Ben wrote: ↑January 10th, 2020, 7:06 pm
Aw, c'mon...back in the early 80s when the Disney films and Sound Of Music were MIA on tape, the likes of Doolittle got us through some rough times, even if we even knew then that it wasn’t as good as the others
I like the genre of late-60's G-rated over-budgeted big-studio kiddy musicals, just on the strength of Willy Wonka and Chitty/Bang, and
want to like Doolittle for the sake of genre, but it betrays my trust every time.
I just got through the Hugh Lofting audiobook out of curiosity, and one big problem with the movie (which the Murphy and Downey versions try to address, with relative degrees of success) is that in the book, when Doolittle talks to the animals,
we can hear them too, and they're funny supporting characters.
Here, apart from the parrot, we have Anthony Newley, Samantha Eggar and the kid inserted as someone for Rex to talk to, when he isn't talking dog and horse to the trained animals on the set. And, out of the loop, we're left in the same position as everyone else in the town, namely thinking that the Doc is a nut embarrassing himself. Doubly so in the romantic seal number.
Bill1978 wrote: ↑January 11th, 2020, 5:58 am
I see to get an ad every second ad break while watching Pay TV, although every time I see the ad I can't share the feeling that the movie is going to do little at the box office.
You've SEEN an actual ad? A real one? What's it like??
Seriously, think this was originally intended for a combination Christmas-vacation kiddy film and December dump, but Star Wars and Jumanji were in the way, so Universal gave it the only thing more humiliating than an under-the-radar December dump--A January dump.
Which does not bode well.