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The Lorax is a 2012 American computer-animated 3D musical fantasy comedy film produced by Illumination Entertainment and based on Dr. Seuss' children's book of the same name. The film was released by Universal Pictures on March 2nd 2012.

The second adaptation of the book, following the 1972 animated musical television special, the film builds on the book by expanding the story of Ted Wiggins, the previously unnamed boy who visits the Once-ler. The cast includes Danny DeVito as the Lorax, Ed Helms as the Once-ler, and Zac Efron as Ted. New characters introduced in the film are Audrey (voiced by Taylor Swift), Aloysius O'Hare (Rob Riggle), Mrs. Wiggins, Ted's mother (Jenny Slate), and Grammy Norma (Betty White).

The film received mixed reviews from critics and was a box office success, grossing $214 million domestically and $348.8 million worldwide based on a $70 million budget.

Plot[]

Ted Wiggins is an idealistic boy, who lives in "Thneedville", a walled city that, aside from the human citizens, is completely artificial; everything is made of plastic, metal, or synthetics with no living plants. Ted has a crush on a local environmentalist, Audrey, who wants to see a "real tree" more than anything in the world, and decides to find one in order to impress her. His energetic Grammy Norma secretly tells Ted the legend of the Once-ler, who will tell anyone about trees if they brought him fifteen cents, a nail, and a shell of a great-great-great grandfather snail. When Ted leaves Thneedville in search of the Once-ler, he discovers that the outside world is a contaminated, empty wasteland. Once the boy finds him, the Once-ler agrees to tell Ted about the trees on the condition that he listens to the story over multiple visits. Ted agrees, but on his way home, he encounters the mayor of Thneedville, Aloysius O'Hare who is also the proprietor of a company that sells bottled air to Thneedville residents. O'Hare explains to Ted that because trees produce oxygen free of charge, he considers it a threat to his business whenever he hears people talking about them. After revealing that he has "security camera eyes" all over the city, O'Hare pressures Ted to stay in town. However, Ted continues to sneak out of O'Hare's sight (with his grandmother's encouragement) and learns more of the trees' history.

Over Ted's various visits, the Once-ler recounts the story that when he was a young man, he departed his family to find good material for his Thneed invention and make a business. After stumbling upon a lush Truffula Tree forest valley, the Once-ler meets the guardian of the forest, the Lorax, after cutting down a Truffula Tree. The Lorax urges the Once-ler to leave the forest, but the Once-ler refuses. Eventually, the Once-ler promises not to chop another tree down, and the two seem to begin a friendship of sorts. Then, the young businessman's Thneed invention becomes a major success and the Once-ler's family arrives to participate in the business. At first, keeping his promise, the Once-ler continues Thneed production by harvesting the Truffula Tree tufts in a slow, but sustainable manner. However, his greedy and lazy relatives soon convince him to resume chopping down the trees. Over time, the Once-ler's deforestation spirals into a mass overproduction. Flushed with wealth, the Once-ler rationalizes his short-sighted needs into arrogant self-righteousness, and the Lorax's helpless protests do not stop him. The Once-ler pollutes the sky, river, and landscape until the very last Truffula Tree falls. With no further chance of business, he is left broken and abandoned by his family, with his mother disowning him, and with the region uninhabitable because of his business's pollution, the Lorax sends the animals off to find a new place to live before he departs into the sky, leaving only a stone-cut word: "Unless". Distraught and ruined, the Once-ler became a recluse.

