Curious George with Will Ferrell: DVD Cover
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Curious George Director: Matthew O'Callaghan Cast: Will Ferrell, Drew Barrymore, Frank Welker, Shane Baumel

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  • DVD Release Date: 09/26/2006
  • Rating: Rated G
  • Sales Rank: 1,870

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  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
  • Cast & Crew
  • Full Product Details

Scenes

Features

Jack Johnson music video with sing-along feature
15 deleted scenes
Featurette: "Monkey Around with Words"
Featurette: "Drawn to George" - learn to draw your favorite monkey
Featurette: "Monkey In Motion" - see how an animation artist makes George come alive
More than 10 interactive games and activities

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Curious George: Widescreen
1. "Upside Down" (Main Titles) [4:03]
2. Struggle for Survival [2:21]
3. An Ancient Idol [5:13]
4. Giant Monkey [3:36]
5. A Size Issue [3:12]
6. "Talk of the Town" [2:53]
7. Lost in the City [3:49]
8. Monkey Business [4:59]
9. Caught Red-Handed [4:49]
10. Our Hero [5:40]
11. Animal Control [5:28]
12. At the Zoo [5:16]
13. Big Idea [4:58]
14. "Jungle Gym" [2:35]
15. Closed Forever [3:08]
16. George Is Gone [5:50]
17. Back to Africa [3:55]
18. Finding Zagawa [1:47]
19. The Next Adventure [3:38]
20. End Titles [9:18]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Those who've grown up reading Margret and H. A. Rey's enduring books will be more delighted than disappointed in the feature film debut of the good little monkey who is always curious. The playful George (voiced by Frank "Fred" Welker of Scooby-Doo fame) befriends Ted, an enthusiastic museum guide who has come to Africa in search of an "amazing new exhibit" to save the failing Bloomsberry Museum. Too bad the mythical, long-lost idol of Zagawa for which he is searching turns out to be a paperweight-sized trinket. Ted's life is further complicated by George, who has stowed away on Ted's ship (dubbed the H. A. Rey -- a nice touch). The simian in the city innocently runs riot. In two sequences drawn from the books, he and Ted are carried aloft by a bunch of balloons, and George impulsively paints an opera diva's apartment with a jungle motif. After monkeying around with The Grinch and The Cat in the Hat, the third time's the charm for producer Ron Howard in bringing to the screen a book beloved by generations of readers. The mostly hand-drawn animation is faithful in spirit to the books' illustrations (the end credits replicate scenes from George's literary misadventures). The dialogue is pretty much geared to its target audience, without the self-consciously audience-broadening pop-culture references that glut most of today's animated films. The usually untamed Will Ferrell reins it in as Ted, who becomes the gaudily dressed Man in the Yellow Hat after an ill-informed shopping spree. Drew Barrymore is Wedding Singer-sweet as the elementary school teacher who likes the clueless Ted. Dick Van Dyke is the comical geezer Mr. Bloomsberry, and David Cross is hilariously nasty as his greedy son, who wants to turn the museum into a parking lot. The film avoids a pre-packaged soundtrack of ill-placed pop hits for likable original songs by Jack Johnson. Children, as ever, will go bananas for the adorable and mischievous George, whose innocent curiosity always gets him (and Ted) into trouble. Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

Great movie for allby toddlermom

Reader Rating:
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August 01, 2009: We've enjoyed watching this movie SEVERAL times with our toddler. It's good enough to be enjoyed by adults and kids of all ages. We highly recommend it.

LOVED IT!!!!by Anonymous

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January 23, 2007: Although i am 15 years old i enjoy this movie every time i watch it. I never hesitate to turn this movie on when i babysit my 3 year old cousin. I highly recommend this movie to everyone not just little kids


More Customer Reviews

common sense media

This item Rated Appropriate for Ages 4 and Up

Why We Rated This Appropriate for Ages 4 and UP

What to watch out for

  • Consumerism:

    Obvious Dole plug (crates of fruit marked clearly); Volkswagen.

  • Messages

  • Sex:

    Some flirting between Ted and Maggie, a kiss at the end.

  • Violence:

    Slapsticky falls and jumps; monkey antics include painting on apartment walls, stealing and flying away on balloons, projecting himself to look large like King Kong (this leads to chaos in the streets).

  • Drugs:

    Not an issue.

  • Language:

    Not an issue.

What Parents Need to Know

About Curious George

Parents need to know that there isn't a lot to be concerned about here. There are some product placements, some flirting, moral ambiguity, and an emotionally intense scene in which George is removed -- at the Man in the Yellow Hat's request -- by animal control. One man schemes to replace a museum with a profitable parking lot. Ted himself tries to fool the museum patrons with a fraud, something he is not punished for. An apartment building manager roughly chases the monkey from room to room, then evicts Ted, who has to sleep on a park bench that night.

Families Can Talk About

Families can talk about what they liked about the movie and if anything scared them. They can ask what makes George so curious. Is he a troublemaker or does he just act like a kid? Older kids can talk about how Ted's relationship with George changes -- what does Ted realize George brings to his life? Families could also compare this movie to the books upon which it's based, and about which one they prefer and why.