The beautiful thing about fantasies is that they have absolutely no limitations. If you can dream it, then it’s a fantasy, so more power to you. But the problem with fantasy movies is that, like most movies, they tend to conform to the tropes of an established genre. So we get an awful lot of films that recycle the same types of characters, monsters and plot points, even though – by their very definition as “fantasy” stories – they should have the freedom to do any damned thing they want.
That’s a big part of why Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of Road Dahl’s The BFG is a rare and beautiful treasure. Here at last is a fantasy film with state of the art visual effects, and one that doesn’t seem beholden anything else that came before it. It is a movie about giant monsters that is told almost entirely through meaningful conversations between dear friends, who are busying themselves with their hobbies. It sounds almost entirely non-commercial, and that’s exactly what it is, and as such it feels like a gasp of life-affirming freedom.
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Walt Disney Pictures
Ruby Barnhill plays Sophie, an orphan with a serious case of insomnia, who notices a giant man in a cloak skulking through the streets of London in the middle of the night. The giant snatches her from her bed and absconds to Giant Country, where he reveals himself to be a charming old fussbudget with a wonky with way words, play (via motion capture) by Mark Rylance. The Big Friendly Giant – or just “The BFG,” if you’re into the whole brevity thing – has no ill-intentions towards Sophie. He was just worried that if she told the adults that she saw a giant, he would have a pitchforks and torches situation on his hands.
Besides, he’s lonely. Giant Country is populated entirely by The BFG and a handful of brutish, child-eating giants who like to bully our skittish friend every chance they get.
Sophie, having nothing better to do (since being an orphan isn’t the end all, be all of her existence) decides to stick around with The BFG and eventually discovers that he has a wonderful pastime: he collects and constructs dreams, and gives happy ones away to humans in the middle of the night, in recompense for all the scariness his fellow giants have brought to the world over the centuries.
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Walt Disney Pictures
There is an overpowering kindness to The BFG that cannot, and most importantly should not be ignored. Although Spielberg’s film has a couple of scary bits, the implication of practically every frame is that everything is going to be okay. It is an assurance that doesn’t feel false and doesn’t seem to pander. It is an assurance made by an inventor of pleasant dreams, brought to life by a filmmaker who – in turn – is in the process of giving us a very pleasant dream.
So sweet and so unusual is The BFG, that even farts – the basest form of humor imaginable – manage to be endearing again (assuming they ever were). The BFG and his giant brethren drink a magical beverage called Frobscottle, in which the bubbles float down instead of upwards. The result is a mighty, green, propulsive fart that sends the imbiber into the air, whether they are a giant, a human, a dog or even The Queen. And these scenes play out not with the condescension of a so-called “mature” film that’s taking the easy way out, but with the lightness of jokes told by young children who, at worst, just don’t know any better. They are innocent fun, presented with innocent glee.
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Walt Disney Pictures
The BFG doesn’t rocket towards a pulse-pounding conclusion. It takes the time to let the characters talk, and not always about something that’s important to the plot. Just when any other movie would be ramping up, The BFG invites you to slow down and appreciate just how lovely its characters are, because its characters are genuinely lovely. The BFG himself is a wonderful old codger, Sophie has an infectious moxie, and even The Queen – who shows up eventually, played by Penelope Wilton – personifies what ever child assumes The Queen should be: a powerful, kind, solver of problems.
Steven Spielberg himself has solved a problem that not everybody had even diagnosed. He has brought vitality back into a stodgy genre, by adapting an unusual tale to the screen, with its essential unusualness intact. The BFG is light to the point of being luminous. It is a fantastic fantasy.
Ten Unforgettable Giant Movies:
Top Photo: Walt Disney Pictures
William Bibbiani (everyone calls him ‘Bibbs’) is Crave’s film content editor and critic. You can hear him every week on The B-Movies Podcast and Canceled Too Soon, and watch him on the weekly YouTube series Most Craved, Rapid Reviews and What the Flick. Follow his rantings on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani.
The Ten Most Memorable Movie Giants
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Gulliver's Travels (1939)
The second feature-length animated movie (after Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs) was an adaptation of the first part of Jonathan Swift's fantasy classic, in which a shipwrecked man finds himself on an island where the inhabitants are all really, really tiny. This version of Gulliver's Travels is strange and historically significant, and worth watching.
Photo: Fleischer Studios
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The Amazing Colossal Man (1957)
A soldier is caught in a nuclear weapons test, and begins to grow exponentially in size in Bert I. Gordon's The Amazing Colossal Man. The visual effects waffle between competent and silly, but the film is an honest attempt to inject pathos into a bizarre storyline, and has more of an emotional impact than you might think.
Photo: American International Pictures
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Attack of the 50 Foot Woman (1958)
Depending on your perspective, Attack of the 50 Foot Woman is either sexist or feminist, telling the story of an heiress with a philandering husband, whom nobody believes when she says she had an alien encounter. While the men all talk about having her committed, she turns into a giant and exacts her revenge. The film takes too long to get going, but it's an intriguing cultural curio from any perspective.
Photo: Allied Artists Pictures Corporation
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The Princess Bride (1987)
Andre the Giant may be small compared to the other fictional giants on this list, but at 7'4" he towered over practically everybody in the real world. He appeared in a few films, but his scene-stealing performance in the fantasy classic The Princess Bride will ensure that the late, great wrestling star will live on in our hearts forever.
Photo: 20th Century Fox
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The BFG (1989)
Before Steven Spielberg took a crack at Roald Dahl's gigantic children's story, an animated TV movie was produced in the late 1980s, and it's a very sweet adaptation of a very sweet tale that stars David Janson (Danger Mouse, Duckula) as the title character, a big friendly giant who befriends an orphan child.
Photo: Celebrity Home Entertainment
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Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman (1993)
The arguably feminist original film was remade into a full-fledged feminist allegory by Waiting for Guffman director Christopher Guest, in an early HBO original movie that boasted (for the time) superior visual effects. Still campy, but still fun.
Photo: HBO
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Dude, Where's My Car? (2000)
The cult favorite Dude, Where's My Car stars Ashton Kutcher and Seann William Scott as lovable dopes who piece together an incredibly eventful, but totally forgotten night of partying. Naturally, it all ends with a giant attractive woman attacking our heroes at an arcade. One more memorably dumb joke in a memorably dumb comedy.
Photo: 20th Century Fox
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Monsters vs. Aliens
An animated homage to 1950s monster movies stars Reese Witherspoon as the voice of Ginormica, a woman who gains her independence after growing 50 feet tall, losing her fiancé and saving the planet from an alien menace, with a team of friendly monsters by her side. A fun genre throwback made with a lot of energy and heart.
Photo: Paramount Pictures
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Captain America: Civil War (2016)
All of the Marvel Studios heroes (well, almost all of them) come to blows in the middle of Captain America: Civil War, and it's an action sequence for the ages. Perhaps the best moment comes when Ant-Man puts his shrinking powers into reverse and grows into Giant Man, to the shock and awe of his fellow superheroes.
Photo (from Ant-Man): Marvel Studios
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The BFG (2016)
Steven Spielberg brought state of the art visual effects to Roald Dahl's children's story, bringing The BFG to life like never before, in a beautifully acted and heartwarming production. Mark Rylance and Ruby Barnhill are terrific in a movie that defies blockbuster conventions.
Photo: Walt Disney