After he finishes telling his story, the Once-ler finally understands the meaning behind the Lorax's last message and gives Ted the last Truffula seed in hopes that he can plant it and make others care about real trees once more. Ted's desire to impress Audrey also becomes a personal mission to remind his town of the importance of nature. O'Hare, still determined not to have trees undermine his business, takes heavy-handed steps such as covering Audrey's nature paintings, closing off the door that Ted uses to see the Once-ler, and forcibly searching Ted's room for the seed. Ted enlists his family and Audrey to help plant the seed, which has begun to germinate after water was accidentally spilled on it. O'Hare and his employees pursue the dissidents until they manage to elude him and reach the town center. When Ted finally attempts to plant the seed, he is interrupted by O'Hare, who rallies the population to stop them by telling the people that trees are dangerous and filthy. To convince them otherwise, Ted takes an earthmover and rams down a section of the city wall to reveal the environmental destruction outside, thereby showing them what O'Hare is encouraging. Horrified at the sight and inspired by Ted's conviction (as though a part of the Lorax is within him), the crowd turns against O'Hare when they discover his true nature, his own henchmen expelling him from the town (by his own jetpack-like helmet), and the seed is finally planted. Time passes and the land starts to recover; new trees sprout, the animals begin to return, and the redeemed, now-mustachioed Once-ler is happily reunited with the Lorax.

The movie ends with a quote from Dr. Seuss: "Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It's not."

Cast[]

Additional Voices[]

  • Jack Angel
  • Bob Bergen
  • John Cygan
  • Doug Stone
  • Melora Harte
  • Kevin Michael Richardson
  • Patrick Pinney
  • John Rafter Lee
  • Paul Eiding
  • Chuck McCann
  • Debi Derryberry
  • Bill Farmer
  • Steve Kramer
  • Paul Greenburg
  • Richard Epcar
  • Dave Mallow
  • Rachael Lillis
  • Teresa Gallagher
  • Michael Forest
  • Grant George
  • Kami Desilets
  • Dana Snyder
  • Chris Cox
  • Tim Conway
  • Corey Burton
  • Brian Stepanek
  • Carlos Alazraqui
  • Eric Bauza
  • Roger Rose
  • Katie Leigh
  • Jason Marsden
  • Roger Craig Smith
  • David Kaye
  • Jeff Glenn Bennett
  • Mickie McGowan
  • Peter Cullen
  • Billy West
  • Jess Harnell
  • Rodger Bumpass
  • Tom Kane
  • Dee Bradley Baker
  • John DiMaggio
  • Jackie Gonneau
  • Tom Kenny
  • Phil LaMarr
  • Wally Wingert
  • Dan Castellaneta
  • April Stewart
  • Matt McKenzie
  • Townsend Coleman
  • Will Ryan
  • Neil Ross
  • David Cowgill
  • Brian Beacock
  • Greg Berg
  • Cam Clarke
  • Barbara Goodson
  • Susan Blu
  • Susan Silo
  • Robin Atkin Downes
  • John DeMita
  • David Lodge
  • Nolan North
  • Matthew Wood
  • Sherry Lynn
  • Danny Mann
  • Mona Marshall
  • Scott Adsit
  • Mickie McGowan
  • Laraine Newman
  • Claria Nicole Titman
  • Jan Rabson
  • Jim Ward

Reception and Box Office[]

As of March 17, 2012, the film had received a score of 53% Fresh at the review compilation site Rotten Tomatoes, a majority of positive reviews, but just shy of a "Fresh" rating, which requires 60% or greater. The site's consensus of film critics' opinions stated that "Dr. Seuss' The Lorax is cute and funny enough but the moral simplicity of the book gets lost with the zany Hollywood production values.[1] Overall audience reviews were much more favorable, rating the film with a CinemaScore grade of A. As such, the film grossed the biggest U.S. domestic opening weekend to date of 2008 with a total of $70.2 million, enough to make up its production cost in the opening weekend. [2] In its second weekend, The Lorax brought in $38.8 million domestically, pushing the domestic take over the $100 million mark.

Music[]

Main article: The Lorax (soundtrack)

The soundtrack for the film was composed by John Powell, who had previously composed the score for Horton Hears a Who! (2008), and the songs were written by Cinco Paul. There were two soundtrack albums released for the film, the first being Powell's film score and the other being the original songs written by Powell and Paul performed by various artists. Original songs written for the film include "Thneedville", "This is the Place", "Everybody Needs a Thneed", "How Bad Can I Be?", and "Let It Grow".

