What do you get when you take a whole bunch of famous movie monsters (Dracula, Frankenstein, the Invisible Man, etc.) and give them the voices of well-known Happy Madison actors (Adam Sandler, Kevin James, David Spade, etc.)? You get "Hotel Transylvania", a zany, fast-paced animated film with an ingeniously clever concept: Where do the creatures of the night go when they want to get away from it all? And surprisingly enough, it's much better than the trailers may lead you to believe. The colorful animation is exuberantly cartoonish and over-the-top, everyone in the voice cast delivers at least one genuinely funny line, and the story can be sweetly endearing at times, despite its easily predictable, by-the-numbers structure. It's really nothing more than your typical plot about an overprotective dad who does everything he can to shield his daughter from the outside world for "her own safety", only to have his plan ruined by an annoying outsider who quickly falls head over heels for the daughter. A whole bunch of wild antics ensue, lies are told, the truth eventually comes out, everyone throws a big dance party by the end, you get the idea. But even though the plot is pretty basic, it does benefit from some goofy sight gags here and there, as well as a few memorable side characters like the shrunken heads and that creepy old gremlin with the catchphrase, "I didn't do that". Besides Dracula, Mavis (his vampire daughter), and Jonathan (the human who ends up falling for her), none of the other protagonists really stand out. At the most, they just exist for pure comic relief. But I digress. "Hotel Transylvania" is a fun family film overall, even if it does occasionally stumble in the storytelling department more often than not. The fast-paced gags are light and clever enough to entertain both young and old viewers, and the eye-popping animation is equally as enjoyable. As long as you can get past all the generic musical numbers and lackluster narrative clichés, there's no reason why you shouldn't have a good time with this giddy animated romp. It's at least worth a one-time watch, if nothing else.