Metacritic Film

Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium

Starring Dustin Hoffman, Natalie Portman, and Jason Bateman

MPAA RATING: G for General Audiences

20th Century Fox
Comedy  |  Family/Kids  |  Fantasy
93 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters November 16, 2007

After inheriting Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium, Molly Mahoney struggles to preserve the magic of the amazing toy store.

WRITTEN BY
Zach Helm

DIRECTED BY
Zach Helm

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

48 / 100

Critic Reviews

83 Christian Science Monitor
At its best, the movie makes you feel like a kindred spirit.
75 Chicago Tribune
Twenty or 30 minutes into Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium the urge to flee may rise within you like an oceanic tide. But stick with it. The film is very sweet--in fact it represents the dawn of a new sport, Extreme Whimsy.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
Hoffman has countless characters inside of him, and this is one of his nicest.
75 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
It's not "The Wizard of Oz," and its cotton-candy fantasy of a story line is definitely aimed at very young children. But it's well made, and adults likely will find themselves yielding to its gentle, whimsical charm.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
Helm gets huge bonus points for noticing everything that's annoying about modern children's films and including none of those things in his movie.
75 Portland Oregonian
Kids will enjoy the experience overall: It's a little messy and undercooked, but still vastly more imaginative and entertaining than junk like "Fred Claus."
70 Chicago Reader
Credit production designer Therese DePrez and set decorator Clive Thomasson for the marvelous setting, a charmed building with a life of its own.
63 TV Guide
This isn't your usual kiddie fare: Beneath the initial glare and blare is a quietly literate script by first-time writer-director Zach Helm that deals directly with big issues like believing in yourself and living on after a loved one passes away. But is it heavy? Not really.
63 USA Today
Writer/director Zach Helm, who wrote "Stranger Than Fiction," achieves bursts of charm and whimsy, but not quite enough magic to elicit a consistent sense of wonderment.
63 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Semi-wonderful at best.
60 Empire
Structurally it’s a bit ragtag, but, as your mum would say, it has its heart in the right place. For all its wilful oddness it’s enchanting, imaginative and genuinely moving.
50 ReelViews
There's something a little annoying about a movie that tries this shamelessly to be endearing and family friendly.
50 Philadelphia Inquirer
In this G-rated movie the effects are gee-whiz, with live giraffes amid the stuffed animals and bouncy balls so manic that they could use some Ritalin.
50 Los Angeles Times
While endearingly heartfelt and G-rated to boot, its storytelling suffers from a lack of locomotive force and characters that feel disappointingly two-dimensional.
50 Boston Globe
About a magical toy shop, but it has some of the sadder moments I've seen in a movie all year.
50 New York Post
There isn't anything terribly exciting or original on offer in the somewhat poky directing debut of screenwriter Zach Helm.
50 The New York Times
If the concept is ingenious, its execution is erratic.
50 New York Daily News
It's hard to escape the feeling that what Zach Helm's directorial debut really wants to be is "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory." But where Roald Dahl's story was brilliantly eccentric and respectfully unsentimental, Helm's is heavy with strained zaniness and hazy morality.
50 Variety
Sprinkles in charming moments but ultimately doesn't evoke enough wonderment to overcome its tongue-twisting title and completely win over adults along with kids.
50 Village Voice Ella Taylor
Helm's pacing is as pallid as his palette is vivid, and for a movie that celebrates wonder and strangeness, the whole enterprise feels coy and half-baked.
50 The Hollywood Reporter
For all its playful touches and neat-o nostalgia for nondigital entertainment, the whimsy feels forced.
42 The Onion (A.V. Club)
The idea of a toy store as a living, responsive being is a good one, but Helm doesn't take that idea to imaginative places.
30 Austin Chronicle Josh Rosenblatt
The film’s one saving grace is Bateman, the only actor on set who seems unwilling to give himself over to Magorium’s philosophy that the key to a fulfilling life can only be found in pathological regression. Maybe he just needs more whimsy in his life.
30 Washington Post
The movie, directed (and written) by Zach Helm in grotesquely bright colors, means to approach the creepy wonder of Roald Dahl but gets only the creepy part right.
25 Premiere Laura Repstad
For a movie built around a brightly-colored, magical toy store, Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium is surprisingly forgettable. In fact, it's most wondrous feat is just how it manages to waste good actors and fine performances.
0 Entertainment Weekly
Mr. Magorium, who is 243 years old (so are his jokes), is a cross between Willy Wonka and Geppetto, but Hoffman plays him with little more than a goofy dumb lisp, achieved by tucking his lower lip under his upper teeth, so that he looks just as rabbity-stoopid as he sounds.

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