Interestingly, Hollywood has tried. In 2014, The Hollywood Reporter announced that Universal Pictures was developing a live-action/CGI hybrid Curious George film with producer Ron Howard. The project was envisioned as a family adventure akin to The Smurfs or Alvin and the Chipmunks —i.e., a fish-out-of-water story where George’s mischief is exaggerated for slapstick. The project never materialized, likely due to the high cost of photorealistic animal VFX versus the modest box office ceiling of a non-franchise children’s property. The existing 2006 animated film (with Will Ferrell as The Man) remains the definitive modern take, precisely because it retained 2D stylization.
The Man with the Yellow Hat in a Photorealistic World: Deconstructing the Viability of a Live-Action Curious George curious george live action
A live-action Curious George is technically possible but artistically and ethically inadvisable. It would solve no problem with the original while introducing many: the uncanny valley, animal-cruelty subtext, and the need for inflated action sequences. The enduring power of Curious George lies in its abstraction—the watercolor world where a monkey can be a child. To render that in photorealism is not to improve it, but to misunderstand it entirely. The most informative outcome of this inquiry is that some classics are better left unchased. Interestingly, Hollywood has tried