Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
    Starring: Embeth Davidtz , Danny DeVito , Pam Ferris , Jean Speegle Howard , and Brian Levinson
    Director: Danny DeVito
    Manufacturer: Columbia TriStar
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

    All Comedy All Comedy | Comedy | Categories | DVD | Video
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    Region 1 Region 1 | Special Features | DVD | Video
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    Similar Items:
    1. Madeline [1999] Madeline [1999]
    2. James And The Giant Peach [1996] James And The Giant Peach [1996]
    3. The Witches [1989] The Witches [1989]
    4. Danny, The Champion Of The World [1989] Danny, The Champion Of The World [1989]
    5. Roald Dahls The BFG Big Friendly Giant [1989] Roald Dahls The BFG Big Friendly Giant [1989]

    ASIN: B0000VCZKW
    Release Date: 2005-06-07
    Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)

    Amazon.co.uk Review

    Danny DeVito's adaptation of the Roald Dahl book for children is mostly just fine, helped along quite a bit by the charming performance of Mara Wilson (Mrs Doubtfire) as the eponymous young Matilda, a brilliant girl neglected by her stupid, self-involved parents (DeVito and Rhea Perlman). Ignored at home, Matilda escapes into a world of reading, exercising her mind so much she develops telekinetic powers. Good thing, too: sent off to a school headed by a cruel principal, Matilda needs all the help she can get. DeVito takes a highly stylized approach that is sometimes reminiscent of Barry Sonnenfeld (director of Get Shorty, a DeVito production), and his judgement is not the best in some matters, such as letting the comic-scary sequences involving the principal go on too long. But much of the film is delightful and funny.--Tom Keogh
    Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Review
    • Matilda
    • Little and Large
    • Great movie
    • Great film!!
    Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
    Starring: Embeth Davidtz , Danny DeVito , Pam Ferris , Jean Speegle Howard , and Brian Levinson
    Director: Danny DeVito
    Manufacturer: Columbia TriStar
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

    All Comedy All Comedy | Comedy | Categories | DVD | Video
    All Science Fiction & Fantasy All Science Fiction & Fantasy | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Categories | DVD | Video
    Fantasy & Futuristic Fantasy & Futuristic | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Categories | DVD | Video
    All Family Favourites All Family Favourites | Family Favourites | Children's DVD | Categories | DVD | Video
    All Children's DVD All Children's DVD | Children's DVD | Categories | DVD | Video
    Region 1 Region 1 | Special Features | DVD | Video
    DVD DVD | Format (binding_browse-bin) | Refinements | DVD | Video
    Similar Items:
    1. Madeline [1999] Madeline [1999]
    2. James And The Giant Peach [1996] James And The Giant Peach [1996]
    3. The Witches [1989] The Witches [1989]
    4. Danny, The Champion Of The World [1989] Danny, The Champion Of The World [1989]
    5. Roald Dahls The BFG Big Friendly Giant [1989] Roald Dahls The BFG Big Friendly Giant [1989]

    ASIN: 0800130227
    Release Date: 1997-08-06
    Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)

    Amazon.co.uk Review

    Danny DeVito's adaptation of the Roald Dahl book for children is mostly just fine, helped along quite a bit by the charming performance of Mara Wilson (Mrs Doubtfire) as the eponymous young Matilda, a brilliant girl neglected by her stupid, self-involved parents (DeVito and Rhea Perlman). Ignored at home, Matilda escapes into a world of reading, exercising her mind so much she develops telekinetic powers. Good thing, too: sent off to a school headed by a cruel principal, Matilda needs all the help she can get. DeVito takes a highly stylized approach that is sometimes reminiscent of Barry Sonnenfeld (director of Get Shorty, a DeVito production), and his judgement is not the best in some matters, such as letting the comic-scary sequences involving the principal go on too long. But much of the film is delightful and funny.--Tom Keogh

    Customer Reviews:

    3 out of 5 stars Review.......2008-03-05

    Film review of Matilda (1996)
    Star rating-\\\gg

    Matilda was originally written as a children¡¦s novel by Roald Dahl (tales of the unexpected) in 1988. His wry wit and humour certainly makes the book an enjoyable read and this humour still shows in Danny DeVito¡¦s movie version of the novel with a contrast of both American and English actors.

