Charlotte’s Web Movie Streaming
Lundi, août 9th, 2010![]() |
Charlotte’s Web Movie Streaming.
Movie Title: Charlotte’s Web Charlotte’s Web is available for streaming or downloading. |
I’ve seen several movie versions of CHARLOTTE’S WEB. The story of the friendship between a runt pig and a spider in the barn has been around entertaining children for dozens of years. But I have never seen a production that came even close to the new movie in theaters everywhere.
Buy,Download, Or Stream Charlotte’s Web! Click Here
The recent release of CHARLOTTE’S WEB is simply amazing. I can’t wait for the DVD to come out, and I’ll really be disappointed if there isn’t some in-depth special features regarding the making the of the film, particularly the computer animation aspects. Watching the animals talking and interacting onscreen was nothing short of magical.
There is an incredible shift from the human point of view in the film to the animal one that is almost seamless unless you’re looking for it. I was, and it was still so effortless that the transition doesn’t jar viewers at all. The handoff is smooth and remains highly believable.
Buy,Download, Or Stream Charlotte’s Web! Click Here
My 9-year-old went with my wife and I, and even though he’d seen the story a number of times on DVD, he fell in love with it all over again. I loved hearing him laugh, and I couldn’t help but remember the first time I’d heard CHARLOTTE’S WEB read to me by a schoolteacher.
The story is timeless and will always be around. But it’s been waiting all this time for movie-making magic to truly unlock a way for audiences to watch it presented so much in the flesh.
No only is the video aspect so good, but the voice talent gathered for the film is outstanding. Julia Roberts, Steve Buscemi, Oprah Winfrey, Cedric The Entertainer, Reba McEntire, and many other recognizeable voices (including Sam Shepard as the narrator) all contributed to this amazing experience.
If you want to have a great time and be a child again, go see CHARLOTTE’S WEB. If you want to bring delight to a child, take one with you. You’ll be glad you did.
As with Walden’s first adaptation–The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe–this is an okay movie that could have been vastly better. It is a superior adaptation to Wardrobe, in that it follows the source material more faithfully both in story and characterization, but it still fails most in those key areas, and in important ways that the animated version didn’t.
The most off-putting and probably most egregious error on director Winick’s part is to make Fern such an impertinent, downright snotty little girl. In the book Fern is determined, but not rude. Neither is her father the milquetoast that he’s made to be in the film. Ditto Templeton the rat, who is turned from an irascible malcontent into an outright bully. Such characterizations are completely unnecessary and in fact detract from the story. (Which again was the core failure with The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Seems to be a Walden thing.)
This ties into a problem with the casting in general. Julia Roberts was simply the wrong voice for Charlotte. The ‘73 version had the good grace and foresight to cast Debbie Reynolds as Charlotte. Reynolds’ soothing, melodic voice was perfect for a creature meant to be soothing and enchanting. There is life and wonder and hope in it. Roberts’ voice is simply too flat and nasally, and becomes actually grating. The casting on the rest of the animals was fine (though the body humor got old after the second “joke”; I long for the days when body “humor” wasn’t considered simply part of kids’ movie genre), but of the humans only Beau Bridges stands out. I like the actors who played the various parts, but they too come off as lifeless. The whole affair is simply flat, which is ironic considering the wondrousness of the tale attempting to be told.
And then there’s the decision to go with hyperrealistic special effects. I found myself wishing they’d stayed with the neat animation that introduced the movie. Instead we’re treated to super-macro shots of a spider worthy of an electron microscope. Director Winick should have had the sense to realize that there’s no way to make a spider cuddly in close-up. The animated ‘73 film was wise enough not to try; it showed Charlotte in just enough detail to give her form and features, and left it that. This one, again like The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, wants to show off at the expense of the story.
Some of the non-book material is witty, but for the most part it’s not and obviously tacked on to tickle kiddies’ funny bones. It does, so in that sense I suppose it works, but it’s laziness on the part of the filmmakers to feel it’s necessary.
In sum, what should be a magical, uplifting movie comes off as flat and, in fact, a little boring. Maybe one of these days the film industry will discover that special effects and high-caliber casts aren’t enough to save a lackluster script. It always comes down to the writing, and it simply isn’t very good in this version of Charlotte’s Web. It has its heart in the right place, and doesn’t stray far from the original book in actual plot, for which I have to commend it at least three stars, but it’s more interested in being a comedy made for kids than a drama made for smart people, young and old. This is why the ‘73 version continues to hold my kids in thrall after at least a score of viewings, but they were so bored on a second watching of this new film that they wanted to leave early.
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