
#How do i make cheese mouse hunt movie#
So Okay, It's Average: Its generally agreed the movie had great ideas, but mediocre execution.After which even the mouse gives a weirded out look to the audience through the camera.Then Ernie loses his beloved establishment over a circumstance he had no control over and is painted as the one responsible for the mayor's death by the press, and when he realizes the presence of the mouse in the manor that can catapult him back to fame, he's paranoid that he will lose his chance of regaining all that he lost from the cockroach fiasco. However, it's also easy to feel sorry for Ernie when it's made clear that his bitterness is a result of old Rudolf seemingly not giving a rat's ass about his son's talent as a chef (no matter how hard Ernie tried to impress him with it) and expected him to continue running the string factory with Lars after he died even when Ernie had his own responsibilities to his restaurant. Jerkass Woobie: There's no denying that Ernie is the more abrasive and cynical of the brothers who is the most eager to kill off the titular mouse and has little to no respect for both the memory of his and Lars' father and their family's string business.The resolution of the film, with the mouse coming to work with the brothers at the factory and help them make their string cheese, feels like a set-up for the start of the plot of Ratatouille.Incidentally, William Hickey (Rudolf) appeared as a drunk in the original film. During Ernie and Lars's big fight, Ernie gives a Shout-Out to The Producers when he yells "DOUBLE! DOUBLE!" Four years later, Nathan Lane would star in the Screen-to-Stage Adaptation of the film referenced as the character who says that line (it's altogether possible that the show's earliest planning stages were occurring while this movie was being filmed).That's a good idea of this movie's humor. Imagine if slapstick actually hurt and left you bruised and slightly bloodied.