    The film is about a young girl called Matilda played wonderfully by Mara Wilson (Miss Doubtfire). Though at the time, Wilson was fairly new to the acting scene; her acting skills still comes across as charming.

    Another great actor in the film is the director, Danny DeVito (Mars Attacks), who also plays both the narrator and Matilda¡¦s father. DeVito is both clever and witty throughout the film and is guaranteed to make the viewer laugh.

    The storyline consists of an extremely bright young girl living with her incredibly stupid, television addicted parents (Danny DeVito and Rhea Pearlman) and equally cretinous brother (Brian Levinson) who do not realise the sheer genius in Matilda and basically neglect her. To get rid of Matilda, the parents bundle her off to Crunchem elementary school governed by what Roald Dahl describes as a ¡¥rather eccentric and bloodthirsty member of the stag hounds¡¦ who is played by Pam Ferris (Darling Buds of May). Her rather sarcastic English humour contrasts brilliantly to the American actors.

    The only flaw in the film is that in Matilda¡¦s home life, the atmosphere is in slight danger of becoming a little sit-com like. However, Danny DeVito¡¦s excellent narration skills solve this problem as he quotes lines from Roald Dahl¡¦s novel, making the film less American.

    Overall, I think that Matilda is a lovely, heart-warming film to be enjoyed by adults and children alike. It is especially warming when Rusted Root¡¦s ¡¥Send me on my way¡¦ is played to accompany the narration fading into the end credits.













    By Imogen Kupper

    5 out of 5 stars Matilda.......2008-02-29

    atilda Wormwood (Mara Wilson- Thomas and The Magic Railroad, A Simple Wish, Mrs Doubtfire) was born into a family that don't appreciate her. Her family are avid television watchers, but Matilda would prefer to curl up with a book.
    Her father (Danny DeVito- Mars Attacks) is a used car salesman who sells used cars at several times the true amount. He makes a deal with a headmistress of a school (Pam Ferris- The Darling Buds of May) that he gives her a car in exchange for Matilda attending her school. But Miss Trunchbull is a terrifying, evil woman who strikes fear into the heart of every child.
    But Matilda gains magic powers to take revenge on the wicked people in her life.
    This film is a lovely story with brilliant acting that you can watch again and again.

    5 out of 5 stars Little and Large.......2006-07-01

    This film is so good - for both kids and adults - that I think Dahl himself must be looking down from Heaven and smiling - after the rumours of what he felt about the production of The Witches. Some of the characterisations, sets and costumes could have been put together by the master of kitsch, Baz Luhrmann, and this is a testament to both Dahl's eye for detail and Danny DeVito's wicked sense of humour - and vice versa. Although in many ways the story has been changed and not least Americanised, Dahl's original book was rather short on substance, despite the fantastic plot, and DeVito's adaptation suits it much better than setting it in phlegmatic old England. Plus Miss Trunchbull as an Englishwoman adrift among Americans makes her character even more grotesque as she brings her curious brand of "English" discipline to an ordinary American suburb, and the way she mimics the cutesy American accents adds much more to her character than if the film had stayed set in England. And since it ends in the way Dahl intended it to - and indeed for fans of Quentin Blake's illustrations, the handwriting on the board is absolutely spot on to that pictured in the book itself, which shows DeVito is paying attention not only to the original but to critics of Americans making films of English children's classics - there is nothing for that peculiarly English snobbery about "disneyfication" to latch on to as there might have been with The Witches.

