Good morning Hank it's Tuesday
So I watch a lot of children's movies, and I watch the same ones over and over and over again
So today I want to review a few 
from the perspective of an adult.
Let's begin with The Lego Movie,
a story about overcoming the creativity-stifling and life-sucking power
of big business that was, itself, created by a very big business.
Not only that, but it's essentially a movie-length commercial for a different big business.
The Lego Movie's relationship with corporate America is just incredibly complicated,
like, the main character Emmett becomes part of this team that saves the world
by building things as they go, rather than following the instructions.
But of course, these days, Legos are all about following instructions, so it's kind of making fun of Legos.
But then the Lego store is now selling kits with instructions on how to make the things
that the characters in the movie make on the fly without instructions.
It's all very meta, Hank, and you could certainly argue that corporate America is only critiquing itself
to make itself look good so it can sell more goods and services
but whatever, it has a fantastic theme song, the movie is totally enjoyable,
so I forgive it everything.
Then there's The Croods, 
which is a story of caveman Neanderthals who meet a human,
and learn from that human the importance of, like, innovation and risk-taking and cooking your food
over a fire.
The Croods features a romance between a Neanderthal teenage girl and a human teenage boy,
and while interspecies romance is disturbingly common in children's movies, it rarely involves, like - you know - humans.
Then again, most of us have some Neanderthal DNA, so there really was human-on-Neanderthal action like,
60 thousand years ago.
So it's a historical reality,
I'm just not used to childrens' movies sharing the message that it's okay
for humans to fall in love with organisms outside their own species.
Then there's Despicable Me 2,
another favorite of Henry's,
which is about a recently-retired supervillain who has gotten
into the jams-and-jellies business after adopting three adorable children.
the interesting thing about Despicable Me 2 is that it's almost entirely about adult problems.
like problems of fatherhood
and dating in middle age
and dealing with your tiny, yellow minions once you don't wanna be evil anymore.
but most of all it's about romantic love.
And that's a little weird because five-year-old kids don't GET romance.
But even so Henry loved it,
and at the end he told me that he wanted to marry Mommy, which I informed him was illegal.
Maybe you can date a Neanderthal, but you are not marrying Mommy,
because that would be both bigamy and incest.
Lastly, let's turn our attention to Penguins of Madagascar,.
which won my heart immediately because it begins with voiceover from
the great documentarian Werner Herzog.
Penguins of Madagascar is about this group of zany penguins who break into Fort Knox
because it contains the last vending machine that sells their favorite snack Cheezy Dibbles
then they get caught up with this shape-shifting, villainous octopus named Dave,
who is resentful because humans have treated Dave poorly on account of how he's not cute.
So Dave, driven by anger over not being cute, has invented this serum that turns penguins monstrously ugly and therefore
will make humans uninterested in protecting them.
So Hank, for at least the last 60 years, we've lived in a new geological period, the Anthropocene,
in which humans are radically reshaping the planet.
We can affect the atmosphere, and the sea levels, and the planet's overall level of biodiversity
and we can also choose which animals to value and protect.
And Dave the evil octopus is absolutely right, that we are very biased toward, you know, the "cute" organisms.
So it seems to me Penguins of Madagascar is really about the Anthropocene as seen from a non-human perspective,
which is totally fascinating.
But unfortunately, they cast Dave as the villain, so it ends up being kind of a celebration of
the cute, instead of a critique of our asthetics of cute.
Still, there's some really interesting ideas there, plus the hilarious Werner Herzog voiceover, 
and some top-notch Cheezy Dibble jokes, 
so all-in-all I give the movie a thumbs up.
So Hank, that's some of what you've been missing
by not watching the same kids' movies over
and over again: human-on-Neanderthal action,
business making itself more likable by making
fun of business, adult meditations on the
challenges of finding love in middle age,
and a glimpse into the massive changes wrought
by the Anthropocene.
In short Hank, the kids are alright. I'll
see you on Friday.
