Imagine That (2009)
Director: Karey Kirkpatrick
Movie review
From Time Out Chicago
“He used to be a king,” Olivia (Shahidi) says of her dad, Evan (Murphy), in the opening moments of Imagine That.
King of what? “Nowhereland.” Which is to say Evan’s a harried financial
executive, and this is another loathsome family comedy in which a busy
father is made to feel like a horrible parent until he abandons earning
money and conforms to his child’s every whim. This kind of ritual
castration is a mainstay of such kid-friendly fare, and it has extra
venom here given the current financial meltdown (unmentioned but
unavoidable).
The plot—high-concept whimsy wherein Olivia’s blanket and imaginary friends give awesome financial advice, bringing Evan closer to his daughter when he reaps the benefit of their wisdom—is no big deal. Youngsters will probably be fine with Eddie Murphy’s unamusing mugging and “Hakuna matata” quoting; for dads, it’s undoubtedly grating that the big meeting is always scheduled against the school concert. Responsible parenting is apparently the willingness to look like an idiot in public and driving recklessly to make it to school on time. Only Thomas Haden Church emerges with any credit, as a shifty Native American adviser who thanks investors for “letting me bring my venison to your potlatch.”
Author: Vadim Rizov
Time Out Chicago
Cast & crew
Director: Karey Kirkpatrick
Cast: Eddie Murphy, Yara Shahidi, Thomas Haden Church
Genre(s): Children's, Comedy
Rated: PG
Duration: 106 mins
US Release: Jun 12 2009
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