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Posted: 03/23/08by Laura Tucker |
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It's interesting to relate to a story as a child and later be re-introduced to the story as an adult. There are so many songs that went completely over my head back then, and now listening to them I find out they're about sex or drug use. I was really excited to watch Horton Hears a Who when it came out, as I remember it as being one of my favorite Dr. Suess stories from when I was little. Yet, watching it now, more than thirty-five years later, I found a new appreciation for the story, learning what it's really about.
There's another whole story going on outside Horton's speck. He's an educator of some type, educating the kids of the "people" where he lives. I found it interesting they referred to them as "people," since one was an elephant, another was a kangaroo, and others were unidentifiable as far as what they were supposed to be, but they were most certainly not people. Horton hears a tiny speck flying by him and after a long, mad dash to save the speck, he places it on a clover. What he's hearing is is the world of the Whos. Their whole world is contained on the tiny speck. Because the speck took flight in the way it did, everything there is going topsy turvy, and they can't figure out what's going on. The mayor would like to cancel the Who-Centennial because of the commotion, but the council will not hear of it. Outside of the speck, the parents of Horton's students aren't very understanding of his connection to the speck on the clover. They don't believe him that there is a whole world residing on the speck. They insist that the whole thing is preposterous and impossible and want him to get rid of the speck and and clover before teaching their children again. Throughout all this we hear Horton utter the first moral in the film, "A person's a person, no matter how small." Of course, I now remember reading that line in the book, but I never thought about it as deeply as I now do as an adult. It's all about acceptance. Everyone is important in society, no matter how big or small, heavy or thin, etc. Additionally, there was another moral embedded within the story, and that's the dangers of "group think." The Whos living on the tiny speck back up the city council on their group think that the Who-Centennial continuing is of utmost importance. No one will allow the mayor to speak his beliefs of the dangers that may be coming their way. The parents of Horton's students certainly participate in this as well and refuse to think independently on Horton's need to help the Whos. All they can concentrate on is one "person" said it was wrong, so it has to be. In addition to walking away from this great story by the legendary Dr. Suess, there are also some great voice performances in this animated film by Jim Carrey as Horton and Steve Carrell as the mayor. The humor is of course built up much more in the film than it was in the book, and it has to be because of these great talents, along with the additional comedic voices of Carol Burnett and Amy Poehler. All of this combined, from the classic Dr. Suess story to the morals embedded within, to the collection of comedic talent makes for a great family film. Laura Tucker is a freelance writer providing reviews of movies and television, among other things, at Viewpoints and Reality Shack, and operates a celebrity gossip blog, Troubled Hollywood.
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