I
thoroughly enjoyed Sonic the Hedgehog. I wasn’t expected Casablanca or The Maltese Falcon, but I was worried it would be lame, even with the character redesign.
But it was a lot of fun, from the swipes at Super Mario Bros. to the speedy humor
to the fantastic credits scene with the 16-bit graphics. Directed by Jeff
Fowler, the film starred James Marsden, Tika Sumpter, Natasha Rothwell, Neal
McDonough, Adam Pally, and Jim Carrey, and they all did a great job. Ben
Schwartz was energetic and funny voicing Sonic himself, and Carrey was his maniacal,
1990s self as we knew him in The Mask and Ace Ventura Pet Detective. You can
watch my full review by clicking HERE.
Conversely,
Simon Abrams, writing for www.rogerebert.com,
hated the movie. He wrote, “Sonic the Hedgehog is the worst kind of bad movie:
it's too inoffensive to be hated and too wretched to be enjoyable. You might
think that this movie’s sad limbo st ate has something to do with the extensive
and well-publicized last-minute animation redesign that made titular woodland
creature Sonic (voiced by Ben Schwartz) look more like Sega’s famous video game
character. You’d be wrong: Sonic the Hedgehog is rotten because it, like too
many other modern blockbusters, was seemingly made by an imaginatively bankrupt
creative committee with more ideas for jokes than actual jokes to tell, and
more cookie-cutter, place-holder dialogue about the power of friendship than
something (anything) to say about that boilerplate quality.”
Movies
like Sonic the Hedgehog aren’t intended for critics. They’re fun popcorn movies
aimed at kids, families, pop culture buffs, comedy adventure fans, and fans of
the franchise. I thought it was a blast.