    Although DeVito's additions of the stupid FBI cops enhance the story (and prove that Matilda is just as smart with people who are supposedly on her side, which I loved and which makes her the sassiest heroine for a long time), there is sadly one bit that really annoyed me - Miss Honey. In the book she is down-to-earth, practical and nonchalant about her fate. In the film...ugh, I needed to do my teeth afterwards lest they fall out from all the sugary-sweet acting. From the moment she turns up on screen the film - while not completely ruined - takes a turn for the "unrealistic". I guess Miss Honey had to live up to her name, but Miss Saccharine would have been more appropriate. The stomach-churning episode with the doll and the chocolates is disappointing, but I suppose the film manages to pull it off - just about - with more of Dahl's refreshingly grim humour injected into it just as Honey becomes Honey Monster. I suppose for an American audience the heroine has to be whiter-than-white, but since I was raised on Quentin Blake's gawky bespectacled blue-stocking, I suppose someone coming to this film without the backhistory might not mind.

    But...the best thing about films of children's books, like with Narnia, is that the silver screen gives the chance for the characters to really come to life and details which would crowd a hundred-page novella can be added, and the film manages to create a whole world that is just as believable from Matilda's point of view as the Dahl version, without losing any of the master's sparkling wit or erudite points dropped in at a moment's notice. Bravissimo!

    5 out of 5 stars Great movie.......2006-06-17

    I have seen this film loads of times and I have read the book as well.It shows that you can be intelligent as a little kid,like Matilda.She is a very sweet little girl with a beautiful teacher called Miss Honey.In the end,they manage to get rid of Miss Trunchbull,the principal who is insane.She also happens to be Miss Honey's stepaunt.

    5 out of 5 stars Great film!!.......2006-01-04

    This is one of those great films that you can just watch over and over again, no matter what mood you're in. Pam Ferris plays Miss Trunchball wonderfully, and although this film has been Americanised in lots of ways, it is very well made. There are a couple of places where the special effects may make you laugh (when Trunchball swings Amanda Thripp into the air by her pigtails, in which the child looks like she's going down an invisible slide, arms outstrecthed!) but that just adds to the fun! Overall, it's a thoroughly enjoyable film. Well worth buying.
    Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Review
    • Matilda
    • Little and Large
    • Great movie
    • Great film!!
    Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
    Starring: Embeth Davidtz , Danny DeVito , Pam Ferris , Jean Speegle Howard , and Brian Levinson
    Director: Danny DeVito
    Manufacturer: Columbia TriStar
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

    All Comedy All Comedy | Comedy | Categories | DVD | Video
    All Science Fiction & Fantasy All Science Fiction & Fantasy | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Categories | DVD | Video
    Fantasy & Futuristic Fantasy & Futuristic | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Categories | DVD | Video
    All Family Favourites All Family Favourites | Family Favourites | Children's DVD | Categories | DVD | Video
    All Children's DVD All Children's DVD | Children's DVD | Categories | DVD | Video
    Region 1 Region 1 | Special Features | DVD | Video
    DVD DVD | Format (binding_browse-bin) | Refinements | DVD | Video
    Similar Items:
    1. Madeline [1999] Madeline [1999]
    2. James And The Giant Peach [1996] James And The Giant Peach [1996]
    3. The Witches [1989] The Witches [1989]
    4. Danny, The Champion Of The World [1989] Danny, The Champion Of The World [1989]
    5. Roald Dahls The BFG Big Friendly Giant [1989] Roald Dahls The BFG Big Friendly Giant [1989]

    ASIN: 0800130952
    Release Date: 1997-07-22
    Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)

    Amazon.co.uk Review

    Danny DeVito's adaptation of the Roald Dahl book for children is mostly just fine, helped along quite a bit by the charming performance of Mara Wilson (Mrs Doubtfire) as the eponymous young Matilda, a brilliant girl neglected by her stupid, self-involved parents (DeVito and Rhea Perlman). Ignored at home, Matilda escapes into a world of reading, exercising her mind so much she develops telekinetic powers. Good thing, too: sent off to a school headed by a cruel principal, Matilda needs all the help she can get. DeVito takes a highly stylized approach that is sometimes reminiscent of Barry Sonnenfeld (director of Get Shorty, a DeVito production), and his judgement is not the best in some matters, such as letting the comic-scary sequences involving the principal go on too long. But much of the film is delightful and funny.--Tom Keogh

    Customer Reviews:

    3 out of 5 stars Review.......2008-03-05

    Film review of Matilda (1996)
    Star rating-\\\gg

    Matilda was originally written as a children¡¦s novel by Roald Dahl (tales of the unexpected) in 1988. His wry wit and humour certainly makes the book an enjoyable read and this humour still shows in Danny DeVito¡¦s movie version of the novel with a contrast of both American and English actors.

