybe he’s a lawyer and whipped up some tight “liability waivers”). Then there are a few gags that seem very out of place in a PG kids comedy. What’s up with the “call back” gag of Ed accidentally exposing himself to son-in-law Arthur (who for some unknown reason, hates when he calls him “Artie”)? Laid over all this is a constant irritating “music bed’ that telegraphs and hammers every punchline (and punch) as the camera tries to make the bland Atlanta locations look “lived in” (The main two-story house couldn’t turn the first-floor den or study into Ed’s room). I was a bit surprised (and happy since this 95-minute test of movie patience was winding down) at the sinister shot just before the final fade-out to end credits (thinking that old monster movie “The End?” would be revived). Kind of gutsy, until the scrolling credits made way for some “zany” out-takes and we’re “treated” to the cast, including Bobby D, dancing and shuffling to co-star Marano’s forgettable pop single. Almost like the film itself, as the humiliation of a team of screen vets earns THE WAR WITH GRANDPA a much deserved …


Zero Out of Four

Disney’s PETE’S DRAGON on Digital HD, Blu-ray, DVD and On-Demand November 29th

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Pete’s Dragon, a reimagining of Disney’s cherished family film centered on an orphaned boy named Pete and his best friend Elliot, who just so happens to be a dragon. Families will be captivated by this magical movie followed by never-before-seen bonus features, including a revealing look at director David Lowery’s personal diary kept during the filming of “Pete’s Dragon,” the design process behind the lovable dragon Elliot, deleted scenes, a tour of the film’s breathtaking production location of New Zealand, audio commentary by filmmakers and actors and hilarious bloopers. Today’s announcement also ushers in tomorrow’s World Dragon Day and the heartwarming adventure arrives on Digital HD, Blu-ray™, Disney Movies Anywhere, DVD and On-Demand on Nov. 29; just in time to entertain the entire family this holiday season.

PETE'S DRAGON
Families will be captivated by this magical movie followed by never-before-seen bonus features, including a revealing look at director David Lowery’s personal diary kept during the filming of “Pete’s Dragon,” the design process behind the lovable dragon Elliot, deleted scenes, a tour of the film’s breathtaking production location of New Zealand, audio commentary by filmmakers and actors and hilarious bloopers.
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“Pete’s Dragon” stars Bryce Dallas Howard (“Jurassic World”) as Grace, a forest ranger in the Pacific Northwest who happens upon 10-year-old Pete, played by Oakes Fegley (“This is Where I Leave You”). Oona Laurence (“Southpaw”) is Natalie, the 11-year-old daughter of Jack, a lumber-mill owner played by Wes Bentley (“The Hunger Games”). Karl Urban (“Star Trek”) is Jack’s bumbling brother Gavin and Oscar®-winner Robert Redford (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier”) portrays Mr. Meacham, an old wood carver who delights the local children with tales of a fierce dragon.
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The film is directed by David Lowery (“Ain’t Them Bodies Saints”) from a screenplay by Lowery & Toby Halbrooks based on a screenplay by Malcolm Marmorstein and produced by Jim Whitaker, p.g.a. (“The Finest Hours”), with Barrie M. Osborne (“The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring”) serving as executive producer.
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Writer/director Lowery reveals, “I look back on childhood as an adventure, and I wanted to capture that on screen in the smallest—but also the biggest—way.” The big—the creation of an irresistible 24-foot tall, green, furry dragon that can breathe fire and turn invisible—is brilliantly tackled by the team at the Academy Award®-winning visual effects company Weta Digital (“The Hobbit” films and “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy). But it’s the small moments between characters that so beautifully convey the film’s powerful message: the importance of friendship, family and finding one’s place in the world.
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Bonus features include*:
BLU-RAY & DIGITAL HD:
  • Notes to Self: A Director’s Diary – Director David Lowery narrates the personal diary he kept through the filming of “Pete’s Dragon” in this intimate and fascinating look at the movie’s making.
  • Making Magic – Discover fun facts about what went into designing this spectacular, lovable dragon.
  • “Disappearing” Moments – The director shares a montage of the film’s “lost” scenes.
  • Welcome to New Zealand – Experience the wonders of New Zealand and learn why it’s a magical place to visit … and to make a movie.
  • Audio Commentary – Gain an insider perspective from director David Lowery, co-writer Toby Halbrooks and actors Oakes Fegley and Oona Laurence.
  • Music Videos
    • “Nobody Knows” by The Lumineers
    • “Something Wild” by Lindsey Stirling featuring Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness
  • Bloopers
DVD:
  • Making Magic

