It's completely animated.OscarGuy wrote:I just wasn't sure if George was that good a film (are we talking the live action/animated concoction)?
Odd that I seem to be the only person here who has seen this cartoon.
It's completely animated.OscarGuy wrote:I just wasn't sure if George was that good a film (are we talking the live action/animated concoction)?
And if you want him to be a reactionary, there's always "Bedtime for Bonzo".Damien wrote:I agree with Sonic that for a little kid the Curious George movie is the ideal choice. It's very sweet, and if it's a teensy bit dull for adults, at least there's a nice Jack Johnson score for the parents to listen to. And, of course, there's the Flying Monkeys in The Wizard of Oz.
But if you want a film for him to appreciate as he gets older, the best film with a monkey prominently featured is probably Howard Hawks's hilarious Monkey Business. And when he gets older, if he's straight, he can ogle Marilyn Monroe.
If you want to traumatize the kid, there's George Romero's Monkey Shines.
And if you want to nudge him along to gay-ness, the uber-camp Maria Montez vehicle, Cobra Woman, has a prominent chimpanzee performing heroics. And there's also the most phallic snake who ever lived, as Montez dances in abandoned ecstasy before it.
Reza wrote:Frankly a one year old is too young to watch, let alone understand and enjoy a film. By the second or third birthday they begin to enjoy tv or films.