Greg Heffley is a 12-year-old who is fresh out of elementary and transitions to middle school, where he has to learn the consequences and responsibility to survive the year.
Trailer
Cast
Zachary Gordon
Greg Heffley
Robert Capron
Rowley Jefferson
Rachael Harris
Susan Heffley
Steve Zahn
Frank Heffley
Connor Fielding
Manny Heffley
Owen Fielding
Manny Heffley
Devon Bostick
Rodrick Heffley
Chloë Grace Moretz
Angie Steadman
Karan Brar
Chirag Gupta
Grayson Russell
Fregley
Laine MacNeil
Patty Farrell
Alex Ferris
Collin
Andrew McNee
Coach Malone
Belita Moreno
Mrs. Norton
Rob LaBelle
Mr. Winsky
Nicholas Carey
Pete Hosey
Samuel Patrick Chu
Carter
Donnie MacNeil
Wade
Maaari Mo Ring Magustuhan
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules
Thunderstruck
Girl Meets World
Jessie
Nicky, Ricky, Dicky & Dawn
School of Rock
Game Shakers
Raven's Home
Baby Daddy
Doogie Kamealoha, M.D.
Alexa & Katie
Stuck in the Middle
Mixed-ish
Family Reunion
The Really Loud House
Bunk'd
The Haunted Hathaways
Bella and the Bulldogs
The Wonder Years
Fuller House
A.N.T. Farm
Liv and Maddie
Lopez vs. Lopez
Mga Komento
10 Mga Komento
source: Diary of a Wimpy Kid
I saw Diary of a Wimpy Kid (DOAWK) at a Cineplex large screen (full-price), with 2 grand-daughters, one of whom has read the books (I haven't). I concur with others that the film starts out promising, but tends to bog down in the middle. The main character becomes a little mean-spirited, and the fun begins to fade somewhat. I gather that the books contain a certain cynical tone for the main character, and that the humour plays off that. When you transfer to a screenplay, you have to get the 'voice' right, or else the gags don't work. I might compare it to describing a Seinfeld plot to a bewildered foreigner: "you see, George takes a disabled parking spot at the mall, causing a girl in a wheelchair to have an accident, so George and Kramer buy her a replacement wheelchair that has defective brakes, and she goes screaming down a hill.." sounds mean, huh? it's not -- it's hilarious WHEN you see it in context. Maybe that's what happens in DOAWK -- incorporating several ideas from the books resulted in some 'losing the context', so to speak. However, family films are few and far between these days, and this is passable family fun. My advice? if you have a matinée-priced theater, go see it. At full price? stay home and watch your 'Better off Dead' DVD on your big screen TV.
