Rene Russo, Robbie Coltrane, Alan Cumming, Irma
P. Hall, Paul Reubens, John Aylward. (PG, 84 min.)
Just because an 800-pound gorilla can sit anywhere he wants to doesn't mean it's
going to be an interesting affair. This directorial debut from screenwriter Thompson
(Edward Scissorhands, The Addams Family, The Nightmare Before Christmas) drops the
macabre good cheer (and witty expertise) of her previous work in favor of a family-aimed
tale of animal love, and the result is a brief 84 minutes of painfully unsurprising
primates-in-tuxedoes period comedy. Everyone may be crazy about a sharp-dressed gorilla,
but Buddy is a sorry, tedious jaunt through the eccentric 1920s upper-crust world
of menagerie-owning Trudy Lintz (Russo) and her efforts to raise a Congolese gorilla
in her household -- with predictably disastrous results. Based on the novel/memoir
Animals Are My Hobby by the real-life Mrs. Lintz, Buddy's growth from sickly, waifish
infant to gargantuan wild thang is as notable as a squirrel crossing the road, minus
the breathless excitement derived from the eternal question of whether a midday repast
of roadkill stew is forthcoming. It's not that this first feature released under
the newly minted Jim Henson Pictures banner is terribly shoddy -- there are plenty
of humorous scenes of Buddy and his chimpanzee housemates clowning about in their
exquisitely tailored Bergdorf Goodman suits and spats -- it's just that nothing out
of the ordinary ever seems to take place, no surprises, no explosive climaxes, and
no heartbreaking resolution, or at least not one we hadn't seen coming from a good
distance ahead. Russo, for her part, acquits herself admirably as the oddball Mrs.
Lintz, as does Robbie Coltrane as her physician husband. And only on rare occasions
does Buddy -- the work of Jim Henson's Creature Shop -- look like a man in a monkey
suit. Children will doubtless enjoy the chimps' animated monkeyshines, and the scenes
of an upright Buddy serving hors d'oeuvres to the Lintzes' startled guests is surreal
in its setup and pleasantly bizarre. Brief homages and references to King Kong, Mighty
Joe Young, Bringing Up Baby, and even Planet of the Apes pop up at odd moments, but
this is, above all, a family affair, and quite a humdrum one at that, even for kids.
Such being the case, it's now my fervent hope that director Thompson reunites with
Tim Burton to create something of at least passable interest to those of us with
a taste for the sublime, if not the simian.
--Marc Savlov
Full Length Reviews
Buddy 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Babe 
The Nightmare Before Christmas 
Tarzan 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Caroline Thompson at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|