PETE’S DRAGON – Review

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Disney’s quest to remake their beloved classics has been successful so far with MALIFICENT, CINDERELLA and especially JUNGLE BOOK. So what happens when Disney revives one of their more lackluster works? The 1977 PETE’S DRAGON has never been considered a Disney standard and hasn’t aged well, but it still endures as a nostalgic kick for those of us who saw it as kids when it was new. The lame new PETE’S DRAGON jettisons all of the daffy details that made the original memorable; the turn-of-the-century setting, the cruel foster home straight out of Oliver Twist, the scenic Maine lighthouses, the wild-eyed Mickey Rooney drunkenly belting out dopey songs at the tavern – and replaces them with the blandest, most generic elements and characters imaginable. The result plays like bottom-drawer Spielberg, a family movie that might delight 6-year-olds with a lap full of popcorn but will bore everyone else.

This PETE’S DRAGON introduces Pete as a 5-year old in the backseat of his parent’s car somewhere near a Pacific Northwest forest. Since I didn’t recognize the actors playing mom and dad, I had a feeling they were going to die then and there, and sure enough a deer darts out and the vehicle flips over instantly killing the toddler’s folks (Disney’s remake of BAMBI should begin with this scene!). Little Pete emerges without a scratch and steps into the furry green paws of nearby Elliott, a dragon apparently as tame as he is huge. Jump ahead six years and forest ranger Grace (Bryce Howard), while marking tree lines for the local timber industry, stumbles upon Pete, now a wild child and takes him to her home. There she lives with stepdaughter Natalie (Oona Laurence), fiancée Jack (Wes Bently), owner of the local sawmill, and father Meacham (Robert Redford), a twinkly-eyed old dullard who claims to know all about that dragon in the nearby forest. Pete soon misses his fire-breathing friend but when Grace takes him back to the forest to be reunited, Jack’s mildly nefarious lumberjack brother Gavin (Karl Urban) is there with his tranquilizer gun to take down and capture Elliott.

Director David Lowery’s ALL THEM BODIES SAINTS was a lyrical outlaw romance from 2013, but PETE’S DRAGON is a major step backward, quality-wise. One problem with PETE’S DRAGON is that everyone is so nice and pleasant and bland and boring. The best they can come up with as a villain is Karl Urban as the logger who captures Elliott with some vague plans for the critter (“it’s my dragon now!”), but he isn’t much of an antagonist, displaying little malice while no one ever seems in much real peril.

While PETE’S DRAGON ’77 was a musical with costar Helen Reddy busting out peppy showtunes, the remake keeps the songs on the soundtrack – but there are so many of them – awful indie rock tunes, several of which are played in cars pointlessly taking characters from one location to another. This causes PETE’S DRAGON to take forever to get going and the film feels padded at just 95 minutes. The CGI effects are routine, and while Elliot’s dog-like design makes nice reference to the ‘77 cartoon (but without that tuft of purple hair), he’s given little personality and the brief bonding between boy and dragon is perfunctory.  This all leads up to a supposedly tearful farewell between boy and dragon but there’s no emotional engagement. Oakes Fegley has a really cool name but his Pete is a weak characterization especially so soon after Neel Sethi’s similar Mowgli in JUNGLE BOOK. Bryce Howard has that weepy gazing-in-wonder-at-a-green-screen shtick down while Robert Redford lazily delivers a string of homilies and platitudes that made me miss Mickey Rooney’s inebriated eye-rolling.  PETE’S DRAGON sinks under the weight of all its well-meaning but half-baked elements. Go watch HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON again instead.

1 ½ of 5 Stars

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Bryce Dallas Howard Stars In New Trailer For Disney’s PETE’S DRAGON

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Watch the brand new trailer for Disney’s PETE’S DRAGON, featuring spectacular never-before-seen footage of Pete’s dragon, Elliot.

See the film when it flies onto the big screen in 3D August 12.

A reimagining of Disney’s cherished family film, PETE’S DRAGON is the adventure of an orphaned boy named Pete and his best friend Elliot, who just so happens to be a dragon.

