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Horton the Elephant discovers the tiny city of Who-ville and its residents, the Whos, which he can hear but cannot see. However, he must struggle to protect the microscopic community from his neighbors who refuse to believe it exists.
Taking on Seuss has proven a challenge for Hollywood, but a nice balance has been struck here between authenticity and new ideas. This one's a winner.
December 12, 2008
Los Angeles Times
The sad thing is that this Horton doesn't stick by its central message -- that every voice counts -- the way Horton sticks to the Whos. It pretends to, but the sincerity is just too scary to commit to fully.
This new Horton 'toon may be state of the art. But it's great virtue isn't the 3-D animation. It's the good Doctor, whose writing about Whos never goes out of style.
March 14, 2008
Movie Views
Horton started as a book, less that 40 pages long. To make it a feature seems just a little bit wrong. The magic of Seuss isn't quite there. It's got the look but it's missing some flair.
And a motto moguls should take some time learning, if they'd like their movies to finally be earning, for it's not the cash that makes a prize of the art, but the warmth of the tale, and the size of the heart.
March 14, 2008
Ebert & Roeper
The animation's ok. I didn't like Jim Carrey. I thought he was a distraction.
March 17, 2008
New York Daily News
The team behind Ice Age capture the Seussian visuals without squishing emotions or squelching the sing-songy language. Listen closely: It's the sound of a million Who fans cheering.