
The Spiderwick Chronicles Review by Brandon Fibbs | posted 2/14/2008
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The Spiderwick Chronicles
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MPAA rating: PG (for scary creature action and violence, peril and some thematic elements)

Genre: Adventure, Children, Family, Fantasy
Theater release: February 14, 2008 by Paramount Pictures
Directed by: Mark Waters
Runtime: 1 hour 37 minutes
Cast: Freddie Highmore (Jared and Simon Grace), Sarah Bolger (Mallory Grace), Mary-Louise Parker (Helen Grace), Nick Nolte (Mulgarath), Seth Rogen (Hogsqueal), Martin Short (Thimbletack), David Strathairn (Arthur Spiderwick), Joan Plowright (Aunt Lucinda)
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There are two kinds of fantasy adventures—those that take place in another world (The Lord of the Rings, The Golden Compass), and those in which the fantasy world exists parallel to and often spills into our own (The Chronicles of Narnia, Pan's Labyrinth). The Spiderwick Chronicles, which embeds spiritual truth in the guise of mythology, belongs in the latter category. Much more fantastical and far more handsome than the trailers reveal, The Spiderwick Chronicles is a thrilling adventure for children of all ages.
The Grace family could use a little grace of their own. Dad has run off with another woman and is seeking a divorce, something Mom Helen (Mary-Louise Parker) is trying to hide for as long as possible from her twin sons, Jared and Simon (both played by Freddie Highmore). While Simon is gentle and compassionate, Jared is short tempered and given to bouts of destructive anger. Unable to process his family's disintegration, Jared is taking it out on those who love him the most.
Sarah Bolger as Mallory, and Freddie Highmore as her twin brothers Simon and Jared
Desperate for a new start on life, Helen moves the family from New York to the secluded Spiderwick Estate in rural Vermont, once owned by her great, great uncle Arthur Spiderwick. Peculiar things begin to occur the moment the Graces step into the spooky Victorian mansion—they're bedeviled by strange disappearances, bumps in the night and mischievous attacks on Mallory Grace (Sarah Bolger). And all accusatory fingers are pointed in Jared's direction.
Out to prove his innocence, Jared stumbles upon a secret room that contains "Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide to the Fantastical World Around You," a book with a dire warning: to read it is to invite certain death. Like Jumanji, it is not a question of if, but when Jared will crack Pandora's box. Partly out of rebelliousness and partly out of a reasonable incredulity, Jared delves into the book. Inside, written in Arthur Spiderwick's own hand, is a primer to a magical universe that exists, invisible, all around us. While his uncle speaks of befriending many of the otherworldly creatures there, he also warns that a malevolent, shape-shifting ogre known as Mulgarath seeks the knowledge to be found within the book's pages and plans on using it to enslave both the magical and the human realm.
Soon the Grace children's eyes are opened to the fantastic truths within the book and the enchanted creatures that inhabit the Spiderwick Estate alongside them. It isn't long before Mulgarath and his goblin army turn all their dark energies to wresting the book from the house and destroying all inside its walls.
Jared travels to another dimension with Arthur Spiderwick (David Strathairn)
It should come as no surprise that Spiderwick is being executive produced by Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall, the husband and wife team responsible for most of Steven Spielberg's most enduring films. No surprise, because Spiderwick, directed by Mark Waters, is rife with Spielbergian touchstones—a dysfunctional family, an absent father, a supernatural world stocked with fantastical creatures seeping into our own, childlike wonderment, and an imminent confrontation that can be won only by the innocent might of a child.
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