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In all fairness, The Simpsons Movie doesn't exactly go where no episode of the TV series has gone before (unless you mean literally, to Alaska, in which case I stand corrected). Rather, what The Simpsons Movie does—and does extremely well—is revisit the series' most enduring situations and themes, while upping the ante just enough to lend everything a new level of suspense. This time around, Homer's doughnut-addled dunderheadedness doesn't merely put his own family in jeopardy—it nearly causes Springfield itself to be wiped off the map. Meanwhile, even on the home front, the consequences are more dire: Duly humiliated after being bullied by Homer into a nude-skateboarding dare—one of several priceless gags unforgivably revealed in the movie's trailer—Bart goes searching for a more stable father figure and nearly finds one in (egads!) Ned Flanders. And in a subplot that turns out to carry unexpected emotional weight, the ever-resilient Marge (voiced as usual by the redoubtable Julie Kavner) is forced to examine the very bedrock of her marriage to see if there's anything there worth salvaging. That leads to a third-act monologue—for which longtime Simpsons writer-producer (and Terms of Endearment Oscar winner) James L. Brooks reportedly demanded more than 100 takes from Kavner—that is one of the deepest and most searching examinations of the meaning of "I do" that I've ever heard in a movie. It does the last thing you might expect The Simpsons Movie to do: It leaves you with a lump in your throat.
The Simpsons Movie has much else to recommend it, not least of all a wonderfully surreal, Dali-like encounter between Homer and an Inuit medicine woman in the wilds of Alaska (don't ask); and, after 18 seasons of seeing Springfield squeezed into the tiny parameters of the television frame, there's an undeniable kick to the movie version's vivid widescreen compositions. But the most meaningful achievement of The Simpsons Movie may be its reminder that we don't merely take pleasure in the weekly exploits of Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, Maggie, Grandpa, Patty, Selma, Milhouse, Flanders, Moe, Apu, Smithers, Mr. Burns, et al.; we look at them—yellow skin, blue hair, bulging eyes, and all—and see reflected back the best and worst of ourselves, and an uncannily accurate portrait of the modern American family.