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The movie highlights on Christopher Robin, the man who has his day by day routine about his family and work. Be that as it may, everything change when his fate puts him in transit of Winnie the Pooh, his old companion who will run with him in an energizing experience looking for old companions and appreciating the entire life.
Christopher Robin is beautifully shot and well-acted. I found the narrative drive of the script less than compelling, but it will certainly entertain parents and kids who already have a love of these time-tested characters.
If you missed Disney's last dip into Milne - the 2011 animated feature Winnie the Pooh - it's sweet and moving and beautiful and an all-ages delight. It's everything that Christopher Robin isn't.
Better than expected. McGregor and Atwell are a delight. Voice cast, especially Brad Garrett as Eeyore, is excellent. Better than director Forster's Finding Neverland.
The movie mostly works -- a fleeting reminder of the simple pleasures of hanging out with family and a talking bear, which, in these frenetic times, is the kind of silliness that's worth savoring.
Poo is too kind a word to describe the flat, gray nature of Disney's reenvisioned Hundred Acre Wood and the trademarked bland anonymity director Marc Forster brings to the party.