Dumbo the elephant flies high. Dumbo the movie not so much, according to a 53% rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes. But, of course, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Four takes on Tim Burton's live-action reboot of the 1941 Disney animated classic, set in the American Midwest following World War I:
- "The best parts of the new film, by a long stretch, are the flying sequences. … Elsewhere, however, we are dragged through patches of glum and listless drama," Anthony Lane writes at the New Yorker. He adds the audience's sour view of animal-powered circuses "won't be brushed off" despite Burton's attempt at a solution. It leaves one wondering "whether he picked the right Disney feature to reboot."
- "It will surely end up being one of the least memorable" of Disney's live-action reboots, writes Christy Lemire at RogerEbert.com. Audiences will recall elements of Burton's earlier work. But the "inevitable comparisons only highlight how inferior Dumbo is." On the bright side, there's "goddess" Eva Green as an "elegant aerialist," and Danny DeVito (circus owner Max Medici) "with sharp comic timing as always."