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The Simpsons Movie
The Simpsons Movie arrives a decade after that 1997 episode, and long after the show’s glory days. Not to sound too much like the Comic Book Guy, but the Fox sitcom, which once brilliantly satirised TV’s conventions, has gradually settled into its own ruts — which usually entail Homer acting silly for silliness’ sake.
After 18 seasons on television, the much-anticipated big-screen debut of The Simpsons feels purposeless — as if creator Matt Groening finally thought: “Well, we might as well.”
The movie quickly revels in lampooning itself. Ralph Wiggurawls over the opening 20th Century Fox logo. An Itchy and Scratchy segment then plays out before revealing the Simpsons family watching, seated in a movie theatre.
“I can’t believe we’re paying for something we get for free on TV!” exclaims Homer (voiced by Dan Castellaneta).
An alteration of the show’s opening sequence leads to a Green Day concert where the band tries to speak about pollution, thereby setting upthe action: Lake Springfield, it turns out, is a polluted mess, the result of — among others things — Krusty the Clown dumping tankfuls of his flop sweat into it.
Homer ruins a clean-up effort, however, emptying a silo (yes, a silo) of pig faeces in the lake, the result of his new best friend: the adopted Spider-Pig, who’s later renamed Harry Plopper. This isn’t Homer’s first love affair with a potential meal, nor his only go-around with a pig. Fans will recall his “pig-de-la-resistance” in Lisa the Vegetarian, the excellent 1995 episode in which vegetarianism is tackled more successfully than pollution is here.
Lake Springfield promptly turns black and the Environmental Protection Agency, led by Russ Cargill (Albert Brooks), soon intervenes, placing a giant, transparent dome over Springfield and its townspeople. It’s a clearly redundant entrapment for a town that exists everywhere and nowhere. (At one point, standing atop a mountain, Ned Flanders points to the states bordering Springfield: Ohio, Maine, Kentucky and Nevada.)
Cargill — who sounds a lot like Hank Scorpio, the maniacal but cheery evil genius Brooks voiced in a 1996 episode — works for President Arnold Schwarzenegger (Harry Shearer) who declares: “I was elected to lead, not to read.”
Homer must save the town from Cargill’s plans for Springfield, but, more importantly, he has to win back the trust of Marge, Bart, Lisa and Maggie. The plot is wayward at times — particularly a trip to Alaska that feels excerpted from an uired episode.
But narrative was never what drove The Simpsons<$>. It was always the jokes, which are just as relentless here as they are on the show.
Under director David Silverman’s stewardship, the animation is brighter and filled with more background detail. Every character now manoeuvres with a carefully drawn shadow.
Little has changed in the leap to the big screen, but we do gain a new perspective on Springfield, where Mr. Burns’ house is now so elevated it seems more like the Grinch’s lair hovering above Whoville.
We also see for the first time Milhouse’s neighbourhood and Bart’s bathing suit area. His full-frontal scene is one of the movie’s best visual gags.
While The Simpsons Movie is — like the TV show has become — too much a caricature of itself, it still possesses good cheer, an aversion to self-seriousness and manic energy for stuffing the screen with layers of humour.
In one of the final scenes, Homer again finds himself sing across Springfield Gorge as he did in the 1990 Bart the Daredevil episode. On the other side of the gorge, moviegoers will notice an old ambulance from that episode crashed against a tree — as though it’s been sitting there in SimpsonLand for 17 years.
The small artefact of animation recalls both the show’s bygone triumphs and stubborn resilience.
The Simpsons Movie