Veggie Tales: Dave and the Giant Pickle - A Lesson in Self-Esteem: In a lesson about self-esteem and learning that God can help little creatures do big things, Bob the Tomato tells the story of David and Goliath from the Old Testament, except that in Bobs story, Goliath is a giant pickle. Jr. Asparagus plays Dave, a shepard boy left at home while his big brothers go off to fight and protect their people. But in the end, who must take on the monstrous pickle and overcome adversity? Who succeeds? Can you guess? This Veggie Tales story has an intermission you wont want to miss, one of Larrys better Silly Songs. ~ Leslie Birdwell, All Movie Guide Veggie Tales: Larry-Boy the Fib from Outer Space! - A Lesson in Telling the Truth: Junior Asparagus is in trouble -- he broke his dads favorite bowling plate and instead of coming clean with the truth, hes convinced by a little blue Fib from outer space to make up a story. Well, the story gets bigger and so does the Fib, threatening to take over everything! Thank goodness for Larry-Boy, superhero wannabe, and his flying Larrymobile. Multiple pop-culture references abound in this humorous video, which still manages to convey the basic message of truth-telling and the consequences of lies. One of the funnier of the Veggie Tales series, this one will please everyone, from young children on up to the parents and grandparents who will watch it with them over and over again. ~ Leslie Birdwell, All Movie Guide Veggie Tales: Larry-Boy and the Rumor Weed - A Lesson in the Power of Words: When Laura Carrot and Junior Asparagus misunderstand a neighbor, a story that he is a robot starts circulating throughout Bumblyburg. The Rumor Weed feeds on the gossip and spreads its menacing intentions all over town. Supercucumber Larry-Boy is called in to get to the root of the problem. This video teaches children about the negative effects of gossip with clever Batmanish humor and positive veggie role models. The horrible Rumor Weed even turns into a beautiful flowering plant when it changes its evil ways. The computer animation and super-hero humor appeal to ages four to eight. ~ Heather M. Fierst, All Movie Guide
Engaging Characters, Entertaining, Great Cinematography
Best Uses:
At Home, In The Car, Younger Viewers
Describe Yourself:
Movie Buff
Bottom Line:
Yes, I would recommend this to a friend
My son and I watched the video together in our home. We liked the music and the moral lesson about the fib monster. I would recommend this to anyone with children.