The movie stars Bryce Dallas Howard (“Jurassic World”), Oakes Fegley (“This is Where I Leave You”), Wes Bentley (“The Hunger Games”), Karl Urban (“Star Trek”), Oona Laurence (“Southpaw”), Isiah Whitlock, Jr. (“Cedar Rapids”) and Oscar® winner Robert Redford (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier”). The film, which is directed by David Lowery (“Ain’t Them Bodies Saints”), is written by Lowery & Toby Halbrooks based on a screenplay by Malcolm Marmorstein and produced by Jim Whitaker (“The Finest Hours,” “Friday Night Lights”), with Barrie M. Osborne (“The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring,” “The Great Gatsby”) serving as executive producer.

PETE'S DRAGON

For years, old wood carver Mr. Meacham (Robert Redford) has delighted local children with his tales of the fierce dragon that resides deep in the woods of the Pacific Northwest. To his daughter, Grace (Bryce Dallas Howard), who works as a forest ranger, these stories are little more than tall tales…until she meets Pete (Oakes Fegley).

Pete is a mysterious 10-year-old with no family and no home who claims to live in the woods with a giant, green dragon named Elliot. And from Pete’s descriptions, Elliot seems remarkably similar to the dragon from Mr. Meacham’s stories. With the help of Natalie (Oona Laurence), an 11-year-old girl whose father Jack (Wes Bentley) owns the local lumber mill, Grace sets out to determine where Pete came from, where he belongs, and the truth about this dragon.

Website:  www.disney.com/petesdragon

Like on Facebook: http://facebook.com/disneypetesdragon

Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/disneypetes

Instagram:  http://instagram.com/disneypetesdragon

Snapchat: disneystudio

PETE'S DRAGON

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PETE'S DRAGON

PETE'S DRAGON

First Look At Disney’s PETE’S DRAGON In New Trailer And Poster

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Check out the first teaser trailer, photos and poster for Disney’s PETE’S DRAGON. The trailer made its debut during “Wonderful World of Disney: Disneyland 60” on ABC Sunday night.

A reimagining of the studio’s cherished family film about the adventures of a boy named Pete and his best friend Elliott, who just so happens to be a dragon, PETE’S DRAGON starring Bryce Dallas Howard and Robert Redford flies into U.S. theaters on August 12, 2016.

For years, old wood carver Mr. Meacham (Robert Redford) has delighted local children with his tales of the fierce dragon that resides deep in the woods of the Pacific Northwest. To his daughter, Grace (Bryce Dallas Howard), who works as a forest ranger, these stories are little more than tall tales…until she meets Pete (Oakes Fegley).

Pete is a mysterious 10-year-old with no family and no home who claims to live in the woods with a giant, green dragon named Elliott. And from Pete’s descriptions, Elliott seems remarkably similar to the dragon from Mr. Meacham’s stories. With the help of Natalie (Oona Laurence), an 11-year-old girl whose father Jack (Wes Bentley) owns the local lumber mill, Grace sets out to determine where Pete came from, where he belongs, and the truth about this dragon.

Website: http://disney.com/petesdragon

Like on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DisneyPetesDragon

Follow on Twitter: https://twitter.com/disneypetes

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/disneypetesdragon/

PETE'S DRAGON is the adventure of a boy named Pete (Oakes Fegley) and his best friend Elliott, who just happens to be a dragon.

Bryce Dallas Howard is Grace, Robert Redford is Mr. Meacham and Oona Laurence is Natalie in Disney's PETE'S DRAGON, the adventure of an orphaned boy and his best friend Elliott, who just so happens to be a dragon.
Bryce Dallas Howard is Grace, Robert Redford is Mr. Meacham and Oona Laurence is Natalie in Disney’s PETE’S DRAGON.

Robert Redford is Mr. Meacham, an old wood carver who delights local children with tales of the fierce dragon that resides deep in the woods nearby in Disney's PETE'S DRAGON.
Robert Redford is Mr. Meacham, an old wood carver who delights local children with tales of the fierce dragon that resides deep in the woods nearby in Disney’s PETE’S DRAGON.

Bryce Dallas Howard is Grace and Oakes Fegley is Pete in Disney's PETE'S DRAGON, the adventure of an orphaned boy and his best friend Elliott, who just so happens to be a dragon.
Bryce Dallas Howard is Grace and Oakes Fegley is Pete in Disney’s PETE’S DRAGON