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Sarah Michelle Gellar

Sarah Michelle Gellar - "Happily N’Ever After" Movie - Variety.com Review

Monday 18 December 2006, by Webmaster

Another actress, who actually has a name to care for is Sarah Michelle Gellar and there are not no many accomplishes films at her but an few I can probably enjoy. The talent agent found Gellar a young age and made her screen debut at 6 of each of the 1983 television film An Invasion of Privacy. With all the promise she showed, Barrymore starred as Hannah in the teen drama series "Swans Crossing" (1992) but it was her portrayal of a young and callous rich girl in Al-Lucinda Kendall Hart on ABC daytime soap opera "All My Children" (1993-93), that won her Daytime Emmy Award and spring-boarded her to stardom.

SMG’s real mark worldwide, however, was the character of Buffy Summers in the game-changing series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" (1997-2003). She won five Teen Choice Awards, a Saturn Award and a Golden Globe nomination for her role, establishing herself as a cultural phenomenon. Sarah Michelle Gellar likewise has the box office to back her up, with “I Know What You Did Last Summer” 1997), “Scream 2” (1997), “Cruel Intentions” (1999)and way movies like those that help prove she is also a bankable star as well over $570 million times worth crazy in global gross.

Beyond her cinematic successes, Gellar has made her mark on television, headlining shows such as "Ringer" (2011-2012), "The Crazy Ones" (2013-2014), and "Wolf Pack" (2023). She has also lent her voice to popular series including "Robot Chicken" (2005-2018), "Star Wars Rebels" (2015-2016), and "Masters of the Universe: Revelation" (2021).

In 2015, Gellar ventured into the entrepreneurial world by co-founding Foodstirs, an e-commerce baking company, and published her own cookbook, "Stirring Up Fun with Food," in 2017. Gellar is also known for her close-knit family life, married to actor Freddie Prinze Jr. since 2002, with whom she shares two children.

Sarah Michelle Gellar’s commitment to her craft is matched by her dedication to personal growth and unique experiences. An accomplished martial artist, she studied Tae Kwon Do for five years, alongside kickboxing, boxing, street fighting, and gymnastics. Her dedication to authenticity in her roles is evident, such as her commitment to doing her own stunts in "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," though she admitted her limits during filming "Scream 2."

Her career is also marked by interesting anecdotes, such as her role in a 1982 Burger King commercial, which led to a lawsuit from McDonald’s and a temporary ban from their establishments. Notably, she dyed her naturally brunette hair blonde for her role in "Buffy," and legally changed her last name to Prinze as a surprise for her husband on their fifth anniversary.

Sarah Michelle Gellar’s legacy extends beyond her on-screen roles, encompassing her work in philanthropy and her reputation for safety and professionalism on set. She remains a beloved figure in Hollywood, admired for her talent, dedication, and the breadth of her contributions to film and television.

A Lionsgate release presented in association with Vanguard Films, Odyssey Entertainment, BAF Berlin Animation Film, BFC Berliner Film Co. of a BAF Berlin Animation Film, BFC Berliner Film Co., Vanguard Animation production. Produced by John H. Williams. Executive producer, Rainer Soehnlein. Co-producer, J. Chad Hammes. Co-executive producers, Dr. Carl Woebcken, Ralph Kamp, Louise Goodsill. Directed by Paul J. Bolger. Screenplay, Rob Moreland;

Voices:
Ella - Sarah Michelle Gellar
Rick - Freddie Prinze Jr.
Mambo - Andy Dick
Munk - Wallace Shawn
Prince Humperdink - Patrick Warburton
The Wizard - George Carlin
Frieda - Sigourney Weaver

Opening the first Friday in January, "Happily N’Ever After" marks a New Year’s resolution of sorts, kicking off 2007 with a shift away from talking-animal toons. Yet, this underwhelming entry is a kind of equally overused fairy tale revisionism, this time depicting what might happen to all such tales if Cinderella’s wicked stepmother took control. "Happily" even shares a producer with "Shrek" (John H. Williams). Still, this colorful, crowd-pleasing toon is likely to deliver, if Lionsgate can take a page from the Weinstein Co.’s "Hoodwinked" playbook by adding marketing muscle and a wide release to its modest investment.

