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Closed Caption; Director Brad Silberling commentary; Brad Silberling and the real Lemony Snicket commentary; Bad Beginnings: Building a Bad Actor, Making the Baudelaire Children Miserable, Interactive Olaf; Orphaned scenes: dismal deletions, obnoxious outtakes; Widescreen version enhanced for 16:9 TVs; Dolby Digital: English 5.1 Surround, French 5.1 Surround, Spanish 5.1 Surround; English subtitles
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. The Bad Beginning
2. Your New Guardian
3. Chores
4. Custody Granted
5. The Reptile Room
6. Stephano Arrives
7. The Incredibly Deadly Viper
8. Aunt Josephine
9. Captain Sham
10. Hurricane Herman
11. Lachrymose Leeches
12. The Marvelous Marriage
13. Let the Wedding Begin
14. No One Listens to Children
15. The Letter That Never Came
16. End Titles
It is Daniel Handler’s nom de plume, Lemony Snicket, above the title, but this mostly fortunate adaptation of three Snicket books (The Bad Beginning, The Reptile Room, and The Wide Window) leans weightily on Jim Carrey’s cinematic shoulders. Carrey is perfect as the despicable actor Count Olaf, hamming it up in a series of guises that figure in his continuing schemes to deprive the Baudelaire orphans of their parents’ fortune. The film's cautionary prologue ingeniously captures the subversive spirit of Snicket's macabre misadventures; it's a wonderful piece of stop-motion animation, right out of Rankin-Bass, in which "The Littlest Elf" prances about in celebration of springtime. Alas, narrator Snicket (Jude Law) informs us, this is not the cheerful film we are going to see. The Baudelaires' story is much more alarming. Described as "clever and reasonably attractive," Violet (Emily Browning), Klaus (Liam Aiken), and infant Sunny (Kara and Shelby Hoffman) survive every deadly predicament Count Olaf can concoct. The cast also includes a boisterous Billy Connolly and a delightful Meryl Streep as ill-fated guardians who are not so lucky in their encounters with Olaf. Director Brad Silberling avoids the slavish-devotion-to-the-text formula that diminished the first two Harry Potter films, although the decision to subtitle Sunny's gurgles and coos with contemporary slang ("Bite me") smacks of pandering. Parents may appreciate that some of the more "extremely unpleasant" incidents in the books (notably a climactic marriage) have been toned down, but the PG-13 rating is accurate. The Academy Award winner for Carrey’s makeup, the film was also justly nominated for its dazzling production design, and the animated end credits are among the best in recent years, too. Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble
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