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Stuart Little (1999)
Released By: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment   Rating: PG   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Genre: Action-Adventure
MPAA Rating: PG
Director: Rob Minkoff
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Allyce Beasley, Dabney Coleman, David Alan Grier, Geena Davis
Published ID: 412196
UPC: 043396048935, 043396052147, 043396089747, 043396098077,
Plot: E.B. White's classic children's story is brought to the screen in this fantasy, which combines computer-animated characters with a cast of live actors. Mrs. Little (Geena Davis), Mr. Little (Hugh Laurie), and their son George (Jonathan Lipnicki) live in a brownstone near New York's Central Park. The Littles have decided to adopt a younger brother for George, and while they're meeting the children at an orphanage, they are greeted by a mouse named Stuart (voice of Michael J. Fox), who can talk, walk upright, wear clothes, and do nearly anything a human child can do. The Littles are so taken with Stuart that they decide to adopt him, and soon the rest of the family is just as charmed by Stuart -- with the possible exception of Snowbell (voice of Nathan Lane), their house cat. The cast of humans includes Jennifer Tilly, Bruno Kirby, and Dabney Coleman; animal voices are contributed by Chazz Palminteri and Steve Zahn, Jim Doughan, and David Alan Grier. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Stuart Little review
Added 8/15/2009

I was pleased with the prompt delivery of this purchase. I got it for a child's birthday and it arrived early. Imagine that!
0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Didn't Care For It
Added 7/2/2009

The movie is meant to be for 4-7 year olds judging from the plot, but the amount of mild profanity is inappropriate for that age group. Much of the movie is sadness and/or peril, with the cat chases definitely overdone. Stuart's a great kid, I mean mouse, though! Geena Davis did a great job.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Way too coarse and perilous
Added 6/17/2009

Show this movie to little kids? I don't think so. I wouldn't even show this to a ten-year-old, unless I wanted him to walk around saying "damn" and "what the hell" all day long.

Stuart Little (the book) is enchanting. This movie is foul. Let's set aside for a moment that the plot of the movie is unrelated to the book. The movie as it stands does not measure up to what it could have been.

Poor Stuart is so pitiful and miserable through 75% of the movie. Wasted potential.

I wish it could have been a movie to love. The visuals and the animation, the settings, costumes, and characters (apart from the cats) are so, so good. But the trash-talking cats and the pathetic loneliness of the main character undo all the positives. No thanks.

3 out of 3 people found this helpful.
Colorful, Charming, Nice Story
Added 5/1/2009

Wow, there are lots of name actors are either in front of the camera or being used as voices in this unique animated-real life film. They use real people and animals (except for fake mouths when the animals "talk") and an animated mouse (Stuart, voiced by animation favorite Michael J. Fox.) who looks incredibly life-like.

The colors in this movie are terrific, especially with the house that the Little family lives in. The story has some clever stuff in it but it strictly played for laughs and reactions since credibility is about zero in many parts of this story. However, it's supposed to be outrageous.

I don't think Geena Davis has ever played a nicer role than this. It was good to see. The husband was just as nice, played affably by Hugh Laurie.

The jokes are good for the kids and adults. I know a couple of parents who liked this movie even better than their kids, so don't believe it when someone writes that this is a film strictly for kids. That is not so. I did object to some profanity in here at the end, which seemed so out of place, but it's hard to expect Hollywood to get everything right.

The sequel to this film is even better!

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
for undiscriminating toddlers
Added 8/30/2008

My almost-three year old loves this movie and watches it repeatedly. After all, there's a cuddly mouse doing people things, there's cats, and about half the movie consists of chases of one sort or another. There's also a lot of seamless and convincing animation (except for the "talking" mouths on the cats, which looks goofy). Any fans of E.B. White's book Stuart Little will be wise to avoid the movie, as they have nothing in common except the existence of a mouse-sized boy. It's as if the Hollywood folks made the movie first, and then decided to put a famous name on it, without any care as to the actual words in the book. It's too bad. The movie's plot is mostly fine for kids, who haven't learned to watch critically yet or expect self-consistency, coherence, or variation from standard hackneyed scenes and themes. Adults will find fuzzy wuzzy cuteness, mainly, and be massively unsurprised by any of the plot "twists". If you must view it, Rent - don't buy it. If you have an almost-three year old, be especially careful not to buy it, or you will be forcibly exposed to it time and again. At least rentals have a due date and an excuse to return the tape to the store.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Stuart Little review
Added 8/15/2009

I was pleased with the prompt delivery of this purchase. I got it for a child's birthday and it arrived early. Imagine that!
0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Didn't Care For It
Added 7/2/2009

The movie is meant to be for 4-7 year olds judging from the plot, but the amount of mild profanity is inappropriate for that age group. Much of the movie is sadness and/or peril, with the cat chases definitely overdone. Stuart's a great kid, I mean mouse, though! Geena Davis did a great job.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Way too coarse and perilous
Added 6/17/2009

Show this movie to little kids? I don't think so. I wouldn't even show this to a ten-year-old, unless I wanted him to walk around saying "damn" and "what the hell" all day long.

Stuart Little (the book) is enchanting. This movie is foul. Let's set aside for a moment that the plot of the movie is unrelated to the book. The movie as it stands does not measure up to what it could have been.

Poor Stuart is so pitiful and miserable through 75% of the movie. Wasted potential.

I wish it could have been a movie to love. The visuals and the animation, the settings, costumes, and characters (apart from the cats) are so, so good. But the trash-talking cats and the pathetic loneliness of the main character undo all the positives. No thanks.

3 out of 3 people found this helpful.
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IDPriceImageUrlPurchaseUrlIdTypeBindingStore
DVD
$19.60 @ Amazon
VHS
$2.50 @ Amazon
DVD
$9.49 @ Amazon
Video On Demand
$9.99 @ Amazon