Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax parents guide

Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax Parent Guide

While the message often feels heavy-handed, the filmmakers have festooned this tale with stunning 3D animation, idyllic forest creatures and enough side jokes to entertain most kids and adults.

Overall B

Audrey (voice of Taylor Swift) is in love with trees. And Ted (voice of Zac Efron) is in love with Audrey. Because there are no trees anymore, Ted decides to impress Audrey by trying to find out what happened to the amazing plants -- which means talking to The Once-ler (voice of Ed Helms), the only creature that might know.

Release date March 1, 2012

Violence B
Sexual Content A-
Profanity A-
Substance Use A+

Why is Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax rated PG? The MPAA rated Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax PG for brief mild language.

Run Time: 86 minutes

Official Movie Site

Parent Movie Review

Twelve-year-old Ted (voice of Zac Efron) lives on a perfectly manicured street lined with blow-up bushes, battery-operated trees and plastic flowers that never fade. Typical of many tween boys, he’s wildly infatuated with the high school girl that lives in the neighborhood. Like any guy overcome with adolescent yearning, he’s willing to do almost anything to win her affection.

In this case, what Audrey (voice of Taylor Swift) wants more than anything is to see a real tree.

Sneaking outside the shield of Thneed-Ville’s city walls, Ted rides his motorized bike through a stinky, decimated, stump-strewn landscape until he comes to the home of the Once-ler (voice by Ed Helms). Coaxing information out of the hermit with a payment of “15 cents, a nail and the shell of a great, great, great grandfather snail”, Ted discovers the disturbing truth behind the disappearance of the colorful, cotton candy-shaped Truffula tress.

Setting out to make his fortune, The Once-ler had big dreams. But he was no Johnny Appleseed. Instead he allowed himself to be overcome by ambition. And while he cut down the forest in the name of progress, the mysterious Lorax (voice by Danny DeVito), guardian of the trees, stood by needling the boy’s conscience with a mournful look.

Fueling kids’ films with an environmental message isn’t bad. Hopefully if anything, it will inspire the next generation to solve today’s problems. But settling for oversimplified, polarizing answers is unfair. “Plant a tree, save the world” likely won’t cut it when it comes to developing environmentally sustainable solutions for the future.

On the other hand, while the message often feels heavy-handed (and may be as controversial as the book was when it released in 1971), the filmmakers have festooned this tale with stunning 3D animation, idyllic forest creatures and enough side jokes to entertain most kids and adults. And though Dr. Seuss’ gloomy fable of the Lorax falls far short of providing any balanced, real world remedies, with any luck it may encourage families to talk about steps they can personally take to curb their own consumerism and preserve nature in their own backyards.

Directed by Chris Renaud, Kyle Balda. Starring Zac Efron, Taylor Swift, Danny DeVito, Ed Helms, Betty White, Rob Riggle. Running time: 86 minutes. Theatrical release March 1, 2012. Updated

Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax
Rating & Content Info

Why is Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax rated PG? Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax is rated PG by the MPAA for brief mild language.

Violence: The film contains numerous depictions of slapstick and cartoon-like violence. A man is knocked over when a large inflatable explodes. A tween is almost injured by abandoned axes. Characters are kicked, slapped, hit on the head, smacked with objects, threatened, shocked from static, punched, and put in peril. Animals are exposed to environmental toxins and enticed with junk food.

Sexual Content: A boy imagines kissing a girl. Later she pecks him on the cheek.

Language: Some mild name-calling is included.

Alcohol / Drug Use: None noted.

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Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax Parents' Guide

The film targets big business as the villain but what role do consumers play? Would the Once-ler’s factory have grown so big if people weren’t demanding his product? How can individuals encourage more environmentally sound business practices among suppliers?

Does the Lorax ever offer suggestions or ideas for compromise? Is he too passive to be a true guardian of the forest? What are positive things he could have done to encourage the Once-ler to employ sustainable policies? How do logging practices depicted in this movie compare with today? Terri Birkett, an active member of the hardwood flooring industry, wrote a children’s book in the style of Dr. Seuss entitled Truax to tell the story from that industry’s perspective.

In a February 8, 2012 press release, Universal Studios unveiled a number of businesses and organizations it is partnering with in the production of the movie. Do you think this is a positive green initiative from a large corporation like Universal? What, if any, effect do you think this might have on improving the environment? What kind of waste is generated by the movie business? Are there any ways theaters could lessen the amount of garbage produced?

To learn more about Theodor Seuss Geisel (the man who took on the pen-name Dr. Seuss), and discover interesting facts about the children’s books he created, check this website: http://www.seussville.com

Home Video

The most recent home video release of Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax movie is August 7, 2012. Here are some details…

Home Video Notes: Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax

Release Date: 7 August 2012

Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax release to home video (DVD and Blu-ray) with the following bonus extras:

- Directors’ Commentary

- 3 Mini Movies

- Making of the Mini Movies

- Deleted Scene

- Seuss to Screen

- Seuss It Up

- Truffula Run Game

- “Let It Grow” Sing-Along

- Once-Ler’s Wagon

Exclusive HD Content

- Get Out of Town Game

- O’Hare TV

- Expedition to Truffula Valley

Related home video titles:

The directors and screenwriter of this animation also worked together creating the movieDespicable Me. Dr. Seuss penned the stories behind these films: The Grinch Who Stole Christmas (the 1966 animation), The Grinch Who Stole Christmas (the 2000 live-action version) Cat in The Hat and Horton Hears a Who.

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