Saturday, September 22, 2007
My review - Ice Age Reviews
Set in prehistoric times when glaciers scoured the earth, the movie finds a wealth of pleasure in a simple story ? three animals find a human baby and set out to return him to his tribe.
The leader of the expedition is Manfred, a heartsick woolly mammoth (voice of Ray Romano); Sid, a motor-mouthed sloth rejected by his family (voice of John Leguizamo); and Diego, a morally conflicted saber-tooth tiger (voice of Denis Leary). Danger is ample; Diego?s pack leader Soto (voice of Goran Visnjic) is determined to ambush the group, which must also dodge avalanches and volcanoes.
The parallel adventures of Scrat, a saber-tooth squirrel who wants only to convey one precious acorn to a safe hiding place, provide some of the movie?s funniest visual jokes.
Ice Age is directed by Carlos Soldanha and Chris Wedge. Mr. Wedge is the maker of an Oscar-winning short film, Bunny, whose company developed the magical animation techniques that give this all-digital creation density and luster that far exceeds most computer graphics. Their breakthrough has to do with the way light plays across both the characters and the imposing, often majestic ice-blue backgrounds.
Their system renders the animals at once rich and real, (as in the convincing elephantine gait of Manfred) but deliberately cartoonish at the same time. As always, the most problematic figures are the humans (computer animators have yet to figure out how to make people who don?t move like stick figures), but overcome it again with stylized design that makes their creations convincing but clearly imaginary.
The script by Michael J. Wilson, Michael Berg and Peter Ackerman is quick, clever and emotional, and makes fine use of the voice talent at hand. Mr. Romano in particular is wonderfully effective as the morose but honorable Manfred.
The movie?s greatest weakness is its predictability; for all the exciting dangers and comical mishaps the animals encounter, there are few genuine surprises along the way.
Still, Ice Age makes for truly fine family entertainment, a spirited adventure to charm parents and kids in equal measure.
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