Differences from the book[]

Due to being a feature-length film based on a children's book, it changed several things from the story:

  • The nameless desolate city was named Thneedville and turned into a colorful plastic paradise. The boy was given the name Ted Wiggins.
  • Several characters were added to the franchise: Mrs. Wiggins, Grammy Norma, Audrey, Cy the O'Hare Delivery Guy, Marie, Wesley, Dan, Rose, Aloysius O'Hare, among others.
  • The Once-ler and his family now have faces; the latter also were given names.
  • The Once-ler doesn't build a small shop, he gets a inflatable house from his cart.
  • The guy who bought the first Thneed does not exist here. The Thneed is a failure at first, until a woman wears it as a hat and everyone begins to like it.
  • The three forest animals leave all at once, not one at a time, although each one gets their own part in How Bad Can I Be?.
    • Additionally they leave after the last Truffula Tree falls and the factory shutdown rather than before.
      • Melvin(the Once ler's Mule) leaves with the forest animals, while in the book his fate is unknown after the factory shutdown.
  • The Lorax is seen coming back and we see that Ted did plant the seed.
  • The Once-ler puts his 15 cents, nail, and great-grandfather snail in a table, not the Snuvv. However, the Snuvv is implied to be used when he gets a small Truffula out of his hand when he sings "almost every creature knows" in "How Bad Can I Be", and it was used as the basis on why the Once-ler was human (since it is described as a hole in his glove, showing the green parts are not his skin).
  • The Lorax is friendlier to the Once-ler and forms a friendship with him before being betrayed.

Trivia[]

  • The characters of the Lorax and the Once ler were intended to be married in a sequel. Seuss joked that if the two were not married in the sequel to the original film he would revoke rights to it.
  • The characters of Ted and Audrey are named after Dr. Seuss (whose real name was Theodor Seuss Geisel) and his second wife Audrey Geisel respectively.[3]
  • The Lorax was the first film based on a Dr. Seuss property to be released in 3D, which is jokingly referred to promotionally as "IMAX Tree-D."
  • According to a calendar in Ted's house, the film is set in October.
  • The song used in the theatrical trailer for The Lorax is "Light and Day" by The Polyphonic Spree. Other songs include "Campus" by Vampire Weekend; and "Quest for Glory" by Q-Factory.
  • In conjunction with the premiere of The Lorax, IHOP (International House of Pancakes) offered a set of Dr. Seuss themed breakfast menu items. It also offered a contest and a challenge to plant 3 million trees, with a bookmark with tree seed paper being given to kids 3 to 1.
    Minion Easter Egg in The Lorax 2012

    Despicable Me Reference.

  • This is the third Dr. Seuss' film to receive a PG rating, after Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat, and Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas, and the first animated film to receive that rating.
  • "Despicable Me", another movie produced by Illumination Entertainment, had a reference to it in the form of a small Minion figurine placed in one of Ted's drawers.
  • In the book, the Lorax came out of the tree stump as soon as the Once-ler chopped it down, but in this film version, the Once-ler didn't see any of that magical event, which didn't take place until after one of the humming-fish knocked on it. Most likely, this is a reference to an old lumberjack superstition that one must knock on the wood of a tree before chopping it down as to ask permission from the nature spirit inside to do so and to promise to plant a seed in its place. Since the Once-ler was naïve in youth to the rules of respecting nature, the "knock on wood" concept makes sense for summoning the Lorax.
  • The film is the fourth feature film based on a book by Dr. Seuss, the second fully computer-animated Dr. Seuss adaptation (the first one is Horton Hears a Who!)
  • Some of the songs in the movie have become memes on YouTube, notably "Let it Grow" and "How Bad Can I Be?".
  • Ted's mom tell him about the tree they got in their backyard, she says it has summer, fall, winter and disco, but she doesn't say anything about it having spring.

Videos[]

Image Gallery[]

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How The Grinch Stole Christmas!

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The Cat in The Hat

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