Jack Black is ready to bonk around in shorts and Converse Allstars on the poster for Rob Letterman's Gulliver's Travels |
Gulliver works in the mail room of a large New York magazine, as he plucks up the courage to talk to the girl he is in love with. - Which brings him on an adventure in the Bermuda triangle!
The plot is only coherent in patches, but there's also really no base of reality at all in this shoot-and-miss catastrophe of a film. No one in the cast make total asses of themselves, but it is a laughless comedy and a film with several problems. - Particularly the overly speedy pace, which made me wonder if director Rob Letterman (Monsters vs. Aliens (2009)) is lacking in self-confidence (or talent, or perhaps has ADD?) This fault hinders any amazement over the film's many effects.
In Lilliput, Gulliver becomes part of a romantic triangle and among other things helps Jason Segel (Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008)) with a Prince song, while Chris O'Dowd (Pirate Radio (2009)) is attacking from inside a kind of Pacific Rim-like robot.
Gulliver's Travels, obviously a very free adaptation of the Jonathan Swift (A Modest Proposal for Preventing the Children of Poor People in Ireland Being a Burden on Their Parents or the Country, and for Making Them Beneficial to the Publick (1729)) 1726 classic, doesn't have much Swift to it. Most extenuating about it, however, is its ending, when Jack Black (Goosebumps (2015)) gives a dance performance to Edwin Starr's War. Black's love for music is luckily plugged into this awful film, which is written by Nicholas Stoller (Zoolander 2 (2016))) and Joe Stillman (Shrek (2001)).
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Watch a trailer for the film here
Cost: 112 mil. $
Box office: 237.3 mil. $
= Flop
[Gulliver's Travels was released December 25 and runs 85 minutes. Filming took place in and around March 2009 in England. Swift is not mentioned in the credits in the film, which, although the film is terrible, is an added shamefulness. The film opened #8, a terrible start for a big budgeted 3D-movie, to a 6.3 mil. $ opening weekend in North America, where it grossed 42.7 mil. $ (18 % of the total gross). Black, Letterman and the film's producers were very lucky that the film pulled in better internationally: The 2nd and 3rd biggest markets were the UK with 24.7 mil. $ (10.4 %) and Japan with 18.9 mil. $ (8 %). Roger Ebert was among the few critics that liked the film, giving it 3/4 stars, equal to 4 hearts here. Gulliver's Travels is rotten at 20 % with a 3.9 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]
What do you think of Gulliver's Travels?
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