This is perhaps one of most dramatic and universal stories we have,” he said. “The nature documentary is really only ever about one thing: death and survival - the primal forces of natural life. University of Sydney film studies lecturer Dr Richard Smith backed Ms Smaill’s assessment, claiming that documentaries are “stitched together all the time”. “And it’s the mastery of the audio-visual, footage being sped up or slowed down to tell a story and make a spectacle.” “Wildlife documentaries are highly crafted - it’s not a matter of ‘point the camera and shoot'”, she said. Ms Smaill said it was common practice for programmes such as BBC’s Planet Earth II to heavily edit footage for documentaries, especially when it comes to nature films and camera-shy reptiles. (It’s not until the end that we find out that one of them sounds like a dead ringer for Ringo Starr.) What’s largely missing from the film are the compelling heroes that kids and adults will root for-and despite the film’s huge team of writers, ultimately, viewers don’t have a vested interest in either Gary or Scorch.“I think that in the age of reality TV and fake news, we’re well-versed as consumers and it’s up to the viewer to discern what’s true.” We would have rather also seen more of the three little floating aliens that do the general’s bidding. Sofia Vergara, who voices Scorch’s girlfriend reporter Gabby Babblebrock, is largely onscreen to be kissed by the valiant hero each time he returns from a mission. The Baab-ians also learn that the Dark Planet’s inhabitants choose their leaders by picking those with weird facial hair (showing illustrations of Fidel Castro and others).Įscape from Planet Earth has a great cast, but there are too many characters with too little to do. There’s a an industrial, black-and-white ”documentary” on planet Earth, where the residents of Baab learn that the Dark Planet is the only one in the universe that’s de-evolving, starting with the intelligent, gentle dinosaurs to a race of humans who war with each other. (The requisite sidekicks of any animated feature are this time voiced by Craig Robinson, George Lopez and Jane Lynch.) The story gets a little muddled at this point, but in the end, it’s a family rescue effort, with Gary using his brain to outmaneuver the general on Earth, and his wife Kira (Sarah Jessica Parker), a former test pilot turned stay-at-home mom, and boy genius son Kip (Jonathan Morgan Heit), helping to defeat Lena on planet Baab.Ī few humorous moments appeal to adults, and we wished for more of them. It’s up to Gary to rescue his brother, but he gets captured, too, and is recruited to work for the general with other enslaved aliens. Lena thinks that the General is a ringer for Elvis, with the help of a wig and a fictitious dating site profile. The general’s personal mission is to destroy all intelligent life in the universe, and he recruits Gary’s boss, the duplicitous Lena (Jessica Alba) to unwittingly help him. On the dark planet, Scorch is captured in Area 51 by General Shanker (William Shatner), flanked by teams of soldiers in yellow Hazmat suits. On the flip side, Gary is a little meek and whiny at the beginning of the movie. His Ricky Bobby-like bombastic ways rub his more studious brother Gary Gary (Rob Corddry), and the audience, the wrong way, and Scorch often teases Gary, head of BASA Mission Control, for being too level-headed-in other words, boring. Scorch is a blowhard and a showoff who’ll shill almost anything for corporate sponsorship the number of patches on his space suit (like “Scorchios”) rival any NASCAR racer’s. Visually, the film looks good, dominated by the blue hues of the residents of planet Baab, where superstar astronaut Scorch Supernova (Brendan Fraser) is sent on an impossible mission to the “Dark Planet” (aka Earth). Such is the case with The Weinstein Company’s animated sci-fi adventure Escape from Planet Earth, which quietly slipped into theaters this past weekend.ĭirected by first-time feature helmer Cal Brunker, and written by Brunker and Bob Barlen (with additional writing by Stephen Fry, Dan Mazer, David Javerbaum, and based on a story by Tony Leech and Cory Edwards), Escape from Planet Earth is a mildly entertaining examination of intergalactic sibling rivalry that will probably appeal to many younger kids, but not to the parents who have to sit through it with them. You know there’s usually a juicy backstory when advance screenings for a film aren’t offered to press, there’s a lawsuit from the former production team and the final writing credits alone are nearly as long as a true indie film’s entire crew.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |