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I'm as surprised as anyone to report that "Sonic the Hedgehog," the adaptation of the popular 1990s Sega video game, is actually good. Expectations have been low since the movie's rocky rollout in its first trailer, with online backlash regarding the look of the computer-generated character requiring animators to go back to the drawing board, completely redesigning the speedy blue hedgehog. So color me surprised to discover that after all of that, "Sonic the Hedgehog" is legitimately funny, heartwarming and entertaining.

There are a few hard and fast facts about Sonic: He claims to be a hedgehog, he runs everywhere, he's from an idyllic island and he has little golden rings that allow him to transport himself anywhere. Writers Patrick Casey and Josh Miller plug those character traits into a story structure that is well-loved and a bit retro, an odd-couple road movie about friendship. Sprinkled with Sonic's hyperspeedy powers and anti-government messages, it's a little bit "E.T.," one part "Harry and the Hendersons," and it's a fun throwback tale.

As it turns out, if you write a very funny script, and hire very funny people to perform it, it doesn't really matter if the movie is about an extraterrestrial hedgehog, or even what he looks like. Ben Schwartz voices Sonic, a lonely alien living in exile on Earth for his own safety, where he longs to connect with the humans around him in the small Montana town of Green Hills. James Marsden co-stars as Tom Wachowski, the cop who takes Sonic under his care, with Tika Sumpter playing his veterinarian wife, and Adam Pally and Natasha Rothwell in very funny supporting roles. But of course, the big news here, and drumroll please, is Jim Carrey's glorious return to his best rubber-faced, fast-talking form as Sonic's main antagonist, a secretive government mad scientist named Dr. Robotnik.

This entire review could be dedicated to Carrey's delightful, outsized and wildly campy performance, feverishly pitched somewhere between "Ace Ventura" and "The Mask." Though Dr. Robotnik is deemed a "psychological tire fire" by a worried general, he's dispatched to Montana after Sonic's solo baseball game generates an electrical surge that causes a power outage all over the Pacific Northwest. When he discovers clues leading to an alien life form, the doctor sets his sights on tracking and trapping this exciting new discovery, hoping to claim Sonic for scientific research.

The plot is simple and the emotions are easy to understand (it is decidedly a movie for children or childlike adults). It's a chase movie that becomes a road movie, underpinned by Sonic's yearning desire for companionship. When he accidentally connects with Tom, it's his chance to do all the things he always wanted to do on Earth. It's an unlikely friendship story, and Marsden has the earnestness to sell that he truly cares about his little furry blue friend. As for those special effects? They look great. Turns out "Sonic the Hedgehog" needed a bit more time in the hopper, and thanks to that, it cruises to an easy and enjoyable finish.