Top 10 reasons why I love Hugo
10. Wanted to see it twice in the theater.
9. The Paris setting, and the train station. I just loved every minute inside those walls. The set designers should get an Oscar nomination.
8. The scenes in the bookstore, library and movie theater. I loved these parts. It's so refreshing to see Hugo and Isabelle inspired by books and silent films.
7. The beautiful musical score by Howard Shore. (I've included a snippet at the end of this post)
6. Though actual footage of real movies are shown in the film (including clips of Méliès's own films) , there are other moments in the movie that reminded me of other films; subtle nods, perhaps. I can't tell you them all without giving away too much, but there were some parts that reminded me of Vertigo, and even Scorcese's Shutter Island. A writer for the Huffington Post expressed my thoughts when she wrote: "you've got...the exquisite little human dramas in the train station a la Rear Window, and Hugo looking occasionally like Truffaut's Antoine Doinel of the 400 Blows to name a few."
5. The 3-D effects. The 3D works very well in this film; I felt like I was actually in the train station among the crowd.
4. It has some comedic moments without going over the top. The humor mostly comes from the station inspector played by Sacha Baron Cohen ("Borat" "Bruno") who has created another memorable cinematic character. And his doberman Maximillian provides some very funny moments.

2. Made me want to seek out more about the origin of this story, the book by Brian Selznick. There's a website about the book, and an old interview Selznick did for NPR : you can listen to it here.
1. This is a movie-lover's movie; it touches on the history of cinema and film preservation. How often do we see that in a modern day film? And this is an artist's movie, with many themes an artist can relate to such as finding inspiration and purpose in your talent and gifts.
More positive reviews from other bloggers:
The Most Beautiful | Mythical Monkey | The Siren | Shadowplay | Lindsay's Movie Musings | Bit Part Actors (interesting information on the Franklin Institute automaton | City Lights |