“Hugo” is acclaimed director Martin Scorsese’s latest film and his first family film. The movie is from the Caldecott Medal earner The Invention of Hugo Cabret, a medium-busting novel that was told through equal parts text and sketches. The book was a tribute to the origins of film and the movie version is as well if not more so. Hugo is an orphaned boy running the clocks in the Paris train station and diligently trying to repair an automated man which he believes contains a message from his father. The film follows what happens when an old toymaker and his god-daughter enter Hugo’s life. The tale is astonishingly visual. It is easy to see the amount of effort Scorsese puts into staying true to the visual aspect of the novel. Asa Butterfield carries an incredible amount of emotional appeal as the titular character and Ben Kingsley perfectly captures the aged bitterness of the toymaker. The supporting cast in both the great and the small side-stories placed in the movie pull viewers into the magical world they have created. “Hugo” doesn’t move quickly, but it is well worth the journey.