Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Wayback Machine
85 captures
20 May 2013 - 11 Oct 2025
AprMAYJun
20
201220132014
success
fail
COLLECTED BY
Organization:Alexa Crawls
Starting in 1996,Alexa Internet has been donating their crawl data to the Internet Archive. Flowing in every day, these data are added to theWayback Machine after an embargo period.
Collection:Alexa Crawls
Starting in 1996,Alexa Internet has been donating their crawl data to the Internet Archive. Flowing in every day, these data are added to theWayback Machine after an embargo period.
TIMESTAMPS
loading
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20130520183252/http://www.rogerebert.com:80/reviews/lilo-and-stitch-2002
In Memoriam 1942 – 2013“Roger Ebert loved movies.”

RogerEbert.com

Thumb_bnttrkdytuerpiguxyx79crwwuf

Star Trek Into Darkness

Less a classic "Star Trek" adventure than a Star Trek-flavored action flick, shot in the frenzied, handheld, cut-cut-cut style that’s become Hollywood’s norm, director J.J.…

Thumb_szppk9nvgnnzkhevqzkttfpvcce

Stories We Tell

Families create their own narratives. Stories are passed on from generation to generation, and in this way the past continues to live, but it can…

Other Reviews
Review Archives
Thumb_xbepftvyieurxopaxyzgtgtkwgw

Ballad of Narayama

"The Ballad of Narayama" is a Japanese film of great beauty and elegant artifice, telling a story of startling cruelty. What a space it opens…

Thumb_jrluxpegcv11ostmz1fqha1bkxq

Monsieur Hire

Patrice Leconte's "Monsieur Hire" is a tragedy about loneliness and erotomania, told about two solitary people who have nothing else in common. It involves a…

Other Reviews
Great Movie Archives
Square_thumb_coens

Cannes: The Coen brothers

Cannes  |  by Ben Kenigsberg

At Cannes, the Coen brothers discuss their inspirations for "Inside Llewyn Davis."

Square_thumb_fedora-1978-2

Cannes Classics: Tip of “Fedora” to You

Cannes  |  by Michał Oleszczyk

Billy Wilder's under-appreciated 1978 "Fedora" returns to Cannes to remind us that some things, like the fear of aging among celebrities, never change.

Other Articles
Cannes Archives
Square_thumb_bedroom_wall

Roger Ebert was an inspiration for disabled people

Far Flungers  |  by Scott Jordan Harris

Roger was a titan in the film community, but he was also a beacon for the seriously disabled.

Moving Forward

Chaz's Blog  |  by Chaz Ebert

Mother’s Day I awakened to spirited calls from my children and grandchildren. As Roger wrote in his memoir, “Life Itself,” I came from a large family of nine, and I had four brothers and four…

Other Articles
Blog Archives
Square_thumb_bedroom_wall

Roger Ebert was an inspiration for disabled people

Far Flungers  |  by Scott Jordan Harris

Roger was a titan in the film community, but he was also a beacon for the seriously disabled.

Square_thumb_krishnaharryhausen

My homages to Ray Harryhausen: age 9 to 19

Far Flungers  |  by Krishna Bala Shenoi

Ray Harryhausen told us, time and again, the story of how he saw the original "King Kong" (1933) on the big screen when he was…

Other Articles
Far Flunger Archives
Square_thumb_roger_ramin

Ebert's last interview:
A letter from Ramin Bahrani

Interviews  |  by Ramin Bahrani

Dear Roger,You emailed me the questions to this interview on March 15, 2013. In your March 16th reply to my email, you said: The piece…

Square_thumb_screen_shot_2013-04-23_at_10.02.49_pm

Tilda Swinton's Ebertfest dance-along

Festivals & Awards  |  by Chaz Ebert

Tilda Swinton leads 1,500 people in a dance-along to Barry White's "You're the First, the Last, My Everything" during Roger Ebert's Film Festival in the…

Other Articles
Channel Archives

Reviews

Lilo & Stitch

Lilo & Stitch Movie Poster

Lilo & Stitch (2002)

Cast
Directed by
Written by

Animation, Comedy, Family

Rated PG

85 minutes

Watch This Movie

 | 

  |  
Print PageTweet

Only a week ago I deplored the wretched "Scooby-Doo" as a blight on the nation's theaters. My fellow critics agreed. Checking the Web sites that monitor reviews, I find that at RottenTomatoes.com the movie scored a 26, at Metacritic.com a 27. Passing grade is 60. The American public effortlessly shrugged off this warning cry and raced to the box office to throw away $54 million.

