LET THE WILD SPOILERS START
I cut Jonze and Eggers some slack in adapting a kids' picture book with minimal plot into a feature-length film. But they ripped that slack right out of my hands and then raped my childhood. Maurice Sendak's book is the sweet story of a wild kid who runs away in his imagination to a world where he can do anything he wants. But he comes to realize that he needs limits and that those limits are part of his parents' love. It's a simple story, very well told.
The movie version is another beast entirely. It does get some things right. Among them:
It looks beautiful
The callbacks/linkages/echoes between the stuff that happens in the real world -- Max's boat on bedsheet waves/the real boat and waves; the snowball fight and the dirt-clod fight; the similarities between Max's problems and Carol's
Little details, like Max's wolf suit, or the fact that the beasts pull the scepter and crown out of a pile of bones.
Max's performance -- the kid is great
But the film makes several unforgiveable missteps.
First, it's scary as hell, particularly for a kids' film. While there's nothing wrong with having SOME scary bits in a kids' movie (the tunnel/boat scene in the original WILLY WONKA come to mind), this film has way too much of that, including a highly disturbing bit in which Carol rips Douglas' arm off and dust comes out.
Second, there's almost no plot to speak of, and there's certainly nothing driving the story. Max gets to the land of the Wild Things, becomes king, then builds a fort, has a dirt-clod fight, and leaves. There's very little conflict, no goals, no tasks. No nothing.
Adapting a slight, thirty-page book is tough. But it would've been easy to do something like (this is off the top of my head, so it's rough)
Max lands on the island of Wild Things, the W.T.s take his boat, he's about to get eaten
He lies in order to become king and forestall death
He tries to get to his boat to leave, the WTs provide obstacles
He builds a fort, becomes leader
Has a good time doing whatever he wants
The WTs always do what they want, this gets tiresome
And he misses home
He wants to leave
They won't let him, particularly Carol, who becomes obsessed with him
With the help of KW and/or someone else, Max tries to escape
Carol and the rest of the WTs try to eat him
He escapes
Makes it home, has tender moment with his mom
That way, Max is always trying to do something, instead of just aimlessly walking around or building forts or screwing around.
Finally, perhaps the biggest problem is that Jonze and Eggers have created new material that isn't in the book and not even hinted at by it. Namely that the WTs are all moody, emotionally troubled monsters with problems ranging from rage issues to severe depression. I don't think that's what anyone envisioned when reading the books.
The monsters feel more like mopey suburban teens in a psychiatric facility than wild beasts running free in a strange land. They fight, anger each other, and tear down everything they've done before in a pathological, cyclical, depressing, co-dependent relationship. Not only is this not fun and not child-friendly, it's just plain weird.
Other weird touches include the addition of two freaky looking owls that squawk (everyone understands them except for Max and Carol) and a giant dog wandering the desert.
Someone said of the film that it's the first art film for kids. It feels a lot like that -- it's material intended for kids that instead forgoes plot and accessibility for an odd, forlorn tone and mood.
Kids movies don't have to be just for kids. Pixar is a particularly good example. Their "kids' movies" have masterfully tackled everything from parents learning to let their children go (FINDING NEMO) to learning to overcome loss/the greatest adventure is in your own backyard (UP) to how exceptional individuals learn to fit in in society (THE INCREDIBLES). They've all made a fortune and are all great films, largely because they take kids' material and elevate it with great characters and fantastic scripts.
WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE aims high, but collapses instead in its own weird hipster universe of mopey monsters. As the tagline says "There's one inside of all of us." Unfortunately, most people are going because they're hoping "one" refers to the fun wild things of the book and not the ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST beasts we get in this film.