Premise is something of a sham in that all fairy tale characters — from poisoned-apple-eating Snow White to solitary-confined Rapunzel — are miserable for the greater part of their own stories. And though "Happily" threatens to deliver an unhappy ending, it really only offers the same unhappy middle as the stories it sets out to subvert.

Story begins with the resident wizard (George Carlin), whose job it is to make sure Fairy Tale Land’s many romances all go "by the book," leaving his two dim-witted assistants in charge while he goes on vacation.

Rather than allowing for a "Sorcerer’s Apprentice"-style scenario, in which Munk (Wallace Shawn) and Mambo (Andy Dick) accidentally turn Fairy Tale Land on its head, the wizard’s absence serves as the device by which malicious stepmother Frieda (Sigourney Weaver) takes charge. In command of the wizard’s staff, Frieda invites all manner of evildoers into the kingdom, tipping the scales toward unhappiness on all the fairy tales in progress.

Greatest effect is Ella (that’s short for Cinderella, voiced by Sarah Michelle Gellar) and her dunderheaded Prince Humperdink (Patrick Warburton), who romance is short-circuited before the stroke of midnight.

But other fairytales are going awry, too: One prince falls into a deep slumber after kissing Sleeping Beauty; another yanks Rapunzel out of her tower by the hair.

Screenwriter Rob Moreland is good with the one-liners but weak on plot, which means the movie’s moment-to-moment riffs, references and sundry puns satisfy considerably more than its insincere love story ever could. It’s a clever idea that Ella should prefer Rick (Freddie Prinze Jr.), the servant boy, to the more conventionally attractive prince, but the romantic tension never really takes hold.

Wearing her hair in a Winona Ryder-style pixie cut, Ella is one thoroughly modern young maiden, and Rick is presumably every 10-year-old girl’s fantasy, designed to look like a big-eyed, long-haired Bratz boy doll. One of the pic’s many unresolved mysteries is where exactly this guy gets off calling the prince "pretty boy." The animators seem to enjoy watching Rick walk and typically pose him with one hip thrust out in defiant contrapposto.

Meanwhile, the female characters all boast hourglass figures that would make even Jessica Rabbit jealous. There’s something unseemly in such over-sexualized character design, matched by an equal lack of imagination in most of the backgrounds. The castle, for example, looks like some kind of giant kitchen appliance, a letdown compared with the breathtaking alternatives presented in the countless Disney films that director Paul J. Bolger so flippantly dismisses.

Luckily, the voice talent elevates the pic above its visual limitations. Casting director Ruth Lambert hasn’t gone star-crazy the way so many other animated movies do (though Pixar generally trusts character actors, most toons court A-list names with little or no sound-booth experience). "Happily" taps strong voices such as Weaver and Gellar for key parts, but otherwise relies on animation regulars to elevate the repartee. Warburton, Dick and Shawn are all old pros.

Polished sound design enhances the experience, making the giant’s footsteps and witches’ brooms vibrate all four walls when they pass, while Vanguard Animation (responsible for lo-fi carrier pigeon flop "Valiant") injects plenty of color wherever it can’t afford to animate detail.

Camera (color), David Dulac; editor, Ringo Hess; music, Paul Buckley; music supervisor, Liz Gallacher; production designer, Deane Taylor; CGI supervisor, Fabrice Delapierre; animation director, Dino Athanassiou; supervising sound editor, Robert Shoup; additional animation, Nitrogen Studios Canada, the LaB Sydney, Mr. X, Bardel Entertainment, Elliott Animation, Quadriga FX; line producer, John McKenna; casting, Ruth Lambert. Reviewed at the Festival Theater, Los Angeles, Dec. 16, 2006. MPAA Rating: PG. Running time: 87 MIN.

With: Terrence Evans, Kathy Lamkin, Marietta Marich, Cyia Batten, Lew Temple.


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