7 reviews
the one where Dave has an aneurysm
Oh, wait, that applies to every A&TC cartoon...AAALVEEEN! YOU EEEDIOT! Heh heh heh. But seriously. I used to watch the '80s show when I was but a wee larva, and I never really liked it that much. The show had its good points, but it just seemed kinda slow. And the character designs didn't appeal to me. This movie, which appears to have been put together by all or most of the original creators & voice actors, keeps all the original charm of the older incarnations while giving us a story that's cute, funny, sweet, & never boring, plus subtly redesigned chipmunks that..I dunno, they just look really good in this movie. More alert, like they've taken some caffeine tabs since the '80s. I can't quite explain it. Maybe it's just a higher budget that I'm seeing. Anyway, I thoroughly enjoyed it. I've never felt more affection for 'the boys,' and I even found Dave's obligatory exasperation scenes less grating than usual. Could it be that, as I approach adulthood, I'm starting to identify more with his role as the chipmunks' adoptive father? Am I showing signs of creeping maturity? Oh God, I hope not. Anyway, this movie had the feeling of a real labor of love on the part of its producers; hope I'm not mistaken on that count.. Go ahead and rent it or whatever. Two open questions: (1) Why didn't Dave notice the broken glass in the back door? (2) Assistant Director Yoko Ono? Any relation? I know Simon briefly went to see the Maharishi, but...
- Nicholas Sedillos
- Mar 9, 2001
- Permalink
Not as good as the Wolfman, but certainly worth a watch
- rorymacveigh
- Jul 17, 2012
- Permalink
Nostalgic
I always liked the Frankenstein film over the Wolfman one personally.
Alvin and the Chipmunks come face-to-face with the creepy Dr. Frankenstein and, by extension, Frankenstein's monster. However, they have a chance to teach the monster to be good, to earn friends and show compassion to those around him. The question is, will the Chipmunks be able to convince the townspeople that he isn't what he appears to be?
This film always had more compassion to me than the Werewolf one; it was about not judging people on their appearance, accepting those who are different in any capacity, and trying your best to include the people who are left out. And it accomplishes all that with some truly fantastic songs scattered throughout.
It's a simple story and concept, but it's something we all need to be reminded of from time to time. Every year around Halloween, when I take this movie out and watch it again, it's always nice to get a reminder of the lessons given in this movie. It has a lot of heart and humanity, which is why it'll always have a place in my heart around the Halloween season.
Alvin and the Chipmunks come face-to-face with the creepy Dr. Frankenstein and, by extension, Frankenstein's monster. However, they have a chance to teach the monster to be good, to earn friends and show compassion to those around him. The question is, will the Chipmunks be able to convince the townspeople that he isn't what he appears to be?
This film always had more compassion to me than the Werewolf one; it was about not judging people on their appearance, accepting those who are different in any capacity, and trying your best to include the people who are left out. And it accomplishes all that with some truly fantastic songs scattered throughout.
It's a simple story and concept, but it's something we all need to be reminded of from time to time. Every year around Halloween, when I take this movie out and watch it again, it's always nice to get a reminder of the lessons given in this movie. It has a lot of heart and humanity, which is why it'll always have a place in my heart around the Halloween season.
- baileycrawly
- Sep 7, 2020
- Permalink
One out of two ain't bad.
I picked this up as a 2-pack (bundled with "...meet the Wolfman") at my local video store for a bit of Halloween in July. I'd watched the Wolfman cartoon a few days prior and was impressed with the quality -- It was a monster movie made for kids, and it didn't feel the need to lower the spook-factor for their sake -- and I was hoping the Frankenstein feature would be up to the same par.
Looking for some Franken-fun, I popped the DVD back in tonight to watch this film. Unfortunately, on this DVD 2-pack, if the Wolfman feature was the treat, this one was definitely the trick. Whew boy, just minutes into this film and I could tell it was going to be a stinker. Rather than feeling like a monster movie, this one was a poorly-crafted movie that happened to have a monster in it at times. It took a horribly cliché moral lesson that would take only 30 minutes to tell, maximum, and stretched it into a feature length movie, filling the extra time with diversions that lacked any focus whatsoever. The entire story felt disjointed because the film's creators thought that they had to go on wild, manic tangents that had nothing to do with the movie just to keep the kids' attention. Unfortunately, all this did was diminish any interest the audience may have had in its already-weak story.
I understand that it may sound like I'm forgetting that this was aimed at kids, and I may have looked past all of these shortcomings if the other Chipmunk monster movie weren't such a solid film.
Looking for some Franken-fun, I popped the DVD back in tonight to watch this film. Unfortunately, on this DVD 2-pack, if the Wolfman feature was the treat, this one was definitely the trick. Whew boy, just minutes into this film and I could tell it was going to be a stinker. Rather than feeling like a monster movie, this one was a poorly-crafted movie that happened to have a monster in it at times. It took a horribly cliché moral lesson that would take only 30 minutes to tell, maximum, and stretched it into a feature length movie, filling the extra time with diversions that lacked any focus whatsoever. The entire story felt disjointed because the film's creators thought that they had to go on wild, manic tangents that had nothing to do with the movie just to keep the kids' attention. Unfortunately, all this did was diminish any interest the audience may have had in its already-weak story.
I understand that it may sound like I'm forgetting that this was aimed at kids, and I may have looked past all of these shortcomings if the other Chipmunk monster movie weren't such a solid film.
Good for a fan or a child.
In the Alvin and Chipmunks canon this is probably the least interesting video. However small children would enjoy this flick around Halloween.
As usual any Alvin video is full of really catchy songs that even I can't stop humming.
The theme of this video is on the lighter side so there is no need to worry about scaring your kids with this movie.
The animation is bright and cheerful, I can't help but find Alvin, Simon and Theodore really cute in this, though it's probably a video you want to sit your kids in front of and then leave the room.
If you enjoyed this you'll enjoy these too.
Alvin and The Chipmunks Meet the Wolfman The Chipmunks Adventure.
As usual any Alvin video is full of really catchy songs that even I can't stop humming.
The theme of this video is on the lighter side so there is no need to worry about scaring your kids with this movie.
The animation is bright and cheerful, I can't help but find Alvin, Simon and Theodore really cute in this, though it's probably a video you want to sit your kids in front of and then leave the room.
If you enjoyed this you'll enjoy these too.
Alvin and The Chipmunks Meet the Wolfman The Chipmunks Adventure.
- liberty_mks
- Aug 25, 2011
- Permalink
Fun 'scary' movie for all the family
Alvin and the Chipmunks Meet Frankenstein, although not that scary, is still a treat and a great instalment in the Chipmunks franchise
Scariness-3/10 Humour-10/10 Story-8/10 Voice acting-7/10 Music-8/10
Scariness-3/10 Humour-10/10 Story-8/10 Voice acting-7/10 Music-8/10
- maxstenner
- Mar 29, 2020
- Permalink
Frankenstein's monster is funny!!
- stephenchase-63504
- Feb 9, 2021
- Permalink