    The film is about a young girl called Matilda played wonderfully by Mara Wilson (Miss Doubtfire). Though at the time, Wilson was fairly new to the acting scene; her acting skills still comes across as charming.

    Another great actor in the film is the director, Danny DeVito (Mars Attacks), who also plays both the narrator and Matilda¡¦s father. DeVito is both clever and witty throughout the film and is guaranteed to make the viewer laugh.

    The storyline consists of an extremely bright young girl living with her incredibly stupid, television addicted parents (Danny DeVito and Rhea Pearlman) and equally cretinous brother (Brian Levinson) who do not realise the sheer genius in Matilda and basically neglect her. To get rid of Matilda, the parents bundle her off to Crunchem elementary school governed by what Roald Dahl describes as a ¡¥rather eccentric and bloodthirsty member of the stag hounds¡¦ who is played by Pam Ferris (Darling Buds of May). Her rather sarcastic English humour contrasts brilliantly to the American actors.

    The only flaw in the film is that in Matilda¡¦s home life, the atmosphere is in slight danger of becoming a little sit-com like. However, Danny DeVito¡¦s excellent narration skills solve this problem as he quotes lines from Roald Dahl¡¦s novel, making the film less American.

    Overall, I think that Matilda is a lovely, heart-warming film to be enjoyed by adults and children alike. It is especially warming when Rusted Root¡¦s ¡¥Send me on my way¡¦ is played to accompany the narration fading into the end credits.













    By Imogen Kupper

    5 out of 5 stars Matilda.......2008-02-29

    atilda Wormwood (Mara Wilson- Thomas and The Magic Railroad, A Simple Wish, Mrs Doubtfire) was born into a family that don't appreciate her. Her family are avid television watchers, but Matilda would prefer to curl up with a book.
    Her father (Danny DeVito- Mars Attacks) is a used car salesman who sells used cars at several times the true amount. He makes a deal with a headmistress of a school (Pam Ferris- The Darling Buds of May) that he gives her a car in exchange for Matilda attending her school. But Miss Trunchbull is a terrifying, evil woman who strikes fear into the heart of every child.
    But Matilda gains magic powers to take revenge on the wicked people in her life.
    This film is a lovely story with brilliant acting that you can watch again and again.

    5 out of 5 stars Little and Large.......2006-07-01

    This film is so good - for both kids and adults - that I think Dahl himself must be looking down from Heaven and smiling - after the rumours of what he felt about the production of The Witches. Some of the characterisations, sets and costumes could have been put together by the master of kitsch, Baz Luhrmann, and this is a testament to both Dahl's eye for detail and Danny DeVito's wicked sense of humour - and vice versa. Although in many ways the story has been changed and not least Americanised, Dahl's original book was rather short on substance, despite the fantastic plot, and DeVito's adaptation suits it much better than setting it in phlegmatic old England. Plus Miss Trunchbull as an Englishwoman adrift among Americans makes her character even more grotesque as she brings her curious brand of "English" discipline to an ordinary American suburb, and the way she mimics the cutesy American accents adds much more to her character than if the film had stayed set in England. And since it ends in the way Dahl intended it to - and indeed for fans of Quentin Blake's illustrations, the handwriting on the board is absolutely spot on to that pictured in the book itself, which shows DeVito is paying attention not only to the original but to critics of Americans making films of English children's classics - there is nothing for that peculiarly English snobbery about "disneyfication" to latch on to as there might have been with The Witches.

