Monday, April 16, 2012



Bryan Hynes
 Dear Mr Weinstein,
     This is a letter about the movie Hoodwinked Too. You asked me to evaluate the movie and decide whether or not you should spend the money to release this nation wide. In case you don’t remember, this movie mixes traditional fairy tale characters into one in a humorous way. I think you should spend the money on this movie because of its great originality. The movie does a great job at fracturing the traditional fairy tales they mix together. Some of the main characters in the movie are from the story Little Red Riding Hood. Like Red, Her Grandmother, and the Wolf. Except the Wolf isn't actually trying to eat them, he’s helping them stop the evil characters in the movie. Hansel and Gretel are also apart of this, but they aren't just two innocent little children trying to find their way back home. They are actually the evil masterminds in the movie. Hansel and Gretel also get help from The Three Little Pigs who actually work for them. The pigs have high tech guns and gear throughout the movie that they use to fight against Red and her partners. Too bad they didn't have that when the big bad Wolf blew their house down. The movie also uses the traditional fairy tale characteristics and makes fun of it a little. Like when the Wolf starts to tell us where Red is, he continuously says that she is far, far, far away. Making fun of the fact that traditional fairy tales usually say that someone or something is very far away. The movie has a narrator and it even has a magic or enchanted Item that everybody wants too, like most fairy tales. It has a lot of magic in it and forests where people live. But it also has a modern day sort of fracture added into it. There is a big city in the movie, with trains, cars, and helicopters. The fairy tale characters and animals have cell phones and tv’s. Just like normal people in the real world would have.  So in conclusion, I think you should spend the money to have this movie released nation wide. It has a lot of originality and creativity all throughout the movie. And it even has humor mixed in with the traditional fairy tales.
    Sincerely, Bryan Hynes.

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