Hotel Transylvania (DVD REVIEW)
Hotel Transylvania
DVD Review
by Kam Williams
Adam
Sandler & Selena Gomez Co-Star in Spooky Animated Adventure
More romantic and funny than spooky
and spine-tingling, Hotel
Transylvania is a tenderhearted tale that milks most of its mirth by turning a
basic scary movie convention on its head. The picture unfolds from the
point-of-view of Count Dracula (Adam Sandler) and a beleaguered brotherhood of peace-loving creatures who
have not only been unfairly-demonized as monsters but are actually more afraid
of humans than we are of them. Who knew?
Victims of bad press and paranoia,
they naturally shy away from making any contact with humans. After his wife’s
untimely demise at the hands of an angry mob, an understandably overprotective Dracula restricted his daughter,
Mavis (Selena Gomez), to the safe confines of the family’s hilltop mansion, far
removed from any prejudiced townsfolk armed with torches and pitchforks. Inside
that protective bubble, “Daddy’s Little Ghoul” was raised on misleading nursery
rhymes in which all the evil villains were people.
Figuring his fellow social outcasts
might also enjoy a sanctuary of tranquility safe from humanity, Dracula
transforms his sprawling estate into the Hotel Transylvania, a swanky,
5-stake (ala “5-star”) resort catering strictly to fellow monsters. The plot
thickens when he
lowers the drawbridge over the moat to the castle to welcome his friends to
celebrate Mavis’ birthday.
A hiker who just stumbled upon the place slips in alongside Frankenstein (Kevin James), The Mummy (CeeLo Green), The
Werewolf (Steve Buscemi), Quasimodo (Jon Lovitz), The Invisible Man (David
Spade) and the other invited guests. Jonathan (Andy Samberg) may be a mere
mortal, but the clueless party crasher’s just the right age to appreciate the
blossoming beauty of a rebellious teen vampire with raging hormones.
It’s cross-species love at first
sight, much to the chagrin of an exasperated Count Dracula whose desperate
efforts to discourage his suddenly-defiant daughter prove futile. His cries of
“You’re barely out of your training fangs!” and “There are so many eligible
monsters!” fall on deaf ears, as Mavis opts instead to heed her late-mother’s
sage suggestion that “A zing comes along only once in a life.”
A tyke-friendly adventure teaching a
universal message of tolerance via the oft-repeated maxim that monsters are
people, too!
Very Good
(3 stars)
Rated PG for action, rude humor and scary images.
Running time: 91 minutes
Distributor: Sony
Pictures Home Entertainment
DVD Extras: Commentary
with director Genndy Tartakovsky, producer Michelle Murdocca and visual effects
supervisor Daniel Kramer; Goodnight Mr. Foot; Prologue; "Monster
Remix" music video by Becky G, featuring will.i.am; Making “Monster
Remix.”
To see a trailer for Hotel Transylvania, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4RK3jY7AVk&feature=youtube_gdata_player
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