    Although DeVito's additions of the stupid FBI cops enhance the story (and prove that Matilda is just as smart with people who are supposedly on her side, which I loved and which makes her the sassiest heroine for a long time), there is sadly one bit that really annoyed me - Miss Honey. In the book she is down-to-earth, practical and nonchalant about her fate. In the film...ugh, I needed to do my teeth afterwards lest they fall out from all the sugary-sweet acting. From the moment she turns up on screen the film - while not completely ruined - takes a turn for the "unrealistic". I guess Miss Honey had to live up to her name, but Miss Saccharine would have been more appropriate. The stomach-churning episode with the doll and the chocolates is disappointing, but I suppose the film manages to pull it off - just about - with more of Dahl's refreshingly grim humour injected into it just as Honey becomes Honey Monster. I suppose for an American audience the heroine has to be whiter-than-white, but since I was raised on Quentin Blake's gawky bespectacled blue-stocking, I suppose someone coming to this film without the backhistory might not mind.

    But...the best thing about films of children's books, like with Narnia, is that the silver screen gives the chance for the characters to really come to life and details which would crowd a hundred-page novella can be added, and the film manages to create a whole world that is just as believable from Matilda's point of view as the Dahl version, without losing any of the master's sparkling wit or erudite points dropped in at a moment's notice. Bravissimo!

    5 out of 5 stars Great movie.......2006-06-17

    I have seen this film loads of times and I have read the book as well.It shows that you can be intelligent as a little kid,like Matilda.She is a very sweet little girl with a beautiful teacher called Miss Honey.In the end,they manage to get rid of Miss Trunchbull,the principal who is insane.She also happens to be Miss Honey's stepaunt.

    5 out of 5 stars Great film!!.......2006-01-04

    This is one of those great films that you can just watch over and over again, no matter what mood you're in. Pam Ferris plays Miss Trunchball wonderfully, and although this film has been Americanised in lots of ways, it is very well made. There are a couple of places where the special effects may make you laugh (when Trunchball swings Amanda Thripp into the air by her pigtails, in which the child looks like she's going down an invisible slide, arms outstrecthed!) but that just adds to the fun! Overall, it's a thoroughly enjoyable film. Well worth buying.
    Madeline/Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Review
    • Matilda
    • Little and Large
    • Great movie
    • Great film!!
    Madeline/Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
    Columbia Combo
    Manufacturer: Columbia TriStar
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

    All Comedy All Comedy | Comedy | Categories | DVD | Video
    All Family Favourites All Family Favourites | Family Favourites | Children's DVD | Categories | DVD | Video
    Region 1 Region 1 | Special Features | DVD | Video
    DVD DVD | Format (binding_browse-bin) | Refinements | DVD | Video
    Similar Items:
    1. Madeline [1999] Madeline [1999]
    2. James And The Giant Peach [1996] James And The Giant Peach [1996]
    3. The Witches [1989] The Witches [1989]
    4. Danny, The Champion Of The World [1989] Danny, The Champion Of The World [1989]
    5. Roald Dahls The BFG Big Friendly Giant [1989] Roald Dahls The BFG Big Friendly Giant [1989]

    ASIN: 0767840003
    Release Date: 1999-12-07
    Madeline/Matilda [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)

    Amazon.co.uk Review

    Danny DeVito's adaptation of the Roald Dahl book for children is mostly just fine, helped along quite a bit by the charming performance of Mara Wilson (Mrs Doubtfire) as the eponymous young Matilda, a brilliant girl neglected by her stupid, self-involved parents (DeVito and Rhea Perlman). Ignored at home, Matilda escapes into a world of reading, exercising her mind so much she develops telekinetic powers. Good thing, too: sent off to a school headed by a cruel principal, Matilda needs all the help she can get. DeVito takes a highly stylized approach that is sometimes reminiscent of Barry Sonnenfeld (director of Get Shorty, a DeVito production), and his judgement is not the best in some matters, such as letting the comic-scary sequences involving the principal go on too long. But much of the film is delightful and funny.--Tom Keogh

    Customer Reviews:

    3 out of 5 stars Review.......2008-03-05

    Film review of Matilda (1996)
    Star rating-\\\gg

    Matilda was originally written as a children¡¦s novel by Roald Dahl (tales of the unexpected) in 1988. His wry wit and humour certainly makes the book an enjoyable read and this humour still shows in Danny DeVito¡¦s movie version of the novel with a contrast of both American and English actors.

