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Stuart Little

1999 · Directed by Rob Minkoff

🧘4

Woke Score

61

Critic

🍿64

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 57 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #872 of 1469.

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Synopsis

When the Littles adopt Stuart, the mouse, George is initially unwelcoming to his new brother, and the family cat, Snowbell, is even less enthusiastic. Stuart resolves to face these difficulties with as much pluck and courage as he can muster.

Consciousness Assessment

Stuart Little arrives as a perfectly functional artifact of late 1990s family entertainment, a film so thoroughly unconcerned with progressive sensibilities that it functions almost as a historical document. The narrative centers on a white mouse adopted into a white family, a premise that generates no particular cultural commentary and asks for none. Geena Davis moves through the film with competence and warmth, but her presence registers as the default state of a functional adult rather than as any statement about gender roles or representation.

The film's moral landscape remains entirely conventional. Stuart's journey involves learning courage, overcoming family discord through earnest effort, and the triumph of pluck over circumstance. These are timeless family film values, neither progressive nor regressive, simply the accumulated wisdom of children's entertainment from an earlier era. Rob Minkoff's direction prioritizes charm and spectacle over any engagement with social themes, and the voice acting (particularly Michael J. Fox's earnest mouse) commits fully to the fantasy without winking at contemporary concerns.

What emerges is a film fundamentally indifferent to modern cultural consciousness, which may well be its greatest strength as entertainment. The absence of preachy messaging or progressive positioning allows the simple pleasures of a talking mouse adventure to exist without apology. In the landscape of contemporary family cinema, such unconcern feels almost radical.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

61%from 32 reviews
New York Daily News88

Parents, who are more apt to be bored by the simple story line, are going to be amazed nevertheless by the smooth, convincing animation that lends Stuart his lifelike physicality and expressive facial gestures.

Jack MathewsRead Full Review →
New York Post88

Such astounding computer-generated effects you'll suspend disbelief and root for the hero, a 3-inch talking mouse.

Lou LumenickRead Full Review →
Charlotte Observer88

Charming Stuart Little improves on original tale.

Lawrence ToppmanRead Full Review →
Dallas Observer30

Forces its snuggly weirdo upon us and instructs us from the get-go to love him.

Gregory WeinkaufRead Full Review →