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My, my — a mild movie for moppets. Will wonders never cease!

At multiplexes in mid-summer, it’s nice to deal with small problems for a change. Especially for small children, who are not all that interested in the doings that beckon teens and tweens.

Thus the animated musical adventure Winnie the Pooh, with its brief running time (under 70 minutes), cuddlesome creatures, gentle interactions, simple plot, subdued charm, and casual enchantment. Pitched directly at preschoolers, it would, it just so happens, do nicely as a youngster’s first theatrical movie.

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2c2bd Movie Review: Winnie the PoohIt’s a playful, modest reboot of a franchise that has enthralled young children for decades about a rotund “bear of very little brain” who’s always on the lookout for his inayofuata pot of honey, and his woodland friends, the amiably bumbling residents of the Hundred Acre Wood — Tigger, Rabbit, Piglet, Owl, Kanga, Roo, and Eeyore.

On this day, they are in tafuta of a new tail for Eeyore, the depressed donkey who has somehow apparently Lost his, and in hopes of rescuing their friend, Christopher Robin, whom they mistakenly think has been abducted kwa a ferocious creature they refer to as a “backson” — which is simply their misreading of the message, “Back soon.” Nobody alisema these were high-powered intellects.

And so it goes.

Inspired kwa five stories from the A. A. Milne books, including Winnie-the-Pooh and The House at Pooh Corner, and David Benedictus’s Return to the Hundred Acre Wood, the low-key narrative merely smooshes a couple of incidents and storylines together.

Gripping it’s not, but then it needn’t be. What it is is sufficiently absorbing for the target audience members and their indulgent chaperones.

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Voiced kwa Jim Cummings (Winnie the Pooh and Tigger), John Cleese (Narrator), and Craig Ferguson (Owl), among others, the characters parade through the not-so-tall tales like the group of stuffed wanyama come to life that they are, sometimes even jumping on and off the storybook’s words and interacting with letters and punctuation marks — an understated but refreshing reminder that there are vitabu to be read out there.

Here’s a film that doesn’t exactly champion correct spelling, but certainly pays homage to the joy of reading.

Directors Stephen J. Anderson (Meet the Robinsons) and Don Hall have acknowledged the timeless quality of the chanzo material and kept the retro charm on the front burner by, for the most part, eschewing CGI accoutrements and instead employing the warm, old-fashioned, hand-drawn style of animation, continuing to celebrate the original illustrations kwa E.H. Shepard. They also let the characters whimsically interact with the narrator and sing a few simple songs, as does Zooey Deschanel.

Winnie the Pooh is neither dazzling nor exhilarating, because it doesn’t try to be. It’s offered as if nothing technological had happened between the time, decades ago, when Pooh-poohed shorts dotted the media landscape, and now, in the era of 3-D and special effects.

Instead, this pleasant visit with a honey-obsessed teddy kubeba bearing a message about friendship is not Ice Age but “Nice Stage,” not The Incredibles but “The Huggables,” not Shrek but “Shhh.”

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So we’ll grin and kubeba 2½ stars out of 4 for this short and sweet, G-rated treat for tots that also offers a tinge of nostalgia for their parents. It may not win the Poohlitzer prize, but Winnie the Pooh is a modest pleasure for an underserved audience.
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This Friday, Paramount Pictures and Marvel Studios bring wewe the last film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe before inayofuata year’s mega team-up that is The Avengers. Read my full review of Captain America: The First Avenger after the break.

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For those not familiar with the comic book series, Captain America is the story of Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), a frail young man who desperately wants to jiunge the Army to help the United States win World War II. A scientist (Stanley Tucci) working for the government overhears Rogers and convinces him to be a test subject for his experiment. He has developed...
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BOTTOM LINE: Funny, raunchy summer rom-com with a hip cast that the under-25 crowd will love.

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It’s been a good mwaka for sex. Between No Strings Attached, Hall Pass, and Marafiki With Benefits, it seems relationships are out and emotion-free fornication is in. Yet regardless of the somewhat stale premise, Marafiki With Benefits is as enjoyable and down-to-earth of a romantic comedy as you’re going to get in theatres these days. It really amounts to no zaidi than a smartly cast version of No Strings Attached, but that doesn’t mean it’s not worth watching.

Justin Timberlake stars as Dylan,...
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