-By Michael Rechtshaffen
For movie details, please click here.
Pretty much any sign of creative life gets left out in the cold in
Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, the monotonous, strictly
by-the-numbers third edition of the wildly lucrative digitally
animated franchise.
Stringing together a series of bits in the absence of inspired
storytelling, the picture, though technically assured, offers
audiences very little that's fresh or different aside from 3D
glasses.
Given the success of the first two films (released during the
spring breaks of 2002 and 2006), there's no doubt
IA3 will
draw families looking to fill the gap between
Up and the July 24 arrival of Disney's
G-Force,
but taking into consideration that more crowded marketplace, this
one should expect scaled-down returns.
Where
Up took to the skies both literally and figuratively,
Ice Age goes in the other direction, set primarily in a
subterranean world situated beneath the icy tundra. Ray Romano
returns as the sardonic voice of Manny the woolly mammoth, and he's
trying paternal instinct on for size since his wife, Ellie (Queen
Latifah), is very much in the family way.
That situation doesn't sit well with Sid the sloth (John Leguizamo
again provides the lateral lisp), who, fearing there won't be any
room for him in the new dynamic, decides to create his own family,
making off with several enormous eggs he discovers in an
underground cavern. But when they hatch into a trio of rambunctious
baby dinos, it isn't long before their birth mom—a mighty
displeased T-Rex—goes on the rampage, turning Manny's world order
upside-down.
Despite the Jurassic perk, returning director Carlos Saldanha,
co-director Michael Thurmeier and a herd of writers—including
founding scribes Michael Berg and Peter Ackerman along with
longtime "Simpsons" writer Mike Reiss and newcomer Yoni
Brenner—manage to bring precious little in the way of charm or
inventiveness to the generic plotting.
The film is content to rely on the inherent affability of its core
voice cast, also including returnees Denis Leary as saber-toothed
Diego and Seann William Scott and Josh Peck as nutty possums Crash
and Eddie.
There's also the incoming Buck, a swashbuckling one-eyed weasel
(Simon Pegg channeling Johnny Depp's Captain Jack Sparrow by way of
Captain Ahab), but like the hapless, acorn-chasing Scrat (Chris
Wedge), who this time has been provided with a female foil (Karen
Disher), there's a lot of dashing around without accomplishing much
of anything.
Blue Sky Studios' digital animation is again technologically
state-of-the-art, and the 3D, while unspectacular, is sharply
vivid. But in relation to some of its recent competition, the rest
of
Ice Age feels frozen in another place in time.
-
Nielsen Business Media
Film Review: Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs
Prehistory repeats itself in this dispiritingly slothful third installment.
June 29, 2009
-By Michael Rechtshaffen
For movie details, please click here.
Pretty much any sign of creative life gets left out in the cold in
Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, the monotonous, strictly by-the-numbers third edition of the wildly lucrative digitally animated franchise.
Stringing together a series of bits in the absence of inspired storytelling, the picture, though technically assured, offers audiences very little that's fresh or different aside from 3D glasses.
Given the success of the first two films (released during the spring breaks of 2002 and 2006), there's no doubt
IA3 will draw families looking to fill the gap between
Up and the July 24 arrival of Disney's
G-Force, but taking into consideration that more crowded marketplace, this one should expect scaled-down returns.
Where
Up took to the skies both literally and figuratively,
Ice Age goes in the other direction, set primarily in a subterranean world situated beneath the icy tundra. Ray Romano returns as the sardonic voice of Manny the woolly mammoth, and he's trying paternal instinct on for size since his wife, Ellie (Queen Latifah), is very much in the family way.
That situation doesn't sit well with Sid the sloth (John Leguizamo again provides the lateral lisp), who, fearing there won't be any room for him in the new dynamic, decides to create his own family, making off with several enormous eggs he discovers in an underground cavern. But when they hatch into a trio of rambunctious baby dinos, it isn't long before their birth mom—a mighty displeased T-Rex—goes on the rampage, turning Manny's world order upside-down.
Despite the Jurassic perk, returning director Carlos Saldanha, co-director Michael Thurmeier and a herd of writers—including founding scribes Michael Berg and Peter Ackerman along with longtime "Simpsons" writer Mike Reiss and newcomer Yoni Brenner—manage to bring precious little in the way of charm or inventiveness to the generic plotting.
The film is content to rely on the inherent affability of its core voice cast, also including returnees Denis Leary as saber-toothed Diego and Seann William Scott and Josh Peck as nutty possums Crash and Eddie.
There's also the incoming Buck, a swashbuckling one-eyed weasel (Simon Pegg channeling Johnny Depp's Captain Jack Sparrow by way of Captain Ahab), but like the hapless, acorn-chasing Scrat (Chris Wedge), who this time has been provided with a female foil (Karen Disher), there's a lot of dashing around without accomplishing much of anything.
Blue Sky Studios' digital animation is again technologically state-of-the-art, and the 3D, while unspectacular, is sharply vivid. But in relation to some of its recent competition, the rest of
Ice Age feels frozen in another place in time.
-
Nielsen Business Media