Saturday, December 5, 2009

James and the Giant Peach (1996)

Young orphan James lives with his two wicked aunts, Sponge and Spiker.  A slave to the spinsters, James world is a lonely, miserable place.  His only solice is the memory of his parents.  Enter a spilled bag of crocodile tongues.  Overnight a giant peach grows in the wasteland of the front yard.  Before long, the huge fruit is rolling James and an odd bunch of inhabitants away and towards his dream of New York City.  During the journey, James is kept company by a lady bug, spider, centipede, earthworm, and a grasshopper.

Devilishly engaging and wonderfully macabre, James and the Giant Peach is produced by Tim Burton, directed by Henry Selick and adapted from the Roald Dahl classic.  The film is perfect.  A blend of live action and motion capture, it's equal parts odd and charm.

The cast of characters make the film.  Voices by Richard Dreyfuss, Susan Sarandon, David Thewlis, and Paul Terry warm the heart.  Pete Postlethwaite is delightful in a quaint role.  Aunts Sponge and Spiker are frightening.  The dialogue between James and his creature counterparts is vibrant, filled with humor and emotion.

The story is simple, but multi-faceted and is just as I imagined it.  The production values are left of center, fitting beautifully with my third-grade memories.  From the aunt's creepy old, far from square house to the lucious flesh of the peach, every image jumps from the scene making a vivid fantasy.

As I see it, James and the Giant Peach is a brilliant adaptation of a fine children's book.  Don't miss the perfect storm found herein.

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