Now here comes a truly inspired animated feature named "Lilo & Stitch." How will it do? It's one of the most charming feature-length cartoons of recent years--funny, sassy, startling, original and with six songs by Elvis. It doesn't get sickeningly sweet at the end, it has as much stuff in it for grown-ups as for kids, and it has a bright offbeat look to it.

If "Scooby-Doo" grossed $54 million in its first weekend, then if there is justice in the world, "Lilo & Stitch" will gross $200 million. But there is not justice. There is a herd instinct. On Monday a man on an elevator asked me what I thought about "Scooby-Doo." I said it was a very bad movie. "My kids want to see it," he said. Yes, I said, because they've heard of nothing else all week. But, I said, there is a much better animated family film opening this weekend, named "Lilo & Stitch," that your kids are sure to like much more than "Scooby-Doo," and you will enjoy it, too. Take my word, I said; I do this for a living. Take the kids to "Lilo & Stitch." I could see from the man's eyes that he was rejecting my advice. How could I possibly be right when $54 million said I was wrong? How could human taste be a better barometer of movie quality than the success of a marketing campaign? Prediction: This weekend, more parents and their children will dutifully file into the idiotic wasteland of "Scooby-Doo" than will see the inspired delights of "Lilo & Stitch." That will be a shame. "Lilo & Stitch," produced by the same Disney team that made "Mulan," is a toothy fantasy about an alien monster that accidentally finds itself adopted as the pet of a little girl in Hawaii. The creature, named Stitch (voice byChris Sanders), was produced by an illegal genetic mutation, and is so horrifyingly hostile that it's been locked up by its inventors. It escapes to Earth, is mistaken for a very strange dog, and adopted by Lilo (voice byDaveigh Chase), who essentially uses her innocence and the aloha spirit to confuse and even civilize the creature.

This all takes place against a cheerful background of pop-culture references, including scenes spoofing "Men in Black," "Jaws" and "Godzilla" (with Stitch first building a model of San Francisco, then destroying it). And the film firmly positions itself in Hawaii--both the Hawaii of tourist kitsch, and the Hawaii of the aloha spirit. The plot revolves around concepts of ohana, or family, since Lilo is being raised by her big sister, Nani (voice byTia Carrere), who is disorganized and not always a perfect substitute mom, and is up against a disapproving social worker named Cobra Bubbles (voice byVing Rhames).

Nani works as a waitress in one of those "traditional" Hawaiian musical revues, where her boyfriend David Kawena (Jason Scott Lee) is a fire dancer. Lilo takes Stitch to the show, and Stitch is much confused, especially after David sets the stage on fire, but even more confusing episodes are ahead, as the little girl teaches her alien pal how to be an Elvis imitator.

Lilo and Stitch of course have trouble communicating, since Lilo is very young and Stitch speaks no English, but the alien, who is a quick study, picks up some words and, more important, some concepts that challenge its existence as a destructive being. Lilo and Nani are learning, too, how to be a family and take care of each other, but the movie doesn't get all soppy at the end and is surprisingly unsentimental for a Disney animated feature. It keeps its edge and its comic zest all the way through, and although it arrives relatively unheralded, it's a jewel.

Popular Blog Posts

Cannes: The Coen brothersBen Kenigsberg

At Cannes, the Coen brothers discuss their inspirations for "Inside Llewyn Davis."

Roger Ebert was an inspiration for disabled peopleScott Jordan Harris

Roger was a titan in the film community, but he was also a beacon for the seriously disabled.

Cannes Classics: Tip of “Fedora” to YouMichał Oleszczyk

Billy Wilder's under-appreciated 1978 "Fedora" returns to Cannes to remind us that some things, like the fear of agin...

Cannes reviews: Politics and troubled family lives in "Ain't Them Bodies Saints," "Blue Ruin," and "Tip Top"Ben Kenigsberg

While Cannes's red-carpet crowd toasts the Coen brothers' tuneful "Inside Llewyn Davis," the parallel programs have a...

Popular Reviews

Reveal Comments
comments powered byDisqus

Advertisement

Subscribe to our mailing list

The Ebert Club is our hand-picked selection of content for Ebert fans. You will receive a weekly newsletter full of movie-related tidbits, articles, trailers, even the occasional streamable movie. Club members also get access to our members-only section on RogerEbert.com

Premiere Member : $20.00USD - yearly

Pixel

Advertisement

Reviews RSS

In Theaters


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp