Dr Seuaa Nwver Live Actionfilm Again
The Cat in the Hat | |
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![]() Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Bo Welch |
Screenplay by |
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Based on | The Cat in the Chapeau past Dr. Seuss |
Produced by | Brian Grazer |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Emmanuel Lubezki |
Edited past | Don Zimmerman |
Music by | David Newman |
Production | Imagine Amusement |
Distributed by |
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Release date |
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Running time | 82 minutes[one] |
State | United States |
Language | English language |
Budget | $109 million[ii] |
Box office | $133.9 1000000[2] |
The Cat in the Hat (also known every bit Dr. Seuss' The True cat in the Chapeau ) is a 2003 American fantasy one-act film directed by Bo Welch in his directorial debut and written by Alec Berg, David Mandel and Jeff Schaffer. Loosely based on Dr. Seuss'due south 1957 book of the same name, information technology was the 2d feature-length Dr. Seuss adaptation after How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000). The film stars Mike Myers in the title role with Alec Baldwin, Kelly Preston, Dakota Fanning, Spencer Breslin, Amy Hill and Sean Hayes in supporting roles.
Production on the moving picture began in 1997 with Tim Allen originally bandage in the title role. After Allen dropped out due to scheduling conflicts with The Santa Clause ii, the role went to Myers. Filming took place in California and lasted three months from late 2002 to early on 2003. Every bit with the previous Dr. Seuss adaptation, many new characters and subplots were added to the story to bring information technology up to feature-length.
Released in theaters on November 21, 2003 in the United States by Universal Pictures and internationally by DreamWorks Pictures, the film grossed $133.nine meg against a budget of $109 1000000[2] and received negative reviews from critics.[3] Seuss's widow, Audrey Geisel, was also critical of the pic and decided not to allow whatsoever further live-action adaptations of her hubby's works, resulting in the counterfoil of a sequel based on The True cat in the Lid Comes Back; all Dr. Seuss film adaptations have since been produced using computer animation.[4] [3]
In March 2012, an animated remake was appear by Universal and Illumination but did not happen. In 2018, Warner Bros. Pictures via Warner Animation Group appear an animated reboot was again in development.[5] [6]
Plot [edit]
Conrad and Emerge Walden alive in the town of Anville with their single mother Joan who works for groovy-freak Hank Humberfloob as a existent manor agent and is dating next-door neighbour Lawrence "Larry" Quinn. Scheduled to host an office party that evening at her house, Joan forbids her children from inbound the living room which is existence kept pristine for the political party, which would outcome in her dismissal if it becomes messy. Conrad trashes the front hall, causing the family'southward dog Nevins to run off in fright to Larry'south grand (Larry afterward returns him). When Humberfloob calls Joan dorsum to the function, she leaves her kids with lethargic babysitter Mrs. Kwan after the previous one abruptly quits.
After Mrs. Kwan falls asleep, the kids come across the Cat in the Lid, an oversized, anthropomorphic humanoid talking true cat with a red-and-white striped top chapeau and ruby bow tie who expresses a want to teach them most having fun, though the family's pet fish is extremely reluctant to accept the Cat around in Joan's absence. In his presence, the True cat causes destruction throughout the house, and presently releases two troublemaking creatures named Things 1 and 2 from a crate, who end up trashing the business firm as they only do the opposite of what they are instructed. Afterwards witnessing Conrad open the crate, the Cat warns him to keep it airtight as it is a portal to his world, only Conrad picks the crab-similar lock on the crate, which grabs on to Nevins' collar as the Things throw Nevins out the window. While the Things stay backside and continue to trash the house, the trio go exterior to retrieve Nevins and the lock.
Meanwhile, Larry is revealed to be an unemployed, destitute slob, posing every bit a successful businessman to marry Joan for her money and send Conrad away to military machine school. Larry sees Nevins running beyond the street and, believing that Conrad had let him out again, calls Joan to notify her. While spying on Nevins, the trio see Larry kidnapping him to utilize as leverage, prompting them to follow him into the city using the Cat's super-powered automobile, the S.L.O.Westward. Upon discovering Larry going into Joan'southward office, the Cat tricks him into giving them Nevins and they escape. Larry attempts hunt, merely afterwards loses them at an surreptitious party where the Cat loses his hat and takes a normal one instead. Seeing Larry render home with Joan, Conrad uses the Things to stall the two by posing as police officers in lodge to get home commencement. Despite beingness distracted by the Things, Larry witnesses the trio bulldoze past in his car and races after them on the Things's police motorbike.
The trio return to the house, merely Larry intercepts them and orders them inside. The Cat reveals himself to Larry, who, in fear and due to his cat allergy, accidentally tears through a wall and falls into a purple gooey ocean, revealing that the house has been transformed into "The Female parent of All Messes" inside the True cat'south world. The trio ride a sleeping Mrs. Kwan through the surreal house to discover the crate, which the kids seal using the lock, whereupon the house returns to its normal proportions simply immediately collapses. In a heated argument, the kids discover that the Cat, who had his hat all along, planned the whole day and angrily social club him to leave. Conrad resigns himself to facing the consequences upon Joan's return with Sally sharing the blame, merely the True cat returns with a cleaning machine, revealing that his planned day was intended to make the kids learn from their flaws, and fixes the house.
Conrad and Sally reconcile with the Cat and thank him for everything before he departs merely as Joan arrives. Larry, covered in royal goo, reappears and attempts to tell Joan about the kids' shenanigans and the True cat'south existence, merely Joan dumps him, saying that while Conrad is indeed a troublemaker, he is withal a adept kid whom she believes in. Later, afterward her successful party, Joan spends time with her kids at domicile while the True cat (who is revealed to exist the narrator himself) and the Things walk off into the sunset.
Cast [edit]
- Mike Myers equally the Cat in the Hat, a 6 ft. tall, anthropomorphic and humanoid wise-keen cat with a Brooklyn accent and a goofy laugh who wears an oversized red bow tie and a magical red-and-white striped top hat that reveals many humorous gadgets.
- Myers as well makes uncredited cameos as the Cat'southward disguises throughout the picture show:
- Mr. Catwrench, a mechanic who helps Sally and Conrad fix their couch.
- The Guy in the Sweater Who Asks All the Obvious Questions, the blonde-haired and bespectacled host of the fictional Goggle box cooking show "Astounding Products".
- Cheshire Cat, a chef from Cheshire, England who hosts the fictional TV cooking testify "Astounding Products".
- Zumzizeroo Man, a hippie who offers a petition to stop the senseless, wholesale slaughter of the flatulating, acid-spitting Zumzizeroo creature to Larry as part of the True cat'south plan to rescue Nevins.
- Myers as well makes uncredited cameos as the Cat'southward disguises throughout the picture show:
- Spencer Breslin as Conrad Walden, Joan'due south subversive and misbehaved 12-twelvemonth-former son, and the older brother of Emerge.
- Dakota Fanning equally Sally Walden, Joan'south dull, somewhat bossy, well-behaved and rule-obeying viii-year-old daughter, and the younger sister of Conrad.
- Kelly Preston as Joan Walden, Conrad and Sally's unmarried mother, a workaholic real estate agent.
- Alec Baldwin as Larry Quinn, the main antagonist; the Waldens' pompous, lazy and unemployed next-door neighbor who is allergic to cats, steals food from the Waldens unnoticed, and is determined to both ally Joan to mooch off of her wealth and send Conrad to war machine school to go rid of him.
- Amy Hill as Mrs. Kwan, an overweight and elderly Taiwanese woman who was hired to sentinel the kids, but sleeps through her job, which (as well as her weight) serves every bit a running gag.
- Sean Hayes as Hank Humberfloob, Joan's zero-tolerance boss, a germophobe who is seemingly friendly, but is quick to fire employees for even the smallest infractions (such as for shaking his hand which he does non allow since he dislikes germs), often in an extremely loud tone of phonation.
- Hayes is also the voice of the somewhat cynical, pessimistic family unit fish.
- Danielle Chuchran and Taylor Rice equally Affair 1, and Brittany Oaks and Talia-Lynn Prairie every bit Thing 2; two gibbering trouble-making creatures that the Cat brings in with him. Dan Castellaneta provided the voices for the Things.
- Steven Anthony Lawrence as Dumb Schweitzer, an intellectually and socially inferior pre-teen boy with a Bronx accent. When Cat bearded himself equally the piñata at a altogether party Sally was left out of, he whacks Cat in the groin with a wooden bat.
- Paris Hilton every bit a female order-goer.
- Bugsy as Nevins, the Waldens' pet dog. Frank Welker provided his voice. Welker had previously provided the vocalisation of Max the dog from How the Grinch Stole Christmas.
- Candace Dean Chocolate-brown every bit a secretary who works for Humberfloob Existent Estate.
- Daran Norris as the Astounding Products Journalist
- Clint Howard as Kate the Caterer
- Paige Hurd as Denise, Sally's erstwhile friend who no longer speaks to her, later she talked back to her. She never invited Sally to her altogether party either since Emerge earlier stated that she told Denise not to speak to her anymore.
- Stephen Hibbert as Jim McFlinnigan, a new employee of Humberfloob Real Estate who is immediately fired for not washing his hands
- Roger Morrissey equally Mr. Vompatatat
- Victor Brandt every bit the Narrator, who tells the story; he is revealed to be the Cat using a voice-changer at the terminate.
Production [edit]
Development [edit]
DreamWorks Pictures acquired the film rights to the original Dr. Seuss book in 1997.[seven] However, production did non originally offset until afterward the 2000 Christmas/comedy moving-picture show How the Grinch Stole Christmas, based on another Dr. Seuss volume of the aforementioned name, became a commercial success. Brian Grazer, the producer of The Grinch, stated: "Because we grew upwardly with these books, and because they have such universal themes and the illustrations ignite such fantasy in your mind as a child—the assemblage of all those feelings—it leaves an indelible, positive retention. And so when I realized I had a chance to convert offset The Grinch and then, The Cat in the Hat, into movies, I was willing to do anything to bring them to the screen."[8] Grazer then contacted Bo Welch over the phone with the offering to direct the film, and he accepted.[nine] When product began, songs written by Randy Newman were dropped because they were deemed inferior; Newman'southward cousin, David, instead composed the score for the motion-picture show. Although Welch and a publicist for Myers denied it, several people said Myers had considerable input into the film'south management by telling some of the cast (co-stars Baldwin and Preston) how to perform their scenes.[10]
Casting [edit]
Tim Allen was originally considered for the role of the True cat. The script was initially based on a version of the original book's story conceived by Allen, who admitted that every bit a kid he was afraid of Seuss' "mischievous feline babysitter"; "My dream is to give it the edge that scared me," stated Allen.[11] However, the studio did not committee a screenplay until belatedly February 2001, when Alec Berg, David Mandel and Jeff Schaffer (best known for being writers on the television series Seinfeld) were hired past the studio to script the movie (replacing the original typhoon of the film that was written a few years prior by Eric Roth),[12] so the moving picture would not exist gear up to shoot before the borderline. By this indicate, Allen was likewise committed to shooting Disney'due south The Santa Clause 2, which was also delayed because Allen wanted a script rewrite.[13] Due to scheduling conflicts with that film,[14] he dropped out of the role.[15] Every bit a result, in March 2002 the role of the Cat was given to Mike Myers,[xvi] whom Grazer had an statement with regarding a proposed film adaptation of Myers' Saturday Dark Live sketch Sprockets, which Myers cancelled in June 2000 after being dissatisfied with his own script for it.[17] Myers stated in an interview that he was a long-time fan of the original Dr. Seuss volume, and that information technology was the first book he ever read.[18]
Makeup and visual effects [edit]
Originally, Rick Bakery was set to be the prosthetic makeup designer for the film subsequently his previous experience with How the Grinch Stole Christmas, but due to conflicts with the studio and production squad, particularly with Myers' behavior (showing up late to meetings, refusing to come up to makeup tests) and the complex challenge of designing the character's makeup, he left the project and was replaced past Steve Johnson, one of his earliest apprentices. The Cat costume was made of angora and human hair and was fitted with a cooling system. To keep Myers absurd during the outdoor shoots, a portable air conditioner was available that connected a hose to the adjust betwixt shots, while the tail and ears were bombardment-operated.[19] [ ameliorate source needed ] Danielle Chuchran and Brittany Oaks, who portrayed Thing one and Affair 2, respectively, wore a prosthetic face mask and wig designed past Johnson as well. The Fish was considered somewhat of a unique character for Rhythm and Hues Studios (responsible for the visual effects and animation in films such as Cats & Dogs, The Lord of the Rings: The Render of the King and Scooby-Doo), in that the character had no shoulders, hips or legs, so all of the concrete performance had to emit from the eyes, head and fin motion. Sean Hayes, who provided the voice for the Fish, found the function significantly unlike from his usual on-camera jobs; he did not know how the final animation would look, resulting in all of his vocalization work taking identify alone in a sound booth.[20]
Filming [edit]
Prior to filming, giant props for the moving picture were stolen from the set up; the local police constitute the props vandalized with graffiti in a shopping mall car park in Pomona, California. Despite this, no arrests had been made and filming was to start the adjacent week.[21] Principal photography took place by and large in California from October 2002 to Jan 2003. The neighborhood and the town center was filmed in a rural valley near Simi Valley, where 24 houses (each 26 feet square and 52 feet tall) were constructed.[22] The downtown area outdoor shots were filmed forth a Pomona street where a number of antiquarian and gift shops are located. The customs decided not to redecorate later filming ended, so the surreal paint scheme and some of the signage could still exist seen today as information technology appears in the flick. Considering of and so much smog in the area, the sky had to exist digitally replaced with the cartoon-like sky and colors of the groundwork had to be digitally fixed.
According to co-star Amy Hill, Myers was difficult to work with on set, refusing to talk to anyone on the production (other than director Welch) and isolating himself from the cast and coiffure during breaks in filming. She also noted that there would be retakes of scenes considering Myers overruled Welch on whether they were good enough or not. In addition, Hill stated that Myers had an assistant who held chocolates in a Tupperware, and whenever Myers needed a piece of chocolate, his assistant would come up over and give him one.[23]
Music [edit]
The soundtrack was released on November eighteen, 2003.[24] Originally, Marc Shaiman was going to compose the score for the film, simply due to David Newman already being chosen for the film score, Shaiman instead wrote the motion picture's songs with Scott Wittman. The soundtrack likewise features a vocal by Smash Mouth ("Getting Better"), which makes it the third Mike Myers-starring moving-picture show in a row to feature a song past Boom Mouth afterwards Shrek and Austin Powers in Goldmember. The trailer for the motion picture uses a version of "Hey! Pachuco!" past the Royal Crown Revue. The soundtrack likewise includes two songs performed by Myers, who plays the Cat. Newman's score won a BMI Motion picture Music Award.
All music is composed past David Newman, except equally noted.
No. | Title | Writer(south) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
ane. | "Primary Title - the Kids" | 8:07 | |
two. | "Getting Meliorate" (Blast Mouth) | Lennon–McCartney | 2:24 |
3. | "The Cat" | 3:50 | |
4. | "Two Things - Burrow Jumping - Leaky Crate" | 5:xvi | |
five. | "Military Academy Seduction" | three:02 | |
half-dozen. | Untitled | ii:12 | |
vii. | "Surfer Cat - the Phunometer" | two:22 | |
8. | "Fun, Fun, Fun" (Mike Myers) | Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman | 2:38 |
9. | "The Contract" | 1:53 | |
10. | "Oven Explodes - "Clean Upwards This Mess!"" | ane:36 | |
eleven. | "Things Wreck the House" | 2:52 | |
12. | "Larry the Slob" | three:10 | |
13. | "Birthday Party" | 2:11 | |
fourteen. | "Due south.L.O.W. Drive" | two:32 | |
15. | "Rescuing Nevens" | 4:27 | |
16. | "Clean Upwards" (Mike Myers) | Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman | 0:24 |
Total length: | 48:55 |
Release [edit]
Home media [edit]
The Cat in the Lid was released on VHS and DVD on March 16, 2004.[25] The DVD features 13 deleted scenes, 36 outtakes, 13 featurettes, a "Dance with the Cat" tutorial to teach children how to do a Cat in the Chapeau trip the light fantastic, and an sound commentary with director Bo Welch and actor Alec Baldwin.[26] On February vii, 2012, the film was released on Blu-ray.[27]
Reception [edit]
Box part [edit]
The Cat in the Hat opened theatrically on November 21, 2003 and grossed $38.3 million in its opening weekend, ranking first in the Northward American box office alee of Blood brother Carry, Elf and Looney Tunes: Back in Action.[28] The film ended its theatrical run on March xviii, 2004, having grossed $101.i million domestically and $32.8 million overseas for a worldwide total of $133.ix million.[2]
Critical response [edit]
On Rotten Tomatoes, The Cat in the Lid has a nine% approval rating based on 163 reviews and an average rating of 3.twoscore/10. The site'southward critical consensus reads: "Filled with double entendres and potty humor, this Cat falls flat."[29] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 19 out of 100 based on reviews from 37 critics, indicating "overwhelming dislike".[thirty] Audiences polled past CinemaScore gave the picture an average course of "B-" on an A+ to F scale.[31]
Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the moving picture one star, stating: "True cat, another overblown Hollywood raid on Dr. Seuss, has a describe on Mike Myers, who inexplicably plays the Cat by mimicking Bert Lahr in The Wizard of Oz." Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times gave the film two out of four stars. Although he praised the product design, he considered the film to exist "all effects and stunts and CGI and prosthetics, with no room for lightness and joy".[32] Ebert and co-host Richard Roeper gave the film "Two Thumbs Down" on their weekly picture show review program.[33] Roeper said of Myers' performance that "maybe a role of him was realizing as the movie was beingness fabricated that a live-action version of The Cat in the Hat just wasn't a keen idea."[33] Ebert compared the moving-picture show unfavorably to How the Grinch Stole Christmas: "If in that location is one matter I've learned from these 2 movies, information technology'due south that we don't want to see Jim Carrey as a Grinch, and we don't want to run across Mike Myers equally a cat. These are talented comedians, let'southward come across them exercise their stuff, don't bury them under a ton of engineering."[33]
Leonard Maltin gave the film ane-and-a-half stars out of four in his Movie Guide: "Brightly colored adaptation of the honey rhyming book for young children is a betrayal of everything Dr. Seuss ever stood for, injecting potty sense of humour and adult (flash-wink) jokes into a mixture of heavy-handed slapstick and silliness." Maltin also said that the film'due south official title which included Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat was "an official insult".[34]
Todd McCarthy of Variety praised the film as "attractively designed, energetically performed and, above all, blessedly concise."[35]
Alec Baldwin was disappointed with the film and addressed complaints the film received because of its dissimilarity to the source material. He expressed a belief that a picture show is "an idea virtually something" and that because Dr. Seuss' work is so unique, making a feature-length pic out of i of his stories would entail taking liberties and making broad interpretations.[36]
Accolades [edit]
The moving picture besides received three nominations at the Hollywood Makeup & Hairstylists Order Awards.[38]
Future [edit]
Canceled sequel [edit]
On the 24-hour interval of the film'south release, Myers stated in an interview that he expected a sequel where the kids run across the Cat again. A sequel based on the original volume'due south sequel The Cat in the Chapeau Comes Back was in development merely over a calendar month before the film'south release, with Myers and Welch to return to their duties as actor and director, respectively.[39] Following the picture show's poor reception however, Seuss's widow, Audrey Geisel, decided to disallow any subsequent live-action adaptations of her belatedly husband'due south works to exist produced, to which the sequel was eventually scrapped.[four] [three]
Animated reboot [edit]
In March 2012, a computer-animated Cat in the Hat picture remake was announced past Universal Pictures and Illumination Entertainment following the success of The Lorax, with Rob Lieber set up to write the script, Chris Meledandri to produce the film and Geisel to executive-produce it, but it never came to fruition.[40] [41] [42] [43] [44] [45] [46] On January 24, 2018 it was announced that Warner Blitheness Group picked upwards the rights for the animated True cat in the Lid film as function of a creative partnership with Seuss Enterprises.[47] [6]
Video game [edit]
A platform game based on the pic was published by Vivendi Universal Games for PlayStation two, Xbox, and Game Male child Advance on November 5, 2003, and Microsoft Windows on Nov 9, 2003, shortly earlier the picture show's theatrical release.[48] [49]
See also [edit]
- List of films based on Dr. Seuss books.
References [edit]
- ^ "THE Cat IN THE HAT (PG)". British Board of Film Classification. November 27, 2003. Retrieved March xi, 2016.
- ^ a b c d "The Cat in the Lid (2003)". Box Function Mojo . Retrieved March xix, 2017.
- ^ a b c Ivie, Devon. "Mike Myers Was a Huge 'Diva' While Filming The Cat in the Hat". Vulture.
it was so widely panned that Dr. Seuss'southward widow banned whatever other alive-action adaptations
- ^ a b "Seussentenial: 100 years of Dr. Seuss". TODAY.com . Retrieved December thirteen, 2020 – via Associated Press.
- ^ Kroll, Justin (January 24, 2018). "'Cat in the Chapeau' Picture in Works From Warner Bros., Dr. Seuss Enterprises". Variety . Retrieved Jan 29, 2018.
- ^ a b "Jon K. Chu Tapped to Direct Dr. Seuss'southward 'Oh, the Places Y'all'll Go!'". Nov eleven, 2021.
- ^ Linder, Brian (March 13, 2001). "Grazer Talks True cat in the Hat". IGN. Archived from the original on May 13, 2014. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
- ^ "THE CAT IN THE HAT - Production Notes". p. 1. Archived from the original on December 9, 2014. Retrieved March sixteen, 2012.
- ^ Welch, Bo. (2004). Commentary for The True cat in the Hat [DVD]. Universal Pictures.
- ^ Horn, John (Nov nineteen, 2003). "A 'True cat' with some bite". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved March xviii, 2012.
- ^ Keck, William (Nov 24, 2000). "The Cat in the Hat -- Tim Allen is on board to star in the Seuss film". Entertainment Weekly. Time Inc. Retrieved January one, 2021.
- ^ Stax (February 26, 2001). "New Cats Hired for Alive-Action Hat". IGN. Archived from the original on May 13, 2014. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
- ^ Susman, Gary (Apr 26, 2001). "The strike: a motion-picture show-goer's guide". The Guardian. London. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
- ^ Keck, William (March 8, 2002). "'The Cat' Came Back". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved March xviii, 2012.
- ^ Rebecca Ascher-Walsh (November 16, 2001). "Tim Allen drops out of Cat in the Hat". Amusement Weekly. Time Inc. Retrieved Jan 1, 2021.
- ^ "Myers to play The Cat in the Hat". The Guardian. London. March 7, 2002. Retrieved March sixteen, 2012.
- ^ Keck, William (March 15, 2002). "Howdy Kitty". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
- ^ Murray, Rebecca. "Dr. Seuss Fan Mike Myers Talks About "The True cat in the Hat"". About.com. Archived from the original on September xix, 2005. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
- ^ Welch, Bo (Nov 21, 2003), The Cat in the Hat , retrieved Apr ten, 2016
- ^ "THE CAT IN THE Chapeau - Product Notes". p. 3. Archived from the original on May 12, 2014. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
- ^ "Stolen 'Cat in the Hat' Props Found". WENN. IMDb. Oct xvi, 2002. Retrieved March sixteen, 2012.
- ^ "'Cat in the Hat' filming starts Monday".
- ^ "Mike Myers branded 'diva' by True cat in the Hat co-star: 'It was just a horrible, nightmarish experience'". The Independent. October 26, 2016. Retrieved October 26, 2016.
