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Drac (Brian Hull) and his friends are back and Drac is ready to announce his retirement from Hotel Transylvania. He plans to give the hotel to his daughter, Mavis (Selena Gomez) and Johnny, his son-in-law (Andy Samberg), but after having a change of heart, he decides not to, thinking that Johnny will ruin the hotel. To get out of it, he tells Johnny a lie, which causes Johnny to use Van Helsing's (Jim Gaffigan) mysterious invention, the "Monsterfication Ray" to transform into a monster to get Drac's approval and fix everything. However, the machine malfunctions and ends up stripping Drac of his powers and turning him and his monster friends into humans. Johnny and Drac must partner up on an adventure to find the magical stone that will change them back before their transformations become permanent.
The main characters are Drac, Johnny and Mavis, but the rest of the Hotel Transylvania family we've come to love, such as Drac's wife, Erika Van Helsing (Katherine Hahn), Frank (Brad Abrell), Murray (Keegan-Michael Kay), Griffin The Invisible Man (David Spade) and Wayne (Steve Buscemi) also make appearances. This film lives up to its subtitle where almost every character goes through some type of internal or external transformation. It is fascinating watching the monsters get turned into humans and how they have to adapt. I laughed so hard when Blobby, who is a green blob monster, turns into his human form, which ends up being a plate of green gelatin that the characters have to carry around. Drac and Johnny's entire adventure through the jungles of South America is hilarious, especially when they are on a tour bus and Johnny's weight as a monster slows it down, so he sticks his feet through the bottom and starts running with it.
The message of this film is to accept others for who they are and also be true to yourself. Drac only sees the crazy things Johnny does and Johnny tries to teach him to see beyond the worst things so he can see the best parts in people and life. Whether Johnny is a human or monster he always loves being himself but gets in trouble when he lets Drac convince him that he isn't enough.
I rate Hotel Transylvania: Transformania 5 out of 5 stars and recommend it for ages 8 to 18, plus adults. You can check into Prime Video to watch Hotel Transylvania: Transformania starting January 14, 2022.
by Tiana S., KIDS FIRST! Film Critic, age 11
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Kid Critic video review by TIANA SIRMANS |
Kid Critic video review by TIANA SIRMANS |
Kid Critic video review by TIANA SIRMANS |
Kid Critic video review by TIANA SIRMANS |