"I can't believe we're paying for something we get on
TV for free. If you ask me, everybody in this theatre is a giant sucker. Especially
you!"
Let's not pretend: this is The Simpsons, so obviously it's brilliant. Let's just take the
gushing as read. I'm not going to pretend to not like 83 minutes of The
Simpsons: that would just be silly. Also, I'm trying not to just make this
review a list of funny bits from the film. Well, maybe a bit. I love the Green
Day cameo, with band going down with their ship like the band on the Titanic,
the "latest rock band to die" in Springfield. I love the fact that Springfield borders Ohio,
Nevada, Maine
and Kentucky.
I love the tasteful sex scene with the adorable Disney-style animals, which is
not as addled with bestiality as it sounds. I love "Why does everyone I
whip leave me?" I love… that'll do.
There are lots of nods to the fact that this is a movie, of
course. The opening titles are much swankier. The animation is posher, and the
credits reveal that an army of South Korean animators was hired for this. The
stakes are higher. The opening sequence with itchy and Scratchy makes a nice
metatextual reference to the fact that this is a movie based on a TV show, and the
Simpsons themselves talk over the closing titles. Maggie's first word is
"sequel". But, in spite of all that, this is basically just a really
long episode of The Simpsons. It
doesn't look particularly different from the TV show, at least on the small
screen. And that's no bad thing.
Of course, boring old politics rears its head a bit. America's
indifference to the Environment gets a bit of a dig, as does the Big Brother
surveillance society that's popping up everywhere these days. But this is
essentially just 83 minutes of sheer fun, that throws a countdown in at the
climax for the sheer Hell of it.
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