Showing posts with label byron howard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label byron howard. Show all posts

March 04, 2016

Zootopia

Welcome to the new Voter ID process

Grade: B +
Director: Byron Howard, Rich Moore and Jared Bush
Starring the voices of: Ginnifer Goodwin, Jason Bateman, Idris Elba, J.K. Simmons, Jenny Slate, Nate Torrence, Octavia Spencer and Bonnie Hunt
MPAA Rating: PG
Running Time: 1 hr. 48 min.

Smart, funny and thoughtful, Zootopia is one of the finest Disney-proper animated feature films in many years. The film isn’t a product of Pixar, the Disney subsidiary, but perhaps the best compliment that can be paid to Zootopia is that it would fit seamlessly in the esteemed Pixar canon. The film lends itself to repeat viewings by audiences of any demographic, including the essential parent-child pairing. It’s a buddy-cop movie, an animal education primer, a movie parody, a coming-of-age flick, and a gateway into earnest discussions about racial and gender prejudice, bullying and cultural inclusiveness.

Judy Hopps (brilliantly voiced by Ginnifer Goodwin) is an ambitious, diminutive bunny in an alt-universe populated by anthropomorphic animal species. The instinctive conflict between predators and prey has been erased, although preconceptions about differences between species remain. She’s bred in a backwater “burrow” to limit her aims. “It’s OK to have dreams,” declares Judy’s aw-shucks, carrot farming dad (Don Lake), “just just as long as you don’t believe in them.”

However, Judy dreams of becoming the first rabbit cop in the metropolis of Zootopia. Although predators make up 10 percent of the population, they still occupy most positions of authority, from Mayor Leodore Lionheart (J.K. Simmons) to Police Chief Bogo (Idris Elba), a grouchy water buffalo.

So even after graduating at the top of her police academy class, Judy quickly hits a glass ceiling. Bogo assigns her to meter maid duty, and she’s further reprimanded when her successful apprehension of a shifty bandit wreaks more havoc than Bogo deems worthy.

But Judy’s upbeat exuberance, and friendship with little lamb Dawn (Jenny Slate), Zootopia’s deputy mayor, soon puts Judy on the trail of a missing otter. Judy has 48 hours to find the otter or be fired, so she reluctantly enlists the help of Nick Wilde (Jason Bateman, equally tremendous), a cynical sly fox and Judy’s newfound foil. Judy and Nick’s snooping undercovers an epidemic where predators are reverting to their base savage instincts. This plot turn further widens the allegory to mass fear, hysteria and stereotyping.

While the issues are weighty, the wit remain breezy and biting. Directors Byron Howard (Tangled), Rich Moore (Wreck-It Ralph) and Jared Bush craft fully realized districts, from Little Rodentia to Tundra Town and the upscale Sahara Square. There’s a running riff on The Godfather involving an arctic shrew crime boss named Mr. Big. A DMV office literally staffed by slow-moving sloths is the film’s comedic showstopper.

The whodunit caper drags in parts, and its resolution is a tad tidy and anti-climatic. And the film’s theme song, “Try Anything,” sung by a slinky pop star gazelle voiced by the slinky pop star Shakira, is used once too often and too cloying and synthetic by half. But these are minor quibbles for this amusing “Animal Farm” analog.

November 24, 2010

Tangled

"This is what you call a hairy situation." There, I said it...


Grade: C +

Director: Nathan Greno and Byron Howard

Starring the voices of: Mandy Moore, Zachary Levi, and Donna Murphy

MPAA Rating: PG

Running Time: 1 hour 40 minutes


During a New England car trip several years ago, my nostalgic streak propelled me to seek out as many indigenous, homespun landmarks as time would allow. After crossing a particular covered bridge in Vermont, I peered back at a sign nailed above the archway only to see that the structure – constructed to resemble the truss bridges of yore – was actually built in 1982. My sense of wistful excitement instantly evaporated.


While the computer-generated Tangled is made to resemble a throwback, hand-drawn Disney animated classic, its 3-D countenance and benign, uneven script betray something trying a little too hard to hearken back to a simpler age of animation, to be the anti-Pixar, anti-Shrek kiddie flick. Unfortunately, the narrative baby gets thrown out with the pop-culture-referencing bathwater.


In this revamp of the Brothers Grimm fairy tale from writer Dan Fogelman (Bolt; Cars), an infant Princess Rapunzel is kidnapped from her regal crib by Mother Gothel (voiced by Tony Award-winning Donna Murphy), an old crone who covets the young ingĂ©nue’s long locks for their restorative, anti-aging properties.


Forbidden by Gothel from ever leaving her ersatz home, the grown-up, doe-eyed Rapunzel (Mandy Moore) eventually yearns to venture into the outside world. She finally finds the chutzpah to descend her tower prison after being visited by Flynn Ryder (Zachery Levi), a handsome, wiseacre bandit on the run from the authorities whose principal functions are to be a love interest and a fount of one unfunny one-liner after another.


The aim of presenting a spunkier, self-assured damsel-in-egress somewhat flies in the face of the symbolism of a female lead who disables foes using a frying pan and her flowing blond hair. Plus, after the relatively underwhelming box-office draw of The Princess and the Frog, Disney execs changed this film’s traditional title to a more gender-neutral one.


Veterans Alan Menken and lyricist Glenn Slater compose a number of serviceable songs throughout, although they only come to life when channeled through Murphy’s formidable pipes. As the storyline lurches about, you’re left to ponder such mundane matters as why all the king’s horses and men are assigned to retrieve a stolen crown, while the only effort expended to find his lost daughter is floating a bunch of hopeful lanterns into the cosmos every year on her birthday.


Tangled tries to blend traditionalism with hip modernity. However, bridging that gap proves a bridge too far.


Neil Morris