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Tooth Fairy follows star hockey player Derek Thompson as he is temporarily transformed into a full-fledged tooth fairy for a week as penalty for discouraging a young fan. But as Derek slowly adapts to his new position, he begins to rediscover his own forgotten dreams.
It has a terrible screenplay and you get the feeling that Johnson could be a much better light comedian than this, given a better chance.
June 03, 2010
At the Movies
Is there anything else to say except skip it?
February 01, 2010
Reeling Reviews
This is an obvious labor of love for the filmmakers and their collective eye for capturing the beauty, grace and, often, humor of their many dances (with Dom and Fiona) with geometric precision....
To call Tooth Fairy a bad film is like calling star Dwayne Johnson a big guy. Both statements are accurate, but neither actually conveys the degree to which they are true.
For what it is, Tooth Fairy is probably a success; it's not particularly smart or original but it doesn't care to be. That doesn't offer much hope to anyone else.
This comedy is essentially a goofy premise with some nutty dialog and set pieces pasted onto it. But it's watchably entertaining, even though the filmmakers miss almost every opportunity for sublime absurdity.
Like most family films nowadays, the movie squanders a lot of energy righteously huffing and puffing its message: let kids dream.
January 22, 2010
Time Out
The one element that lifts this above utter tedium is the presence of Stephen Merchant as tooth-fairy administrator Tracy. That he manages to come away with his dignity intact is testament to his skill as a comedian.