Reviewed by: Douglas Downs
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: | Average |
Moviemaking Quality: |
|
Primary Audience: | 10 to 18 |
Genre: | Animated Family |
Length: | 1 hr. 20 min. |
Year of Release: | 2002 |
USA Release: |
Featuring | Cathy Cavadini, Tara Charendoff, EG Daily, Tom Kenny, Tom Kane |
Director |
Craig McCracken |
Producer | Donna Castricone |
Distributor |
Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company |
Blossom, commander and the leader
Bubbles, she is the joy and the laughter
Buttercup, she’s the toughest fighter
Powerpuffs save the day…
Fighting crime, trying to save the world
Here they come just in time, the Powerpuff Girls
Fighting crime, trying to save the world
Here they come just in time, the Powerpuff Girls
Powerpuff!
Warner Brothers has decided to try and build a movie success around the popular four-year-old Cartoon Network cult series “The Powerpuff Girls.” They have already enjoyed some modest success bringing “Pokémon” to the big screen.
I’m sure most viewers will find this animated nonsense not worth a $29 million dollar budget or the price of full admission. The animation is your basic all-rectangles and circles, giving it a popular 50’s look. Our story includes a review of how Blossom, Bubbles and Buttercup were created as the result of Professor Utonium’s frustration over crime in Townsville. He mixes together the ingredients of sugar, spice and everything nice, and no perfect girl would be complete without Chemical X. The result is three girls (a blonde, a redhead and a brunette) that can fly fast, lift heavy objects and slice through things with laser-ray eyes.
The plot behind “The Powerpuff Girls Movie” is full of stereotypical symbolism. The blonde is bubbly and Buttercup wears green because she is often envious of the other two. The Professor wants to be a good parent, so he leaves the three girls at home alone and immediately runs to the store to buy them gifts. His next concern is for their education, so he enrolls them in Kindergarten. The girls are fine until they learn how to play Tag and tear up the town. The citizens of Townsville are so upset that they put the Professor in jail. At that time, a monkey named Jojo convinces the girls that they are special and tricks them into using their super powers to create an evil devise. The machine quickly turns Townsville into the “planet of the Apes,” but the girls manage to redeem themselves just before the rolling of the closing credits.
If “Powerpuff” looks interesting to you, you may want to reconsider. Skip it. There are far too many negative messages present for our children. This trio is destructive, but with no consequences. The flik is simply a poor example of taking perfectionistic expectations for children and parenting to the extreme. The attitude and dialogue of the three is by far more “spice” than “sugar.” I also found the MPA explanation of the “PG” rating very vague (“non-stop Frenetic Animated action”—what’s that!?!). Yeah, I know it’s just a cartoon, but there was way too much “puff” over “power”.
My Ratings: [Very Offensive / 1]