Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. (L to R) Lil Rel Howery Moose Benjamin Bottani Mel and Zachary Levi Harold in Columbia Pictures HAROLD AND THE PURPLE CRAYON In a ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. “Harold and the Purple Crayon” is a picture book — now a movie — about the importance of imagination. So let’s try to imagine ...
Jeff Ewing is a critic, entertainment journalist, interviewer, and screenwriter in LA with a life-long love of horror and film history. He has an M.S. in Sociology from the University of Oregon, and a ...
It’s very easy to understand why kids might love a picture book about a curious four-year-old whose purple crayon gives him the power to create anything he can think to draw. On the other hand, it’s ...
Growing up, I loved the children’s novel “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.” So when the Hollywood film version came along, you’d better believe I was primed. Like the book, the movie was about a family with a ...
When we meet him, Harold is a cartoon boy with a purple crayon who can draw anything he wants, including his two best friends: Moose (a moose) and Porcupine (a porcupine). Together, they live in a 2D ...
It’s not the sort of family film you’ll wax lyrical about, but there’s enough colorful, chaotic, kid-friendly fun to amply entertain. Why you can trust GamesRadar+ Our experts review games, movies and ...
“Harold and the Purple Crayon” is a picture book — now a movie — about the importance of imagination. So let’s try to imagine something together, shall we? Let’s all imagine a film starring Zooey ...
Zachary Levi plays Harold, a man who has been able to draw his whole life with a purple crayon. He lives in a world he created and has the power to control his existence to an extent but when he ...
In the 1955 picture book “Harold and the Purple Crayon,” a small boy finds he can will anything into existence by simply drawing it with his magical implement. The movie version suggests a certain ...
Maybe it’s unfair to call out a bizarre, ugly, unlikable live-action rendition of a beloved children’s book like Harold and the Purple Crayon, for being illogical. It is, after all, a visual-effects ...