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The Simpsons

Rated - 3.5 stars

The Simpsons

'Terrible things are going to happen,' warns Grampa, rolling down the Church aisle in spiritual fervour. (In a typically sharp touch, someone whips out a cell phone to record his religious experience for posterity.)

And terrible things do happen: to the polluted local lake, which turns toxic. To Bart, who is supplanted in his father's affections by a swine Homer goofily christens 'Spider-pig'. And to Springfield, which is deemed such an environmental catastrophe President Schwarzenegger has it cut off from the rest of the country by a large glass dome. As coffee supplies run low, irate citizens form a lynch mob to hang the buffoon who tipped the town into disaster. Guess who?

As a Simpsons fan old enough to remember when Bart was black (at least to certain well-meaning pop culture theorists) this movie never seemed inevitable, or called for, come to that. But now it's here, after several lackluster recent seasons, I'm glad it's good, even if the first 20 minutes promise much more than the next hour can possibly deliver.

It doesn't take Homer long (about two minutes) to ask the obvious question: What kind of sucker pays for something he can watch at home for free?

Thankfully this is the last time the thought will intrude on what proves to be a smooth and assured transition. The Simpsons Movie is basically a bumper edition of the show; bigger, longer and uncut. (Newsflash: we get a passing glimpse of Bart's manhood after Homer double-dares him to skateboard through Springfield butt naked.)

At its best, The Simpsons is as cruel a satire on American culture - particularly the lack of it - as anything on prime time. Producer James L Brooks negotiated creative independence from Rupert Murdoch's Fox Network, and over the years the writers haven't been shy to bite the hand that feeds them. Indolent blue collar imbecile Homer may not be a model citizen or a working class hero, but you have to look next door, at his squarely middle-class, born again neighbour Ned Flanders to find where the slap invariably sticks.

The Simpsons

Not this time though. Perhaps cowed by his public humiliation and jealous of the hog, Bart begins to draw unflattering comparisons between Homer and Flanders - and goes perilously soft on us.

Even Marge has had enough, after Homer high-tails it to Alaska and makes it clear he cares more about his own yellow skin than the good folk of Springfield.

The show has ventured beyond home town security before of course, but it's usually sharper on the micro: domestic squabbles, neighborly feuds and the petty prevarications of municipal authority figures. Let's face it, the Homer Simpsons of this world have no curiosity for anything beyond the remote, so it's a stretch when he ups sticks, and almost immediately the movie loses some of its sparkle.

Homer's odyssey gives the picture epic scope, no doubt, but it's a pity several well-loved supporting characters are short-changed as a result, and dare we suggest his redemptive transformation from pathetic Every-jerk to mock action-hero is a just teensy bit tired?

The Simpsons

That's not to say The Simpsons Movie doesn't have plenty of laughing gas left in its tank, but those hilarious opening 20 minutes remind us how far this wickedly funny animated series pushed the sitcom format towards an inspired, anarchic subversion. The film settles for something more conventional, though you can hardly hold that against it. Bigger and longer don't always mean better, but The Simpsons Movie is still a cut above the rest.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Critics' Reviews

Rating of 4 
	  stars out of 5 Ben Walters, Time Out

The Simpsons Movie opens with an Itchy and Scratchy short that the Simpsons clan turns out to be watching in a... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 3 starsThank you, Lord, for this bountiful...

JediSi JediSi [Highly rated reviewer] , 01/10/2007

There was a time when 'The Simpsons' stood for the funniest, most original comedy on the planet, but it seems it is now entering a downhill spiral. The movie itself was OK, but it’s just an average (if elongated) episode. If “The Simpsons” were a horse, we’d be taking it to the glue factory.

“The Simpsons” has been around for what seems an eternity, and there’s only so much one can endure. This could be the straw that broke the dying camels back.

  63 out of 87 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 2 starsWorth the wait?

Filaytes Weltoni from South England , 10/10/2007

Being a fan of the Simpsons for most of my life, I was trying not to get to excited about the film (for fear of being let down.) On first viewing in the cinema I was crushed. I waited for the big laughs. And waited... and waited... and then it was over.

On second viewing at home I quite enjoyed it as a film, it works quite well. It's just not funny, or not funny enough considering it's the Simpsons! The show packs in as many jokes as possible because it only has 20 minutes to work with, the film is 4 times as long as that. You are not bombarded with jokes, it is more about characters and flashy effects.

A let down, but not as bad as it could have been!

  46 out of 52 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsAll hail yellow

cghammy from Kirkcaldy [Highly rated reviewer] , 25/07/2007

To all fans of the genius that is the Simpsons, you will not be disappointed, there is so much going on, its fantastic and i will have to go again to catch all the gags i missed the first time. The only down side is that, some of the characters just don't get enough lines because there are too many to fit in to a 90 minute film. We even have President Schwarznegger, giving his best acting performance to date.

