Stuart Little 2 [DVD] [2002]

£2.465
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Stuart Little 2 [DVD] [2002]

Stuart Little 2 [DVD] [2002]

RRP: £4.93
Price: £2.465
£2.465 FREE Shipping

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Stuart Little 2 was even more well-received than the first film. Rotten Tomatoes has reported that 84% of critics gave the film a positive review. All the voice-overs are excellent with Nathan Lane having the best lines as "Snowball," the cat. He was simply hilarious, line after line. In addition to its title character and his family, Stuart Little 2 takes several elements directly from the original novel by E.B. White: the cat Snowbell, the songbird Margalo (Melanie Griffith), and several minor incidents such as his adventure in the kitchen drain pipe, landing in the garbage barge, and having a tiny toy car to drive. These elements are woven together into an entirely different story, however, with Margalo a much more important character with a past history that ends up drawing Stuart into a life-threatening adventure. Having discovered Stuart's absence and whereabouts, the Littles follow him by taxi as he begins an aerial adventure through the park, with Margalo at his side. They lose Falcon, but he catches up and makes an attempt to kill Stuart, when he detaches the plane's upper wing, damaging the main one and making it enter a steep nose dive, which fails when Stuart recovers from the dive, narrowly missing his family.

Stuart Little's Big Adventure The movie is condensed into a three-minute read-along adventure which ends with a charming fable about how you can buy more Stuart Little adventures.When Irwin gets hit in the stomach with the soccer ball it bounces off of him, but in the next shot of him he is holding the ball. Stuart Little is the smallest member of the Little family... literally. In fact, he's a mouse. But in the fairytale world of Stuart Little 2, Stuart is completely accepted as their son, complete with going to school, eating breakfast with the family, and even playing in the little kids' soccer league with his human brother George. Of course, being only about six inches tall, Stuart (voiced by Michael J. Fox) ends up being excluded from many of the activities that human kids his own age enjoy. Saddened by George's sudden enthusiasm for playing with the neighbor instead of him, Stuart longs for a friend of his own. Picture Technically this disc is as good as you'd typically expect from Columbia TriStar. The picture quality is good, with the fairytale styled take on New York transferring to screen with warm glowing tones that offer plenty of detail. After the Littles are gone, Margalo is talking with her dad who is a peregrine falcon named Falcon (voiced by James Woods) who forces her to case and steal from households. When he presses her to find and take an object of value or lose the sanctuary he promised her, she can't seem to concentrate on her assignment because she's starting to fall in love with Stuart. Falcon eventually loses patience and threatens to have Stuart for lunch if she doesn't deliver. Worried for his safety, she takes the diamond ring of Mrs. Little ( Geena Davis). When the Littles see that the ring's missing, they think it fell down the sink. Stuart offers to be lowered down the drain on a string to get it, and he almost succeeds. There's plenty to like about "Stuart Little 2" as a film, but the DVD release is quite disappointing in what it offers.

I liked this better than the original, and that''s a high compliment because I thought highly of the original film: Stuart Little. As good as that was, I just thought this was even better. Sound A fun-filled 5.1 sound mix excites the speakers with some great effects, particularly during Stuart's hair-raising plane ride around Central Park. A Touch of Evil The introduction of the scary Falcon to Stuart's world is covered in this seven-minute featurette. James Woods pops-up for a short interview and, as always, has slightly different coloured hair than the last time you saw him. He enjoys playing bad guys in animated films and reveals his formula for being scary, without being too scary, where kids are concerned. PlayStation Demo There's an advert around every corner on this DVD and this time it's for the PlayStation game. Life in the Fast Lane It's the dreaded 'making of' featurette, except this one is kept to only two-minutes long because all the action is speeded up. So you get everything you ever really needed to know in one short blast. Amen to that.Audio Commentary Director Rob Minkoff is joined by senior visual effects supervisor Jerome Chen for a somewhat dry chat about the movie. The focus is highly technical and, while Minkoff provided an interesting commentary for the DVD of the first film, this effort is very limited in appeal. Kids will be bored by it and only those interested in animation and special effects may glean something from a movie that Minkoff describes as having "every shot manipulated". Show and Tell Select this option and whenever an icon appears on screen during the movie you can access a selection of short featurettes (average two minutes in length) on the making of the film. The CGI and other visual effects are explored, as well as the art direction which drew inspiration from the 40s editions of New Yorker magazine and, bizarrely, the Al Pacino cop thriller "Serpico". The story itself is quite entertaining, with enough creative elements to keep adult viewers enjoying it just as much as the younger set, or maybe more, as I think adults will be the ones to enjoy Snowbell's commentary to the fullest. The characters genuinely come to life, from Stuart himself to Margalo, Falcon, Snowbell, and Snowbell's alley-cat pal, and I found myself feeling a part of their adventure as the film unfolded. There are even a few moments in the climactic scenes that are truly tense or poignant, more so than I might have expected. While Stuart Little 2 doesn't rank quite as high as some of my favorites such as Toy Story or A Bug's Life, it's still an all-around fun movie, and I'd put it easily on a par with an animated feature like Antz. In the final shot of the movie, as the Little family leave the rooftop, Eleanor is holding out her hand as though she is carrying Stuart, but he is not there.

The film once again features great colors, a virtual rainbow of them, especially with some of the inventive rooms in the Little house. The parents, once again, are super nice. It's a treat to watch Geena Davis and Hugh Laurie play an old- fashioned "Leave It To Beaver"-type couple. The film has no objectionable material and leaves you with a nice feeling. There are animated films or animated/real life combinations like this, that advertise "family-friendly viewing" but don't really deliver, instead sneaking in sexual innuendos and the like.There's also a miscellaneous selection of lesser bonus material. "Stuart Little's Big Adventures Read-Along" (and the option to record your own read-along) and the "Interactive Game: Stuart's Circle of Friends" are only going to be of interest to the younger viewers. Playstation 2 owners will be interested in the promotional material for the Stuart Little 2 game; incidentally, the graphics for the game look pretty terrible. There's also a music video for one of the insipid songs from the film, Celine Dion's "I'm Alive," trailers, and weblinks.



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