Cast: Adam Sandler, Keri Russell, Guy Pearce, Courteney Cox
Director: Adam Shankman
On the face of it, ‘Bedtime Stories’ is one of those stories told at bedtime: safe, comforting and predictable. But there is a topping: it has Adam Sandler, a hero whose main virtue isn’t his looks, kingdom or valour but a likeability that helps you overlook all of it. He is Shrek, with an “ass” by his side.
Plus, it has two children whose smiles don’t overlast ours.
So the story of a hotel handyman with dreams of one day owning a hotel of his own, and his fanciful bedtime stories to his nephew and niece which come real isn’t as implausible as it sounds. Sandler’s cheery earnestness stands him in good stead — you want what he wants, for he doesn’t want for wanting it. He adroitly strikes the right note even with the children.
Sandler’s Skeeter Branson doesn’t have much experience with them but an interaction doesn’t really throw his world upside down. Branson just follows a simple rule: do what he did, and liked, in his childhood. Yes, it still works!
As for Branson’s ambitions, he isn’t maudlin about it. Life is good, it could be better. Who can argue with that, especially with magical luck helping?
The two women, Russell (the children’s teacher-cum-guardian) and Teresa Palmer (Paris Hilton with a heart of silver, if not gold), don’t really have much to do except figure in Branson’s stories. Courteney Cox doesn’t figure at all.
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