Stuart Little 2
It
could have been cold, calculated crap. Instead, director Rob Minkoff
teamed with writer Bruce Joel Rubin to create a movie with all the heart
of its title character. Stuart Little 2 towers above the first
movie, managing to break a few sequel rules and work in a few pro-social
messages without hitting the audience over the head. In short, if you'll
pardon the puns, it's a sweet little film.
Though it still
has a storybook feel, Stuart Little 2 has gotten rid of a lot
of the first one's affectations. The Littles still greet each other
with a silly poem, but now the Little parents (Hugh Laurie and Geena
Davis) are more relaxed and human. Though everyone in the film matter-of-factly
accepts the presence of talking animals (or at least of Stuart - it's
never quite clear if they can understand the cats), nobody is overly
cartoony themselves.
Not that there
are that many people to register. Breaking rule #1 in the sequel book
(make everything bigger and louder), Minkoff and Rubin have pared
down the supporting cast. Because we all know Stuart's world already,
they can just focus on the plot. Despite participating in a soccer game
early on, for which he's woefully unsuited, Stuart's (Michael J. Fox)
worldview is pretty small, and the filmmakers respect that.
There are new characters.
Big brother George (Jonathan Lipnicki) has a new best friend, Will (Marc
John Jeffries). The two of them still make time for Stuart, but would
rather play Playstation 2. As, naturally, the big brother's world starts
to crowd him out, Stuart wants to find someone more his own size, and
new baby sister Martha just doesn't cut it.
That someone drops
into his lap, almost literally, in the form of Margalot (Melanie Griffith),
a small bird apparently being stalked by a falcon (a strangely perfectly
cast James Woods). Through his growing friendship with Margalot, the
mouse boy learns that things aren't always what they appear, but it's
still worth it to trust your heart. If adults might question the naturalness
of a relationship between a bird and a mouse, the children won't; even
though the two have a "date" in Stuart's car watching Vertigo
on an old television set, things never get mushy.
When Margalot disappears,
Stuart finds out what he's truly made of, enlisting Snowbell the cat
(Nathan Lane) to join him in finding and rescuing his friend. George
covers for the two as best as he can, and if Lipnicki isn't particularly
convincing in such scenes, it's because kids are never as convincing
liars as they think they are.
From a kid's point
of view, this all makes one heck of a great movie. Having Geena Davis
as a mom may seem impossibly Hollywood, but every little kid thinks
of his mother as that beautiful. While Hugh Laurie might seem a little
dorky as a dad, remember that for a kid, that's high praise. The New
York City and Central Park of the film are clean because, to a kid,
they would be.
In many ways, it's
a throwback to a simpler time (albeit using modern techniques). Though
some of the set design acknowledges the modern world, almost everything
within the Little household belongs in the forties, when E.B. White's
source novel was first published. The movie never plays this as a joke;
it's just noticeable when Will brings over that PS2.
Outside of the
house, the movie turns bright yellow and orange to represent the warmth
of family life, and echoes the commercial's parody of Spider-Man.
Stuart may not be Mighty Mouse, but this color scheme reminds us that
he has the heart of that hero.
Because of its
ad campaign, the movie earns a little extra praise. Every commercial
and trailer I've seen has focused on all the obvious dumb fun things:
See Stuart play soccer! See him fly a plane! See him skateboard! And
though there's a hint of danger, the actual plot remains unrevealed.
Though a sharp viewer can see where it's headed, it's nice to not know
walking into the theater.
The movie throws
a few knowing glances towards adults, but is far more interested in
holding children's attention in a quiet, respectful way. And in a summer
where too many kids films have tried too hard to walk in both worlds,
leaving interesting messes but little more, quiet and respectful is
not a bad thing. It just means that older kids will probably not be
all that interested. At a certain age, small, heartfelt stories have
trouble competing with loud explosions and hard-rocking soundtracks.
But if, as an adult, you can let yourself go back to a time when you
could believe in something like a talking mouse, Stuart Little 2
stands as one of the best films of the summer.
What's It Worth?
On its own $6. If you have kids, $9
Derek McCaw