Friday, January 9, 2009

Bedtime Stories

Cast: Adam Sandler, Keri Russell, Guy Pearce, Russell Brand, Richard Griffiths, Teresa Palmer, Courtney Cox, Jonathan Morgan Hert, Laura Ann Kesling, Jonathan Pryce; Director: Adam Shankman; Producers: Jack Giarraputo, Andrew Gunn, Adam Sandler; Screenwriters: Matt Lopez, Tim Herlihy; Music: Rupert Gregson-Williams; Editors: Tom Costain, Michael Tronick; Genre: Comedy/ Fantasy; Cinematography: Michael Barrett; Distributor: Columbia Pictures; Location: USA; Running Time: 99min.;

Technical Assessment: 3
Moral Assessment: 3
CINEMA Rating: For viewers of all ages

Skeeter Bronson (Adam Sandler), a hotel handyman grew up in a homey hotel owned by his father (Jonathan Pryce). Later, it was bought by a hotel magnate Nottingham (Richard Griffiths) on which site, a grander bigger hotel was built and in which Skeeter is now employed. At night, Skeeter babysits the 2 kids of his sister Wendy (Courtney Cox), who’s looking for a job in Arizona. Since the 2 charges wish to hear bedtime stories, Skeeter concocts fantastic tales. With the kids cooperative inputs, theses stories have a strange way of becoming true to life. In other hours, the kids are with Jill (Keri Russell), a teacher who runs an ecology friendly school due for demolition as the hotel tycoon plans to build another hotel on its site. Skeeter does not see eye to eye with the hotel’s manager Kendall (Guy Pearce) because both men are interested in Nottingham’s daughter (Teresa Palmer). Skeeter always seems to be a loser but he realizes that by slanting the bedtime fantasies he invents, he can make things happens in his favor. Can his dream of becoming a hotel manager come true? Can he win the heart of Nottingham’s daughter? Can he help Jill save her school?

Bedtime Stories is said to be a “harmless” comedy fit for family entertainment as it can appeal to everyone of any age. Though the subject matter is not the usual children’s fare, the kids will likely be entertained by the fantasy. But it is doubtful that most adults will much enjoy this picture that is predominantly silly and inane. Still, there are some parts that are laughable like when Skeeter’s tongue is bitten by a bee and he can only make incomprehensible sounds so his friend had to “translate” his words during a crucial “presentation”. The production design is lavish as every invented tale is interpreted or presented with impressive visuals and technical effects. There is variety in the imaginative concoctions which include, among others, a cowboy with a bright red horse, a zero-gravity battle in outer space, a gladiator in a chariot and of course, a medieval king. There are several layers to the film. The beginning and end are narrated by Skeeter’s father and within the story that he narrates about his son, the protagonist Skeeter narrates the fantasies that are now “smaller” stories within the “bigger story. So there is an alternation of fantasy and reality. Adam Sandler is his usual funny self and does adequate work here.

In Bedtime Stories, Skeeter is portrayed most of the time as a loser so that he resorts to fantasizing to make things happen for his benefit. But the movie ends positively and hopefully in that it shows that a person may lose most of the time, but by doing something right (not by imagining out-of-this-world schemes), he will eventually succeed. Sketter’s sister objected to Skeeter’s telling the children nothing ends happily in real life. She does not want her children to develop such unhealthy pessimism and think that beautiful happy things happen only in fairytales or such. One reason she says she wants her kids to be with Skeeter is so they can “catch” some of Skeeter’s usual light happy outlook. Skeeter’s story proves his sister right. Things can also end well in real life.