Hotel Transylvania

The first feature by Cartoon Network auteur Genndy Tartakovsky is a two-headed monster - part idiosyncratic romp, part pro forma studio product.

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Hotel Transylvania

City Paper Grade: B+

The first feature by Cartoon Network auteur Genndy Tartakovsky features the voices of Andy Samberg and Selena Gomez as Johnnystein and Mavis.
The first feature by Cartoon Network auteur Genndy Tartakovsky features the voices of Andy Samberg and Selena Gomez as Johnnystein and Mavis.

The first feature by Cartoon Network auteur Genndy Tartakovsky (Dexter’s Laboratory, Samurai Jack) is a two-headed monster — part idiosyncratic romp, part pro forma studio product. Tartakovsky, the sixth director on Sony’s breech-birthed baby, is at his best in Hotel Transylvania’s frenzied opening set piece, as vacationing monsters pour into the human-safe hotel run by Adam Sandler’s Dracula, here a mild-mannered dad desperate to keep his 100-and-teenage daughter (Selena Gomez) from venturing into the world. As werewolves collide with mummies, narrowly dodging Bigfoot — represented, of course, as a giant foot — the movie pinwheels through 3D space, gloriously free from the coming-of-age plot that eventually straitjackets it.

The script, credited to five writers (including Robert Smigel — no wonder Drac sounds like Triumph the Insult Comic Dog), is a jumbled affair, best when it’s riffing out zingers, worst when it’s dragged, zombie-like, back to the by-the-numbers storyline. It’s not a satisfying whole, but parts are sheer delight. Think of it as the product of Tex Avery and Dr. Frankenstein.

(s_adams@citypaper.net) (@samuelaadams)

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