    The film is about a young girl called Matilda played wonderfully by Mara Wilson (Miss Doubtfire). Though at the time, Wilson was fairly new to the acting scene; her acting skills still comes across as charming.

    Another great actor in the film is the director, Danny DeVito (Mars Attacks), who also plays both the narrator and Matilda¡¦s father. DeVito is both clever and witty throughout the film and is guaranteed to make the viewer laugh.

    The storyline consists of an extremely bright young girl living with her incredibly stupid, television addicted parents (Danny DeVito and Rhea Pearlman) and equally cretinous brother (Brian Levinson) who do not realise the sheer genius in Matilda and basically neglect her. To get rid of Matilda, the parents bundle her off to Crunchem elementary school governed by what Roald Dahl describes as a ¡¥rather eccentric and bloodthirsty member of the stag hounds¡¦ who is played by Pam Ferris (Darling Buds of May). Her rather sarcastic English humour contrasts brilliantly to the American actors.

    The only flaw in the film is that in Matilda¡¦s home life, the atmosphere is in slight danger of becoming a little sit-com like. However, Danny DeVito¡¦s excellent narration skills solve this problem as he quotes lines from Roald Dahl¡¦s novel, making the film less American.

    Overall, I think that Matilda is a lovely, heart-warming film to be enjoyed by adults and children alike. It is especially warming when Rusted Root¡¦s ¡¥Send me on my way¡¦ is played to accompany the narration fading into the end credits.













    By Imogen Kupper

    5 out of 5 stars Matilda.......2008-02-29

    atilda Wormwood (Mara Wilson- Thomas and The Magic Railroad, A Simple Wish, Mrs Doubtfire) was born into a family that don't appreciate her. Her family are avid television watchers, but Matilda would prefer to curl up with a book.
    Her father (Danny DeVito- Mars Attacks) is a used car salesman who sells used cars at several times the true amount. He makes a deal with a headmistress of a school (Pam Ferris- The Darling Buds of May) that he gives her a car in exchange for Matilda attending her school. But Miss Trunchbull is a terrifying, evil woman who strikes fear into the heart of every child.
    But Matilda gains magic powers to take revenge on the wicked people in her life.
    This film is a lovely story with brilliant acting that you can watch again and again.

    5 out of 5 stars Little and Large.......2006-07-01

    This film is so good - for both kids and adults - that I think Dahl himself must be looking down from Heaven and smiling - after the rumours of what he felt about the production of The Witches. Some of the characterisations, sets and costumes could have been put together by the master of kitsch, Baz Luhrmann, and this is a testament to both Dahl's eye for detail and Danny DeVito's wicked sense of humour - and vice versa. Although in many ways the story has been changed and not least Americanised, Dahl's original book was rather short on substance, despite the fantastic plot, and DeVito's adaptation suits it much better than setting it in phlegmatic old England. Plus Miss Trunchbull as an Englishwoman adrift among Americans makes her character even more grotesque as she brings her curious brand of "English" discipline to an ordinary American suburb, and the way she mimics the cutesy American accents adds much more to her character than if the film had stayed set in England. And since it ends in the way Dahl intended it to - and indeed for fans of Quentin Blake's illustrations, the handwriting on the board is absolutely spot on to that pictured in the book itself, which shows DeVito is paying attention not only to the original but to critics of Americans making films of English children's classics - there is nothing for that peculiarly English snobbery about "disneyfication" to latch on to as there might have been with The Witches.