- ^ "The Cat in the Hat [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack] - David Newman | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic . Retrieved October 8, 2016.
- ^ "Dr. Seuss' The Cat In The Hat (Widescreen Edition) (2003)". Amazon. Retrieved March sixteen, 2012.
- ^ Telsch, Rafe. "The Cat in the Chapeau DVD Review". Picture palace Blend. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
- ^ "Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat [Blu-ray] (2003)". Amazon. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
- ^ "Weekend Box Office Results for November 21-23, 2003". Box Office Mojo. Internet Motion picture Database. November 24, 2003. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
- ^ "Dr. Seuss' The True cat in the Lid (2003)". Rotten Tomatoes.
- ^ "The Cat in the Hat". Metacritic.
- ^ "DR. SEUSS' THE CAT IN THE Chapeau (2003) B-". CinemaScore. Archived from the original on Dec 20, 2018.
- ^ Ebert, Roger (November 21, 2003). "Dr. Seuss' The Cat in The Hat". The Chicago Sun-Times. Rogerebert.com. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
- ^ a b c "The Cat in the Chapeau, The Cooler, In America, The Last Samurai, 2003 (incomplete)". Siskel And Ebert Motion-picture show Reviews . Retrieved May 17, 2020.
- ^ Maltin, Leonard (2013) Leonard Maltin's Motion picture Guide Plume[ ISBN missing ]
- ^ McCarthy, Todd (November 21, 2003). "Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat". Variety.
- ^ Baldwin, Alec. (2004). Commentary for The Cat in the Hat [DVD]. Universal Pictures.
- ^ "2003 26th Hastings Bad Movie theatre Order Stinker Awards". Stinkers Bad Moving picture Awards. Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on Oct 17, 2006. Retrieved May i, 2013.
- ^ "Hollywood Makeup & Hairstylists Guild Precursor - Cinema Sight". www.cinemasight.com.
- ^ Kirschillng, Gregory (October 3, 2003). "The Deal Study". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved March 17, 2012.
- ^ Fleming, Mike (March xv, 2012). "Dr. Seuss' 'The Cat In The Hat' Go Another Life At Chris Meledandri's Illumination". Borderline. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
- ^ "Dr. Seuss' 'The Cat in the Hat' coming to the big screen again". Striking Fix. March 15, 2012. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
- ^ Elsenberg, Eric (March 15, 2012). "The Cat In The Hat To Get A Second Go At The Big Screen". Cinema Alloy. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
- ^ Arruda, Cameron (March 16, 2012). "Dr. Seuss' 'The Cat in The Lid' Will Be Remade As Animated Film". Durance Magazine. Archived from the original on July 1, 2012. Retrieved March sixteen, 2012.
- ^ Lee, Mike (March 16, 2012). "Universal Reboots THE CAT IN THE HAT Into 3D CGI Animated Feature". Cinema Blend. Fushed Pic. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
- ^ Makarechi, Kia (March 16, 2012). "'Cat In The Hat' Movie: Universal Hopes To Follow 'The Lorax' With Another Dr. Seuss Box Office Win". The Huffington Mail . Retrieved March 16, 2012.
- ^ Dean Schmitz, Greg (March xvi, 2012). "Weekly Ketchup: The Cat in the Hat Gets A CGI Remake". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
- ^ Kroll, Justin (Jan 24, 2018). "'True cat in the Lid' Motion picture in Works From Warner Bros., Dr. Seuss Enterprises". Diversity . Retrieved January 29, 2018.
- ^ Provo, Frank (December xv, 2003). "Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Chapeau Review (GBA)". GameSpot. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
- ^ Hwang, Kaiser (February 6, 2004). "The Cat in the Lid". IGN. Retrieved December viii, 2013.
External links [edit]
- Official website
- The Cat in the Hat at IMDb
- The True cat in the Hat at Box Office Mojo
- The Cat in the Hat at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Cat in the Hat at Metacritic
- Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat at MobyGames
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cat_in_the_Hat_(film)
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