Is "The Lorax" worth seeing?

DavidBrown

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
Has anybody seen the new 2012 version of "The Lorax", and if so did you like it and would you recommend it? I'm specifically interested if adults who loved the book as kids would like the movie? Any thoughts appreciated.
 
did you see the movie David?

Here's an article not about the movie but about a thing at the Philadelphia Zoo
The Zoo's 'Lorax' saves orangutans
For all its bright colors and Dr. Seussian quirks, The Lorax was never just a children's story. The Philadelphia Zoo's new exhibit, "Trail of the Lorax," shows just how much the cautionary tale still resonates today, decades after its 1971 publication.

Like Theodor Seuss Geisel's work, the zoo presents a place that is exciting and accessible to children. But wrapped into the interactive stops on this trail - which the yellow-bearded Lorax has "left behind" for children - is an urgent message about endangered orangutans and the damage caused to their habitat by deforestation.

The trail, which opens on Saturday and runs through Oct. 31, is part of the zoo's larger effort to help preserve Sumatran orangutans - fewer than 7,000 are left in the wild.

"The story that we wanted to tell is a story that Dr. Seuss told years ago," said Amy Shearer, the zoo's chief marketing officer.

In that story, the Lorax - who is voiced by Danny DeVito in the feature film released this month - tries to defend a forest of "truffula" trees from an industrialist bent on processing them into "thneeds." The land becomes polluted and its creatures disappear.

For the zoo, the book was an easy analogy for orangutans, whose existence has been threatened by rain forests cleared for palm-oil production.

"With orangutans, palm oil is like our 21st-century 'thneed'," said Kristen Lewis-Waldron, the zoo's director of education.

But not all palm oil is made using such damaging practices. In teaching young people about these famous apes, "The Trail of the Lorax" encourages the use of sustainable palm-oil products.

The message that the Lorax helps spread, Lewis-Waldron said, is that "what we do here, in everyday life, does impact animals on the other side of the world."

The educational trail includes eight stops throughout the zoo, as well as the "Lorax Loft," a tree-fortlike hub that evokes the real orangutan dwellings. It's one of several points that make use of 3-D glasses: Images of primates and orangutan-friendly goods pop off the signs.

The stops address children in true Dr. Seuss fashion: "Sustainable palm oil/Saves forests and trees/So next time you shop/look for products like these."

Elsewhere on the trail, a zoo staffer in a Lorax-orange sweater with overlong sleeves tells visitors about the orangutans' seven-foot arm-span and tree-swinging lifestyle. At another station, children learn about the apes' superior flexibility, and visitors are invited to stretch their arms like an orangutan.

There's a short film, which features the stars of the recent Lorax movie. "It's not too late to take action," actor Zac Efron tells the viewers.

Children can drop off "Leaves of Gratitude" - letters of thanks to companies that have committed to using sustainable palm oil.

And the trail doesn't stop at the zoo. At unless.philadelphiazoo.org, visitors can take an "orangutan oath" and share the ways in which they are spreading the word.

Importantly, the zoo's three orangutans make an appearance, too. Inside the Peco Primate Reserve, the ape family spends plenty of time swinging rope-to-rope as fascinated children look on. With the help of the Lorax, the orangutans may be inspiring their audience in a whole new way.
 
I just saw "The Lorax" with my wife and dad. The conservation message from the book is fully intact. It is now framed by the history of the Onceler (voiced by Ed Helms). I found his character quite interesting, pulled between conservation and greed. Greed wins, and then recedes. The take-home message is that we (humans) can make choices that will mess up the world, but also choose not to and perhaps most importantly, to try and fix what we have messed up.

The movie was not appalling, and in the end was quite moving. It made me want to go out and plant some Truffula trees and restore some hummingfish habitat. If you liked the book I suspect that you may like the movie, and I think that the filmmakers have competently renewed the story for 21st century young'uns. Hopefully they will want to go read the book after seeing the movie. The original source material is still the best version of the story (and always will be).
 
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