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The Lorax 3D, Movie

The Lorax 3D 2012

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3D CG animated adaptation of the genius Dr. Seuss book about the Lorax, a stout, mustachioed critter who "speaks for the trees". From the animation studio who made Despicable Me. The directors wrote the screenplay for the last Dr. Seuss movie, Horton Hears a Who! More

Young Ted (voiced by Zac Efron) tries to find the one thing that will win him the affection of the girl of his dreams (Taylor Swift). To do so, he needs to discover the story of the Lorax (Danny DeVito) who defends the Truffula trees and their wee inhabitants from the greedy entrepreneurship of The Once-ler (Ed Helms). Hide

DVD / Blu-Ray

Blu-ray 3D

$29.99

20 votes / 7 comments The Talk

  • 80 %

    Want to See it

    What say you?

    • BERNIE

      LOOKS ALRIGHT I GUESS

    • Atlantah

      I'm sure it's going to be a good movie ... must see ... definately :)

    • madison

      whooaaaa looks cool as i cant to see it with ma mate its going to be great!!!!! ;)

    • Isla

      looks exciting,i wonder what how they get the trees back?

    • isla

      looks exciting,i wonder how they get the trees back?

    • meag

      booo

    • Hamish

      How Good Is It?????

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Flicks.co.nz Review

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James Croot Flicks Writer

We've been waiting a long time for a film adaptation of Dr Seuss's darkest and most thought-provoking tale, but is this the Lorax film we really needed? The animation looks crisp, there are some moments of inspired 3D (involving white-water rapids and a climatic car chase) and the humming fish are a scene-stealing delight, but there's just something missing in translation from that most powerful book. More

Perhaps it’s the Lorax himself, who seems shunted into the periphery as the focus falls clearly and squarely on young Ted and his girl-inspired tree search. Whilst Danny DeVito is an inspired choice for his voice, he's left with little to do other than be the voice of doom and be the victim of countless acts of physical abuse. Yes, rather than frighten the kiddies with too much environmental gloom (my four-year-old pronounced it scary but not too scary), the producers have instead decided to up the cartoon violence and song-and-dance numbers - which are sadly unmemorable both musically and lyrically (the latter surely a crime given the source material).

Despicable Me director Chris Renaud's fingerprints are clearly all over the film, from the pint-sized villain (Vector with a sharper wardrobe but dodgier haircut) to the Minion-esque Barbaloots, but the subversive humour that marked out that movie is much more muted here. Hide

The People's Reviews

Rating:

2 ratings and 1 review

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  • alexia

    what do i have to do?!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Lorax Tree Legend

RealityCheck Flicks Superstar (?)

In the true spirit of 'Despicable Me' and' Horton Hears a Who'... Fantastic an very much a childrens book on the big screen, with some pearls of adultness humour thrown in! This is another flick for the books, I'l even be happy to watch it twice. Laughin all the way through and it did have a good message, like 'Horton Hears a Who' & 'Megamind' :-)
Genre : animated, childrens, fantasy, family, recyclying
4/5 : wonderfuly beautiful childrens film with few bits of adult humour

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Press Reviews

A.V. Club (USA)

This is a dark story with a heavy message, and it's been transformed into a harmless, pretty confection. In defanging it for comic effect, the filmmakers have done Seuss as much of a disrespectful disservice as if they'd laid on the fart gags. Full review.

Hollywood Reporter

Entertains while delivering it's pro-environmental, anti-greed message wrapped in a bright package of primary colors that truly pop. Full review.

Los Angeles Times

This movie version adds a whole lot of other stuff, most of it not very good and not in keeping with the spirit of the Seuss original. Full review.

New York Times

A noisy, useless piece of junk, reverse-engineered into something resembling popular art in accordance with the reigning imperatives of marketing and brand extension. Full review.

Rolling Stone (USA)

Yikes! Chris Renaud and Kyle Balda direct strictly for short-attention spans on a fruit-loopy palette that made me want to puke. Had Dr. Seuss lived (he died in 1991), I'm confident he would have puked as well. Full review.

Variety (USA)

The key to Seuss' tales, as with all good fables, is not only their cleverness but their surpassing elegance and simplicity, qualities that this busy, over-cluttered contraption of a movie seems entirely uninterested in replicating. Full review.