    Although DeVito's additions of the stupid FBI cops enhance the story (and prove that Matilda is just as smart with people who are supposedly on her side, which I loved and which makes her the sassiest heroine for a long time), there is sadly one bit that really annoyed me - Miss Honey. In the book she is down-to-earth, practical and nonchalant about her fate. In the film...ugh, I needed to do my teeth afterwards lest they fall out from all the sugary-sweet acting. From the moment she turns up on screen the film - while not completely ruined - takes a turn for the "unrealistic". I guess Miss Honey had to live up to her name, but Miss Saccharine would have been more appropriate. The stomach-churning episode with the doll and the chocolates is disappointing, but I suppose the film manages to pull it off - just about - with more of Dahl's refreshingly grim humour injected into it just as Honey becomes Honey Monster. I suppose for an American audience the heroine has to be whiter-than-white, but since I was raised on Quentin Blake's gawky bespectacled blue-stocking, I suppose someone coming to this film without the backhistory might not mind.

    But...the best thing about films of children's books, like with Narnia, is that the silver screen gives the chance for the characters to really come to life and details which would crowd a hundred-page novella can be added, and the film manages to create a whole world that is just as believable from Matilda's point of view as the Dahl version, without losing any of the master's sparkling wit or erudite points dropped in at a moment's notice. Bravissimo!

    5 out of 5 stars Great movie.......2006-06-17

    I have seen this film loads of times and I have read the book as well.It shows that you can be intelligent as a little kid,like Matilda.She is a very sweet little girl with a beautiful teacher called Miss Honey.In the end,they manage to get rid of Miss Trunchbull,the principal who is insane.She also happens to be Miss Honey's stepaunt.

    5 out of 5 stars Great film!!.......2006-01-04

    This is one of those great films that you can just watch over and over again, no matter what mood you're in. Pam Ferris plays Miss Trunchball wonderfully, and although this film has been Americanised in lots of ways, it is very well made. There are a couple of places where the special effects may make you laugh (when Trunchball swings Amanda Thripp into the air by her pigtails, in which the child looks like she's going down an invisible slide, arms outstrecthed!) but that just adds to the fun! Overall, it's a thoroughly enjoyable film. Well worth buying.
    Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas/Matilda/Hook [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas/Matilda/Hook [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
      Muppets
      Manufacturer: Columbia TriStar
      ProductGroup: DVD
      Binding: DVD

      All Family Favourites All Family Favourites | Family Favourites | Children's DVD | Categories | DVD | Video
      All Children's DVD All Children's DVD | Children's DVD | Categories | DVD | Video
      Region 1 Region 1 | Special Features | DVD | Video
      DVD DVD | Format (binding_browse-bin) | Refinements | DVD | Video
      Box Set Box Set | Format (binding_browse-bin) | Refinements | DVD | Video
      ASIN: B00006CXGJ
      Release Date: 2002-09-17
      Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas/Matilda/Hook [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
      Storybook Collection: Stuart Little/Matilda/Madeline [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        Storybook Collection: Stuart Little/Matilda/Madeline [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
        Storybook 3pak
        Manufacturer: Columbia TriStar
        ProductGroup: DVD
        Binding: DVD

        All Comedy All Comedy | Comedy | Categories | DVD | Video
        All Family Favourites All Family Favourites | Family Favourites | Children's DVD | Categories | DVD | Video
        Region 1 Region 1 | Special Features | DVD | Video
        DVD DVD | Format (binding_browse-bin) | Refinements | DVD | Video
        Box Set Box Set | Format (binding_browse-bin) | Refinements | DVD | Video
        ASIN: B00005LB89
        Release Date: 2001-07-31
        Storybook Collection: Stuart Little/Matilda/Madeline [1996] (REGION 1) (NTSC)

        DVD Review:

        1. Men In Black 2 [2002]
        2. Merlin: The Return [2000] (NTSC)
        3. Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie [1995] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
        4. Mutant X - Season 3 - Vol. 3
        5. Mutant X, Series 1 Vol. 1 [2001]
        6. My Stepmother Is an Alien [1988] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
        7. Night at the Museum [2006] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
        8. Once Upon a Christmas [2000] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
        9. Paycheck - Remember the Future [2004] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
        10. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest [2006] (REGION 1) (NTSC)

        DVD Review List

        DVD Review