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3/31/2009

Monsters vs Aliens

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Directors:Rob Letterman, Conrad Vernon
Writers:Maya Forbes (screenplay) & Wallace Wolodarsky (screenplay)
Release Date:8 April 2009 (Indonesia)
Genre:Animation | Action | Sci-Fi

Cast :
Reese Witherspoon... Susan Murphy / Ginormica (voice)
Seth Rogen... B.O.B. (voice)
Hugh Laurie... Dr. Cockroach Ph.D. (voice)
Will Arnett... The Missing Link (voice)
Kiefer Sutherland... General W.R. Monger (voice)
Rainn Wilson... Gallaxhar (voice)
Stephen Colbert... President Hathaway (voice)
Paul Rudd... Derek Dietl (voice)
Julie White... Wendy Murphy (voice)
Jeffrey Tambor... Carl Murphy (voice)


Review :
Ginormica is a great name for a woman, regardless of her size. As it happens, the California girl so designated in the ginormically showy but super-average 3-D animated entertainment Monsters vs. Aliens grows into her moniker the old-fashioned sci-fi way: Born plain old Susan Murphy (and voiced by Reese Witherspoon), she's hit on her wedding day with outer-space crud from a falling meteor, causing her to expand to 49 feet 11 inches tall. And although at first she's understandably flummoxed by the transformation, and really steamed when military types lock her up at a top secret government compound with a hidden society of other mutated freaks, the no-longer-plain-old Susan is actually in luck. For one thing, she's now got the figure to carry the skinny-leg-jeans look. For another, the sudden growth spurt saves her from an 
ill-advised marriage to a self-involved boob. (The doltish groom-to-be, voiced by busy Paul Rudd, holds the classic punchline job of local TV weatherman.) Shed of her small ways, this wonder woman embraces her sky-high feminine power; she becomes a female role model to, yes, look up to.

Monsters vs. Aliens is pitched to families; the cuddly drawing style is safely, un-scarily kid-friendly. (Never mind that kids, with their steel-trap memories, haven't forgotten that Pixar already covered the whole disgruntled ogre thing excellently well eight years ago in Monsters, Inc.) But like so many animated projects welded in the DreamWorks Factory, the movie works hard — desperately hard — to be all things to all audience segments. And the visible effort erodes the sense of gaiety, of unfettered fun.

The portion of the adult audience with moviegoing memories that 
extend back before R2-D2 roamed the galaxy will easily calculate that Ginormica is exactly one inch shorter than the giant femme who sought revenge on a loutish husband in the wonderfully awful 1958 sci-fi specimen Attack of the 50 Foot Woman. This same crowd will also note similarities to plenty of other famous 1950s and '60s-style B movies featuring monsters (irradiated and otherwise), aliens, and rudimentary 3-D effects. Ginormica makes friends with her fellow inmates, including the brainy bug-eyed Dr. Cockroach (Hugh Laurie); a half-ape, half-fish Darwinian oddity dubbed the Missing Link (Will Arnett); and a one-eyed splotch of Blob-like blue goo called B.O.B. (Seth Rogen, happily recognizable even disguised as a...thing). There's also a wordlessly braying 350-foot grub from the school of Mothra called Insectosaurus. Soon, the prisoners of this cartoon gulag are conscripted to battle an onslaught of Earth-attacking aliens, led by a cranky multi-eyed overlord (Rainn Wilson).


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