Due fratelli ereditano una lussuosa villa dal defunto padre e decidono di rinnovarla e metterla all'asta, ma non hanno fatto i conti con un topolino che non ha alcuna intenzione di andarsene... Leggi tuttoDue fratelli ereditano una lussuosa villa dal defunto padre e decidono di rinnovarla e metterla all'asta, ma non hanno fatto i conti con un topolino che non ha alcuna intenzione di andarsene.Due fratelli ereditano una lussuosa villa dal defunto padre e decidono di rinnovarla e metterla all'asta, ma non hanno fatto i conti con un topolino che non ha alcuna intenzione di andarsene.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 2 vittorie e 2 candidature totali
- Hilde, the Bench Lady
- (as Camilla Soeberg)
Recensioni in evidenza
In the wrong hands this could easily have turned into a cruel slapstick and nothing else. It's easy to see this sort of thing turning into a Home Alone type thing with the mouse dishing out cruel punishment after cruel punishment. However it's more than that, although it has elements of those films. The film is witty mixing the slapstick with a more adult humour and, although the slapstick is cartoony, it is also clever and imaginative in most cases.
The strength of the film is in three performances. First and second is Lane and Evans, both have an air of Laurel and Hardy (especially Lane) and they make for a good double act. Lane gets to do his usual stuff while the more goofy antics of Lars suit Evans' stand-up routine background to the ground. However the main success is the mouse. In other hands he would have been a mere excuse for destruction, however here he has `humanity' a character if you will. This is perfectly demonstrated by the unintentional chase with a nail gun how dramatic! How tense! But also how touching the mouse is given intelligence and has a motivation for what happens.
Of course at heart this is a kids film and it is a very good one at that. However these other points give it the feel that it was made for adults too. Certainly the inclusion of Walken as a pest controller is one no child will get.
Overall this is well made and is more that just a crude slapstick affair. It can be enjoyed on that level but it just feels that little more mature. To illustrate what I mean can you imagine the difference if Chris Columbus had directed it? Now you've got me!
Smuntz brothers'war with the mouse is really great fun. Christopher Walken as the Exterminator Caesar with his weird mouse hunt equipment is wonderful.
Don't hesitate to see this film. Though it is rather for kids, it has still much to entertain all. Enjoy it.
With its Gilliam-like recreation of a dank, Orwellian universe; with its Tim Burton pervading of Gothic atmosphere; with its twisted Coens' live-action cartoon sensibility (imagine Christopher Walken in a children's film? Even better than that), and you have fun for all the family.
Right in the beginning the fun starts. The brothers argue about the color of Lee/Lars Smuntz's funeral clothes. As they walk down the stairs of the church the handle breaks off the casket, their father's body goes flying out of the casket, into the air and down a open manhole in the street.
The characters are all funny. The animation is amazing. Nathan/Ernie Smuntz has a restaurant and serves dinner to the Mayor who is very fat who is with his family. His daughters see a cockroach without a head running across the table. The Mayor realizes he has eaten the head. He falls back in the chair and passes out. The movement of this giant roach running on the table is so hysterical.
The sons inherit a house from their father who was kind of weird. No one lives in the house and when the men go there they find a mouse who is like the owner of the house. He crawls in all the spaces and takes what he wants and just takes over and causes problems for the sons. The animation of what the mouse does and what they do to catch it is so funny.
The sons end up hiring a man to trap the mouse. The exterminator is played by Christopher Walkens. He is really good in this movie. He has his own equipment and is experienced. He talks loud so the mouse will hear what he has to say because he believes the mouse understands him from his experience and he is trying to fool it. More laughter.
The mouse is smarter than everyone this is a great funny movie to see.
'Mousehunt' Synopsis: Two stumblebum inheritors are determined to rid their antique house of a mouse who is equally determined to stay where he is.
Don't ask questions & I can assure you 'Mousehunt' will prove to be nothing else but fun. Its twisty plot, coupled with the series of unfortunate events that happen to its protagonists, bring the house down on numerous occasions. Made with heart & joy, this 1997 box-office hit doesn't run out of gas, despite a few hiccups in its Screenplay.
Adam Rifkin's Screenplay, despite a few bumps, is a riot overall. Gore Verbinski's Direction is typically solid. Cinematography is grand. Editing is well-balanced. Art Design is comment-worthy.
Performance-Wise: Nathan Lane is stupendous, pitching in a genuine comedic performance from start to end. Lee Evans supports Lane, admirably. Christopher Walken is deliciously weird in a bit role. Vicki Lewis is first-rate.
On the whole, Wanna laugh & relax on a lazy weekend? Watch 'Mousehunt'. You won't be disappointed!
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe mousetraps scene was completed without any digital effects. Over 800 mousetraps were set individually and rigged with wires under the floor. It took several takes, so each trap had to be reset, baited, and wired one at a time.
- BlooperIn the scene when Lars is alone inside the factory, you can clearly see an arm behind the big fan pulling the thread from his jacket. You can even see a watch on the arm.
- Citazioni
Lars Smuntz: Well, these are all kittens. We were hoping for an older cat, one with... experience?
Maury: That's a switch. Most people like the cute little ones. Experience with what?
Ernie Smuntz: Mouse-hunting.
Maury: Ah, all cats are good mousers.
Ernie Smuntz: Yes, but you see, we have huge rats, the size of sumo wrestlers, and lots of 'em, so we really need a ferocious feline, preferably one with a history of mental illness. I'm talkin'... one mean pussy.
Lars Smuntz: Yeah! A vicious cat, difficult to love. You have any of those, knocking about your cages?
Maury: Funny you should ask. I had given up hope of anyone wanting him. We were about to gas him again.
Lars Smuntz, Ernie Smuntz: Again?
- Curiosità sui creditiDuring the last few seconds of the DreamWorks Pictures opening logo, the final seven notes of the musical logo is played on a French horn.
- Versioni alternativeSome VHS releases from 1998 and 2002 included a THX logo after the previews but before the film's opening logos.
- Colonne sonoreI'll Be Home for Christmas
Written by Walter Kent, Kim Gannon and Buck Ram
Arranged by Bruce Fowler (as Bruce L. Fowler)
Performed by The Los Angeles Children's Chorus Ensemble: Daryl Getman, Gavin Hale, Julia Long, Adrienne Pardee, Mark Perry, Amy Sargious, Jonathan Saul, Chai-Fu Wang and Julia Wells
Anne Tomlinson, Artistic Director
I più visti
Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 38.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 61.917.389 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 6.062.922 USD
- 21 dic 1997
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 122.417.389 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 38 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1