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Parents Television
Council Reviews
PTC reviews aim to provide you with advance information about an entertainment offering so that you can be the final arbiter of what you and your family see.
Your
Kids Will Dig "Holes"
By Ben Mozer
Oftentimes, finding a movie the entire family – including your teen or pre-teen
– will enjoy can be a difficult task. Today, many of the films made for a teen
and preteen audience (especially those films marketed to boys) are filled with
dangerous stunts, overt sexuality and foul language. In an ever-increasing
cesspool of teen films, Holes stands apart as a breath of fresh air.
Sure to be enjoyed by parents and children alike, Holes (based on the
Newberry Award-winning book of the same name) perfectly captures the essence of
being a teenage boy. This film brilliantly combines the realistic interactions
between teenagers with the struggles teen's face when placed in thorny
situations.
Holes honorably portrays strong family ties, the merit
of hard work and teamwork, the resilience of the teen spirit and the necessity
of faithful friends during trying times. It is for these reasons the Parents
Television Council gladly awards Holes The PTC Seal of Approval.
From the beginning of this film we are swept into the crazy life of Stanley
Yelnats IV (Stanley spelled backwards), and the curse his grandfather a
"no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing man" placed on the family. No doubt due to
the curse, Stanley is wrongly convicted of stealing a pair of sneakers and is
sent to a reform camp to be transformed into an "upstanding citizen." The
problem is Stanley already is an upstanding citizen!
Camp Green Lake is a modern-day Cool Hand Luke-style reform camp
for teenagers, complete with an evil warden and henchmen. Squid, Armpit, ZigZag,
Magnet, X-Ray, and Zero are campers Stanley befriends. The boys are forced to
dig holes (of which there are thousands to dig) in a dried up lake bed in an
attempt to "build character." All the while they are to inform the Warden
(SIGOURNEY WEAVER) and her goons, Mr. Sir (JON VOIGHT) or Dr. Pendanski (TIM
BLAKE NELSON), when they find anything "special." When Stanley becomes curious
over the warden's interest, the story unfolds into a series of fun, and
extraordinary coincidences.
The
film magically works three plots into the story line: the happenings at Camp
Green Lake, the history behind the Yelnats family curse, and the story of Kissin'
Kate Barlow (PATRICIA ARQUETTE), a female gunslinger in the Old West. The film
works much like a teen mind, wandering from person to person, from back-story to
back-story, until the audience begins to realize the connections between them
all. As the plot quickens, what initially appeared to be snippets of unrelated
events are revealed to be integral to each other and to Stanley's fate. And
because this is a review and not a spoiler, I'll stop here.
It is refreshing
to see talented actors like Jon Voight and Sigourney Weaver lend their talents
to a family-friendly film. The true star of this movie is Shia LaBeouf, who, as
Stanley, captures the comedy of innocence and mischief in a way comparable to a
young Tom Hanks. Very rarely do we see a newcomer carry a movie with such ease.
Writer Louis Sachar and Director Andrew Davis create a spirited and miraculous
down-to-earth film. Andrew Davis is best known for his action films The
Fugitive and Under Siege so expect action sequences more exciting
than the average kid-flick. And though the Old West scenes are mildly violent
(gunslingers have a tendency to sling their guns) and the boys do tussle a
little, this is nothing that will corrupt a child, and surely won't bore
anyone. The MPAA has given Holes a PG rating for violence, mild language
and some thematic elements.
Holes is the recipient of The PTC Seal of
Approval because messages of character, friendship and value of a loving
family are rarely found in today's teen and pre-teen films. We know you will
like Holes as much as we did, and we gladly recommend this for anyone
over the age of ten.
Family Movie Reviews
The Parents Television Council -
www.parentstv.org
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