Since you may not know of this publication, I urge you to Google "Thrilling Wonder Stories magazine" and click on "images." You'll find the same kind of breathless pulp absurdity that "Zathura" brings to a boil. By that I don't mean they look cheap, I mean they have the kind of earnest sincerity you can find on the covers of Thrilling Wonder Stories. Favreau brings a muscular solidity to his special effects they look not like abstract digital perfection but as if hammered together from plywood, aluminum and concept cars. His first film was " Made" (2001), his second was " Elf" (2003) and his next will be inspired by Edgar Rice Burroughs' John Carter of Mars, a series I have always assumed was unfilmable, but on the basis of these three films, maybe not. "Zathura" is the third film directed by Jon Favreau, an actor who, like Ron Howard, was possibly born to be a director. That helps explain why they can still breathe when they open the front door and discover that their house is now in orbit. Incredible things will happen while they play Zathura, but they will survive. They run around as if evading meteors, but actually the meteors evade them. The differences between the three movies are fundamental: "The Polar Express" is a visionary fable, "Jumanji" is an uneasy thrill ride whose young heroes endure dangers too real to be funny, and Zathura is the only board game in history that lives up to the picture on its box.Ī key to the film's charm comes during that meteor shower: The living room is pulverized, but Danny and Walter are untouched. It resembles the game in " Jumanji" (1995), which ported its players into a world of fearsome beasts and harrowing dangers, and indeed is based on a book by the same author, Chris Van Allsburg, who also wrote the book that inspired " The Polar Express" (2004). The game is a portal to an alternative universe of startling adventures the movie wisely attempts no rational explanation. Just about then the meteors start showering, sizzling through the living room ceiling and drilling through the floor, pulverizing coffee tables and floor lamps. Danny has Walter help him read it: Meteor Shower. The game is an ingenious metal contraption you wind it up and push a button, and your little car moves around a track, and the game emits a card for you to read. There Danny ( Jonah Bobo ) discovers the Zathura board game and tries to get Walter ( Josh Hutcherson) to play it with him. Walter and Danny fight, as brothers do Danny hides in the dumbwaiter (a device that will come as news to many of the kids watching this movie), and Walter lowers him into the basement, which for every 6-year-old is a place filled with ominous noises and alarming, unseen menaces. Not quite alone: Their teenage sister Lisa is allegedly baby-sitting, from her vantage point under the covers of her bed with her iPod. In "Zathura," time hangs heavily on the hands of Walter and Danny Budwing, two brothers, one 10, one 6, whose father has left them alone in the house for a few hours. Such games were weapons against the ennui of endless Saturdays. In these days of high-tech video games, it's remarkable that kids once got incredibly thrilled while pushing little metal racing cars around a cardboard track: The toy car was yours, and you invested it with importance and enhanced it with fantasy and pitied it because it was small, like you were. The opening credits of "Zathura" are closeups of an old science-fiction board game, a game that should have existed in real life and specifically in my childhood, but which was created for this movie.
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