Rise Of The Guardians | [better]

Why? Because Rise of the Guardians speaks to something universal: the fear of being forgotten, and the courage it takes to believe in yourself when no one else does. It is a film about found family, about the quiet heroism of the Sandman who never speaks but always shows up, and about the radical idea that joy is a weapon against despair.

The Guardians themselves are a diverse and dynamic group of characters, each with their own unique skills and abilities. There's Santa Claus, the jolly old man with a heart of gold and a penchant for gift-giving; the Tooth Fairy, a mischievous and magical creature with a penchant for collecting teeth; the Easter Bunny, a quick-witted and agile hero with a talent for egg-laying; and Jack Frost, a young and adventurous spirit with the power to control ice and snow. Rise of the Guardians

Rise of the Guardians failed at the box office for a simple reason: it was too weird. It was a Christmas movie with an Easter Bunny. It was a superhero film with no capes. It was a children’s movie that treated death, oblivion, and existential loneliness with terrifying seriousness. The Guardians themselves are a diverse and dynamic

Rise of the Guardians " is a 2012 computer-animated fantasy-adventure feature film produced by DreamWorks Animation It was a Christmas movie with an Easter Bunny

Based on William Joyce’s book series The Guardians of Childhood , the film takes figures we think we know—Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, the Tooth Fairy, and the Sandman—and transforms them into a high-fantasy superhero team.