I just saw the film adaptation of Where the Wild Things Are, one of my all time favorite books. This classic picture book has a permenant spot in my 8th grade ELA curriculum, where my students invesitage the Journey Story. I was not expecting it to be great, because it's ratings were so-so. In some ways it wasn't. As an adult looking for an entertaining flick, not sure this qualifies. But it found it, like the book, oddly profound. It takes liberties with the story, filling in back story and making real characters out of the wild things. But Maurice Sendak co-produced the movie and I can see why. It is different from the book, but resounds like the book. It speaks on the issue of children and power. I was expecting the wild things to be like kids. But like the original illustrations suggest, they are representations of the adults in Max's life. Max feels powerless in reality, a difficult feeling all children experience on various levels. He becomes the king of these wild things and attempts to solve their problems.
Looking for reviews of it, I noticed that fellow TransformEd blogger, Dan Brown, also has written an excellent post about this film. He calls it "required viewing" for teachers. I'd agree. As an adult who cares about children and is interested in understanding childhood, this fim has unusual depth and brilliance. Check out Dan's post and the film. It's a great use of two hours of your winter vacation.
[image credit: indecentbazaar.wordpress.com]

Nice review for this movie/ book. Though it has discrepancies, still, you managed to explained all the sides of the story.
Posted by: essay | January 13, 2012 at 08:40 AM
Nice work keep it up.
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