Anybody who has a fondness the Simpsons will love this film.

  40 out of 48 people found this review helpful

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* * * This review contains spoilers * * *

Rated - 4 stars"I cant believe we are paying to watch something we see on TV for free"

Northernsky Northernsky from Halifax [Highly rated reviewer] , 27/08/2007

I never thought I would start a review about The Simpsons by complaining but I feel this is the most salient point to be made about the movie so here goes. The truly great thing about the show is how it integrates a whole cast(Or Town’s worth ) of characters into the very fabric of the show .So characters like Moe, Flanders, Mr Burns and Smithers, Krusty , Sideshow Bob ,Principal Skinner, Martin… I could go on but you get the drift , are all as essential as The Simpsons themselves . This movie overlooks that fact. There is precious little of the supporting characters , Granddad gets a fair run out, Nelson says “Hah hah” a couple of times , Flanders ,Rod and Todd pop up now and then and Smithers And Mr Burns get one very funny scene which is far from “Eeeexxxellent”.”Spider Pig” while also funny gets more on screen time than any of the usual characters .You would think the eleven writers responsible for the movie could make a bit more of an effort to do in roughly 90 minutes what they normally achieve in 22.

Still , given that the show , and I don’t think I’m courting controversy by saying this, isn’t as good as it used to be , the movie is surprisingly good, and more importantly consistently funny ,even though it’s plot and dramatic tools have been used liberally before. Homer after rescuing a pig due to be slaughtered after appearing in a “Krusty Burger” commercial becomes besotted with the creature. Springfield is currently under going spot of self immolation over its environmental record( There is a superb early scene involving a sinking barge on the lake)and decides to clean up Lake Springfield which is going fine until Homer decides to dump a silo of his pigs waste into the lake causing an environmental disaster. This causes the Environmental Protection Agency to seal Springfield inside a gigantic dome. The other inhabitants are not best pleased with Homer and this motivates them to escape via a means where Homers laziness pays dividends for once. The family head for Alaska to start afresh but Marge finally decides that Homers has taken his selfishness and incompetence too far and the family head off back home leaving Homer to ponder his life afresh . It obviously cannot be left there and an epiphany forces him to re-consider his world view and he decides to act and save his home town. There are sub-plots involving Lisa having a romance with a fellow environmentalist and Bart bonding with Flanders as Homers such a lousy dad.

I made that sound really serious but it isn’t . There are some terrific laughs to be had on the way and as usual there are lots of clever and subtle little sight gags (Marge knitting something on her porch after EPA seal Springfield in saying “Dome Sweet Dome” is my favourite, though Homer adapting his catch phrase to“Dooooohhhmmmmeee“ is also memorable) and one or two tremendous scenes -Bart’s nude run on his skateboard or Homer making his way back home from Alaska. The film is slightly hampered by it’s plot requirements and the writers haven’t really fully explored the advantages of the cinematic medium. Obviously they didn’t want to alienate their core audience so they have taken precious few liberties. Homer flips the bird , something completely in character though difficult for someone with four fingers and of course Bart goes full frontal very briefly.

The voice work is exemplary as always and the animation while still pretty basic is endowed with extra detail and lustre . It makes good use of the opening titles( Ralph stars here) and the end credits but probably the most pithy moment comes in the first sequence when the Simpsons are watching “Itchy & Scratchy” at the cinema and Homer points out “I can’t believe we’re paying to watch something we could see on TV for free! If you ask me everyone in this theatre is a big sucker! Especially you” and here he points at us. I wouldn’t go that far in fact I found myself nodding in agreement with Marge when in another succinct moment in the credits she wonders at Maggie’s first word “Sequel?”.

  25 out of 28 people found this review helpful

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 2 starsIf it ain't broke, don't make it a movie!

atif ayaz from earth , 22/09/2007

First things first, who saw it and wasn't surprised that the film sucked. Anyone who has been watching the Simpson's post season 13 know's that the jokes where drying up. Try stretching one average episode in to a feature film & you'll see why. If this movie was mate at the shows prime then no doubt it would have been good, there would have been a great bunch of jokes we've never seen & homer would still be funny rather than the complete jerk he is now days. That's the problem, seen it all before, how many times can homer doom Springfield before you stop caring. how many times can Bart get into trouble, blah, blah , blah!!

I'm bored of writing this review now, and just like the film it was a waste of time, cos people will still go and see it.

PS trust me, I'm the biggest fan in the world, i can't sleep without watching an episode a night, i wake up cranky without my fix but this.....

  8 out of 10 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 starsThe Simpsons Movie

crabman from Manchester , 16/04/2008

My daughter said it was very funny, and coming from her it is a true compliment indeed.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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