Horst in Translation ([email protected])
"Tell Them Anything You Want: A Portrait of Maurice Sendak" is a fairly long title for a relatively short movie as this documentary here runs for under 40 minutes only. It was directed by Lance Bangs and Spike Jonze and that's not a coincidence of course as Jonze worked with Bangs on other occasions and of course one of Jonze's more known works is an adaptation of a well known Maurice Sendak book. Still the focus here lies not too much on the many film adaptations from Sendak's body of work, but on his own creative approach, also at times on his personal life away from his profession. And from that perspective, you get pretty much all you can expect, maybe even hope for. Still it is not a film that will really turn you into a fan of the author, but it is a work you will appreciate, maybe even love if you already have a connection with the author, for example through loving his works when you were a child or reading your own kids from his work. I myself must say though that all I am in touch with with Sendak is through Jonze's WTWTA and as I was not too big a fan of this film, especially given how much I love some of Jonze's other stuff, and maybe that's the reason why this documentary short did not do too much for me. Sadly Sendak died a few years after this was released back in 2009, so it will have its 10th anniversary next year, but he left us a lot of creativity and I am by no means judging him as a writer here. An entirely subjective thumbs-down from me for this one.